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H-1B · Georgia

H-1B take-home pay in Georgia (2026)

Pick a salary to see the full breakdown — federal income tax, FICA, Georgia state income tax, and your annual / monthly / bi-weekly net.

Georgia moved to a 5.39% flat tax in 2024 (down from a progressive structure topping 5.75%) and is scheduled to keep dropping through the late 2020s. Atlanta is one of the lowest-cost top-20 metros for H-1B holders.

Gross salary Take-home Monthly Effective rate
$60,000 $47,276 $3,940 21.2% Details →
$80,000 $60,958 $5,080 23.8% Details →
$100,000 $73,990 $6,166 26.0% Details →
$120,000 $87,022 $7,252 27.5% Details →
$150,000 $106,006 $8,834 29.3% Details →
$180,000 $124,954 $10,413 30.6% Details →
$220,000 $152,069 $12,672 30.9% Details →
$280,000 $188,115 $15,676 32.8% Details →
$350,000 $228,337 $19,028 34.8% Details →
$500,000 $314,527 $26,211 37.1% Details →

How Georgia state income tax works for H-1B holders

State tax structure
Flat 5.19%
State standard deduction
Conforms to federal / no separate amount

Georgia charges a single flat rate of 5.19% 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 Georgia is dominated by federal tax + FICA, with the flat state component layered on top.

What's different for H-1B holders in Georgia?

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:

Source: dor.georgia.gov/taxes/important-tax-updates