Bonus Tax Calculator 2026

Bonus Details

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Used to determine your marginal tax bracket and Social Security wage base.

Flat rate uses the IRS supplemental wage rate (22%, or 37% on amounts over $1M). Aggregate uses your marginal federal bracket.

Estimated Withholding

Net Bonus (Take Home)
$5,985
Effective withholding: 40.1%
Federal Withholding
$2,200
State Tax
$1,050
Social Security (6.2%)
$620
Medicare (1.45%)
$145
Total Withheld
$4,015

How Bonus Tax Withholding Works

Bonuses, commissions, severance, and other one-off payments are classified by the IRS as "supplemental wages." Employers can withhold federal tax on these payments using one of two methods. The most common is the flat rate method: a straight 22% federal withholding on the bonus, jumping to 37% on any portion that exceeds $1 million in a calendar year.

The alternative is the aggregate method, in which the employer adds the bonus to your most recent regular paycheck and calculates withholding as if the combined amount were your normal pay. This typically produces withholding at your marginal bracket — which can be lower than 22% for some workers and much higher for high earners.

Beyond federal income tax, your bonus is also subject to Social Security (6.2% up to the $168,600 wage base), Medicare (1.45%, plus a 0.9% surcharge on wages above $200,000), and any applicable state income tax. Remember that withholding is an estimate — your actual tax bill is reconciled when you file your annual return, so an over-withheld bonus often comes back as part of your refund.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why is so much tax withheld from my bonus?
The IRS treats bonuses as supplemental wages, which employers typically withhold at a flat 22% federal rate (37% on amounts over $1 million). On top of that, you still pay Social Security (6.2% up to the wage base), Medicare (1.45%), and state income tax — so total withholding can easily reach 30–40%.
What is the difference between the flat rate and aggregate method?
The flat rate method withholds federal tax at 22% on bonus amounts up to $1M. The aggregate method adds the bonus to your most recent regular paycheck and withholds based on your normal W-4 — which usually means your marginal tax bracket. The flat rate is simpler; aggregate may withhold more or less depending on your bracket.
Will I get some of the bonus tax back at tax time?
Possibly. Withholding is just a prepayment — your actual tax liability is calculated when you file. If 22% is more than your marginal rate (because your bracket is 10–12%), you'll likely get a refund. If your bracket is higher than 22%, you may owe additional tax.
Do I pay Social Security tax on my bonus?
Yes, unless your year-to-date wages already exceed the Social Security wage base ($168,600 for 2026). Once you hit that ceiling, Social Security tax (6.2%) stops for the rest of the calendar year. Medicare (1.45%) always applies, with an additional 0.9% surcharge on wages above $200,000 ($250,000 married filing jointly).

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