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Estimate New York salary tax calculator for 2026.
Part of the New York Tax Guide — your hub for every New York tax calculator, bracket, and planning resource.
Federal tax
$8,550
New York state tax
$4,309
Total tax
$12,859
Take-home
$66,141
Effective rate
15.13%
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New York applies an estimated effective income tax rate of 6.85% after federal deductions. Its long-term capital-gains treatment is approximately 6.85%. Property taxes average 1.40% of assessed home value.
Use this calculator alongside our methodology page for a complete picture, and switch to the national income tax calculator when comparing states.
Explore the complete New York Tax Guide or jump to a related New York calculator and comparison below.
In-depth coverage of how New York taxes income, property, and capital gains in 2026 — plus credits, deductions, and the planning moves that actually matter for residents.
New York has one of the most aggressive state and local tax regimes in the country. State income tax brackets run from 4% to 10.9%, and New York City residents pay an additional city income tax of 3.078% to 3.876% on top — pushing the combined marginal rate for high earners in Manhattan or Brooklyn above 14.7% on the state and city portion alone. Layered on top of the federal 37% bracket and the 3.8% NIIT, top earners in NYC frequently see a combined marginal rate above 50% on incremental wage income.
Our New York calculator computes 2026 federal tax using IRS Rev. Proc. brackets, applies New York State's effective rate by income band, and supports the New York City and Yonkers add-on for residents of those jurisdictions. For paycheck use it also calculates Social Security, Medicare, the Additional Medicare Tax, and New York State Disability Insurance (SDI) withholding.
New York uses nine progressive brackets ranging from 4% on the first ~$8,500 (single) up to 10.9% on income above approximately $25 million. The state conforms substantially to the federal Internal Revenue Code but maintains its own standard deduction (~$8,000 single / ~$16,050 joint for 2026), its own dependent exemption, and its own itemized deduction worksheet — notably, New York did NOT adopt the federal $10,000 SALT cap, so full state and local taxes remain deductible against New York taxable income for itemizers.
Capital gains have no preferential treatment in New York: all gains are taxed at the full bracket rate. Long-term gains in NYC for top earners therefore face roughly 14.776% state + city tax stacked on top of federal 23.8%, for a combined ~38.6% marginal rate.
NYC residents pay city income tax on top of state tax, ranging from 3.078% on income up to ~$12,000 (single) to 3.876% above ~$50,000. Yonkers residents pay 16.75% of their state liability (effectively a ~1.5%–2% surcharge) plus a non-resident earnings tax of 0.5% on Yonkers-sourced wages. Non-NYC residents who work in the city are not subject to NYC income tax — there is no commuter tax for individuals (the NYC commuter tax was repealed in 1999).
Our calculator's default is non-NYC residency. To estimate NYC income tax, add roughly 3.5%–3.876% of your NY taxable income to the state tax result; the exact figure depends on bracket placement.
New York's effective property tax rate averages 1.40% statewide but varies enormously by location. Westchester, Nassau, and Rockland counties regularly exceed 2.0% — among the highest in the country in absolute dollar terms — while NYC's effective property tax on Class 1 (1–3 family residential) properties is closer to 0.9% due to assessment limits and aggressive assessment caps under the NYC tax classification system.
STAR (School Tax Relief) provides a partial school-tax exemption for primary residences under an income cap (~$500,000 for Basic STAR). New STAR enrollees receive a check rather than a direct assessment reduction. Senior STAR provides additional relief for filers age 65+ under a tighter income limit.
New York's progressive structure and lack of capital gains preference make planning particularly valuable for high earners and pre-IPO employees:
The New York Department of Taxation and Finance runs one of the most aggressive residency audit programs in the country. The 'statutory residency' test treats anyone maintaining a permanent place of abode in New York and spending more than 183 days in-state as a New York resident for tax purposes, regardless of domicile. Day counts are tracked to the half-hour, and a single calendar day with any New York presence counts as a full day. Establishing a non-New York domicile requires a thorough paper trail: a primary residence elsewhere, voter registration, driver's license, vehicle registration, professional and social affiliations, and a clearly reduced New York footprint.
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