Georgia Take-Home Pay Calculator (2026)

Georgia uses a flat 5.19% state income tax on all wages. Combined with federal income tax and FICA, the calculator below shows what hits your paycheck and what's left.

Take-home pay

Net annual

Per month

Per biweekly paycheck

Federal income tax

FICA (SS + Medicare)

Georgia state tax

Other state payroll

Effective tax rate

Marginal rate (next $)

Georgia tax brackets (2026)

RateApplies to
5.19%All taxable income

What the calculator does

For each gross salary, it applies the 2026 federal brackets, FICA (6.2% Social Security up to the $184,500 wage cap + 1.45% Medicare on everything), then Georgia's state income tax using the brackets above. Pre-tax deductions (401(k), HSA, etc.) reduce your taxable income before any of the above runs.

Source

Georgia DOR — flat tax with annual rate cuts. Verified 2026-06-08. For high-stakes financial decisions, double-check the current rates with your state's Department of Revenue.

FAQ

How is take-home pay in Georgia calculated?

Take-home = gross salary − federal income tax − FICA (Social Security + Medicare) − Georgia state income tax. The calculator above runs each piece through the published 2026 brackets and rates.

What is Georgia's state income tax rate?

Georgia charges a flat 5.19% state income tax on taxable income. The standard deduction is $12,000 for single filers and $24,000 for married filing jointly.

Anything special about Georgia taxes I should know?

Georgia flat tax dropped from 5.39% (2025) to 5.19% (2026); scheduled to decline toward 4.99%.

What about local city or county taxes in Georgia?

Georgia doesn't have widespread local income taxes for most workers, so the calculator above covers the main paycheck deductions. If you live in a city with a local income tax, add that separately.

Are these 2026 numbers accurate?

These brackets reflect the published 2026 rates as of January 2026. Each state's tax authority is cited in the page source. Rates can change mid-year via legislation; verify with your state's Department of Revenue before relying on these for financial decisions.