H-1B · Arizona
H-1B take-home pay in Arizona (2026)
Pick a salary to see the full breakdown — federal income tax, FICA, Arizona state income tax, and your annual / monthly / bi-weekly net.
| Gross salary | Take-home | Monthly | Effective rate | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $60,000 | $48,890 | $4,074 | 18.5% | Details → |
| $80,000 | $63,110 | $5,259 | 21.1% | Details → |
| $100,000 | $76,680 | $6,390 | 23.3% | Details → |
| $120,000 | $90,250 | $7,521 | 24.8% | Details → |
| $150,000 | $110,041 | $9,170 | 26.6% | Details → |
| $180,000 | $129,796 | $10,816 | 27.9% | Details → |
| $220,000 | $157,987 | $13,166 | 28.2% | Details → |
| $280,000 | $195,647 | $16,304 | 30.1% | Details → |
| $350,000 | $237,752 | $19,813 | 32.1% | Details → |
| $500,000 | $327,977 | $27,331 | 34.4% | Details → |
How Arizona state income tax works for H-1B holders
State tax structure
Flat 2.50%
State standard deduction
Conforms to federal / no separate amount
Arizona charges a single flat rate of 2.50% on taxable income. Unlike the federal system, there are no brackets — every dollar of taxable income is taxed at the same rate. This makes the state tax math simple: $H-1B take-home in Arizona is dominated by federal tax + FICA, with the flat state component layered on top.
What's different for H-1B holders in Arizona?
State income tax generally does not distinguish between visa categories — it only looks at where you live and where you work, not your immigration status. A few practical notes for H-1B holders specifically:
- Residency. Most states deem you a tax resident if you are domiciled in the state or spend more than 183 days there during the calendar year, regardless of visa type.
- FICA exemption (federal) ≠ state-tax exemption. H-1B holders pay state tax on the same basis as US workers — there is no special exemption.
- Standard deduction. As a resident alien for federal purposes, you typically qualify for the state's standard deduction (where one exists) under that state's residency rules.
Source: azdor.gov/