H-1B · District of Columbia · Tax year 2026
H-1B take-home pay in District of Columbia, salary
That's $3,667/month or $1,692/biweekly, after federal income tax, FICA, and state income tax (26.67% effective tax rate).
Why this number differs from a generic paycheck calculator
NRAs cannot claim the federal standard deduction.
Generic calculators silently apply the $16,100 single standard deduction. As a nonresident alien (no applicable treaty), you don't get it — that's roughly $3,542–$3,864 more federal tax at typical bracket rates. IRS Pub 519.
How is the take-home calculated?
| Line item | Annual | % of gross | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gross salary | $60,000 | 100.00% | Input · |
| Federal income tax | −$7,912 | 13.19% | IRS Rev. Proc. 2025-32 |
| Social Security (6.2%, capped) | −$3,720 | 6.20% | SSA 2026 wage base |
| Medicare (1.45%) | −$870 | 1.45% | IRS Pub 15 |
| State income tax | −$3,500 | 5.83% | State Department of Revenue |
| Take-home pay | $43,998 | 73.33% |
Effective tax rate 26.67% · Marginal federal 22.00% · Marginal state 6.50% · 3 line items hidden ($0 at this scenario)
Show the math
- Gross salary: $60,000 .
- Federal taxable income: $60,000 (after standard deduction of $0).
- Federal income tax: $7,912 —
computed by stepping through the SINGLE progressive brackets:
- 10% on income up to $12,400
- 12% on income up to $50,400
- 22% on income up to $105,700
- 24% on income up to $201,775
- 32% on income up to $256,225
- 35% on income up to $640,600
- 37% on income above the previous cap
- FICA: Social Security 6.2% on wages up to $184,500 ($3,720); Medicare 1.45% on all wages ($870) .
- State tax: $3,500 (income tax $3,500 + SDI/local $0).
- Total tax: $16,002 = 26.67% of gross.
- Take-home: $60,000 − $16,002 = $43,998.
Assumptions used in this calculation (1)
- NRAs cannot claim the standard deduction (exception: F-1/J-1 students from India under treaty Article 21).
Try your own numbers
- Federal income tax
- $5,020
- Social Security
- $3,720
- Medicare
- $870
- State income tax
- $3,500
- Total tax
- $13,110
This calculator runs entirely in your browser. No salary or personal data is sent to a server.
Other salary points
Frequently asked questions
Specific to this visa, state, and salary. Sourced to IRS, SSA, and state DOR.
How much does a H-1B (first-year (nra)) earn after tax on $60,000 in District of Columbia?
Are H-1B holders subject to FICA in this scenario?
Can the standard deduction be claimed in this scenario?
What state taxes apply in District of Columbia?
How much would I save by moving to a no-state-tax state at this salary?
How much would maxing out a 401(k) save me at this income?
How are bonuses and RSU vesting taxed for H-1B holders?
How much more does a first-year H-1B (NRA) pay vs. a resident H-1B at the same salary?
Where do these numbers come from?
Sources
- IRS Rev. Proc. 2025-32 (2026 inflation adjustments) (opens in new tab) — Federal tax brackets and standard deduction.
- IRS Pub 15 (Employer Tax Guide) (opens in new tab) — FICA withholding mechanics.
- IRS Pub 519 (US Tax Guide for Aliens) (opens in new tab) — NRA rules, substantial presence, treaty benefits.
- IRS Substantial Presence Test (opens in new tab)
- SSA 2026 COLA fact sheet (opens in new tab) — Social Security wage base.
- District of Columbia Department of Revenue (opens in new tab) — State income tax rates and brackets.