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Washington DC Paycheck Calculator (2026)

Calculate your Washington DC net paycheck after federal and Washington DC state deductions. Uses 2026 Washington DC tax brackets.

Washington DC: Washington DC operates as both city and state for tax purposes. DC income tax has a top rate of 10.75% on income over $500,000. DC also imposes a 0.62% Universal Paid Leave tax on wages. DC residents cannot vote for voting congressional representatives despite paying federal taxes.

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Washington DC Net Paycheck

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$75,000/year — Bi-weekly — Single — 2026 Washington DC rates. Gross per check: $2,884.62

DeductionPer PaycheckAnnual
Gross Pay$2,884.62$75,000.12
Federal Income Tax−$0.00$0.00
Washington DC State Tax−$0.00$0.00
SS + Medicare−$0.00$0.00
Net Take-Home$0.00$0.00

How Washington DC Income Tax Affects Your Paycheck

Washington DC applies a progressive state income tax to wages earned within its borders. The schedule has 7 brackets ranging from 4.00% on the lowest income to 10.75% at the top. For single filers, the standard deduction is $6,500; married couples filing jointly get $13,000.

Your employer withholds Washington DC state income tax each pay period based on the W-4 (or state-specific equivalent) you submit. This is in addition to federal withholding (10%–37% based on your bracket), Social Security at 6.2% on the first $176,100 of 2026 wages, and Medicare at 1.45% on all earnings (plus an additional 0.9% above $200,000 for high earners).

Pay-Period Math: A Washington DC Worked Example

Consider a single filer earning $75,000 per year and paid bi-weekly in Washington. Gross pay per check is $2,885. After federal income tax withholding (~$9,750 annually using 2026 IRS brackets and the standard deduction), Social Security ($4,650), and Medicare ($1,088), federal-only deductions reduce annual gross by about $15,488.

Adding Washington DC state income tax brings the total tax burden close to $20,325, leaving roughly $54,675 in annual take-home — about $2,103 per bi-weekly check. Pre-tax contributions to a 401(k), HSA, or section 125 cafeteria plan reduce both your federal and Washington DC state taxable wages, providing a marginal-rate dollar savings on every contribution.

Washington DC Cost of Living and Wage Context

Washington DC's cost of living index exceeds the national baseline (155 vs. 100). Median household income in Washington DC is $90,842 — 12.7% higher than the US median of $80,610. Higher nominal wages here typically reflect both productivity premiums and the elevated cost structure.

If you're comparing offers across states, focus on take-home pay relative to local rent, groceries, and transportation. A $85,000 salary in Washington DC (cost index 155) has a different purchasing power than the same salary in a state with a cost index near 90. Use the calculator above to map gross-to-net, then divide by your local benchmark expenses for an apples-to-apples view.

Common Washington DC Paycheck Adjustments

Update your federal W-4 (and Washington DC's state withholding form, typically required when you start a job) whenever you marry, divorce, gain a dependent, take on a second job, or expect a significant change in itemized deductions. Under-withholding can trigger an underpayment penalty at filing time; over-withholding is an interest-free loan to the government you could redirect to retirement accounts instead.

Pre-tax benefits that reduce both federal and Washington DC taxable income include traditional 401(k) contributions (2026 limit: $24,500 with catch-up $8,000 for 50+), HSA contributions (2026: $4,400 self-only / $8,750 family), commuter benefits, and most employer-sponsored health insurance premiums. Dollar for dollar, these are the highest-yield paycheck adjustments most W-2 employees can make.