Massachusetts's 5% Flat Income Tax
Massachusetts applies a flat 5% tax on all taxable income. This means whether you earn $30,000 or $300,000, every dollar of taxable income is taxed at the same rate. For a worker earning $65,000 per year, Massachusetts's flat tax amounts to approximately $3,250 annually, or about $271 per month. Flat tax states simplify payroll calculations and mean your effective and marginal state tax rates are always the same.
Federal Taxes and FICA on Your Massachusetts Paycheck
Regardless of state, every Massachusetts paycheck is subject to federal income tax (10–37% depending on bracket) and FICA contributions. Social Security tax is 6.2% on the first $176,100 of wages in 2026, while Medicare is 1.45% on all earnings with an additional 0.9% surtax above $200,000. Together, FICA alone reduces a $60,000 salary by about $4,590 per year. Pre-tax deductions for 401(k) contributions, health insurance premiums, and HSA/FSA contributions reduce your taxable income for both federal and state purposes, increasing your net take-home pay. The calculator above models all of these deductions.
Maximizing Your Take-Home Pay in Massachusetts
The most effective lever for increasing take-home pay in Massachusetts is pre-tax retirement contributions. Every dollar contributed to a traditional 401(k) reduces your federal taxable income and your Massachusetts state taxable income, saving you 27–42% on that dollar depending on your bracket. Health insurance premiums paid through an employer cafeteria plan are also pre-tax. In Massachusetts, maximizing pre-tax deductions provides a double benefit by reducing both federal and state tax. Try adjusting the 401(k) and insurance fields in the calculator to see how much more you can keep each paycheck.
Massachusetts Pay Frequency: Biweekly vs. Semimonthly
How often you're paid affects your per-check amount but not your annual tax burden. Biweekly pay (26 checks/year) means each check is slightly smaller than semimonthly (24 checks/year), but you get two extra payments. For a $70,000 salary in Massachusetts, biweekly gross pay is about $2,692 per check versus $2,917 semimonthly. After taxes and deductions, this translates to roughly $1,850–$1,950 biweekly take-home or $2,000–$2,100 semimonthly. Select your pay frequency in the calculator to see the exact breakdown for your situation.
Massachusetts Paycheck Calculator: 2026 Tax Year Updates
This Massachusetts paycheck calculator reflects 2026 federal tax brackets and FICA limits. The Social Security wage base increased to $176,100 for 2026 (up from $168,600 in 2024), meaning higher earners pay FICA on more income. The standard deduction for 2026 is $15,000 for single filers and $30,000 for married filing jointly. Massachusetts’s flat 5% state rate remains unchanged for 2026, making your Massachusetts wage calculation straightforward when combined with the updated federal brackets. Whether you’re calculating your Massachusetts take-home pay for a new job offer, estimating your Massachusetts net salary for budgeting, or comparing Massachusetts payroll taxes with another state, these 2026 figures give you an accurate picture.
Why We Built This Massachusetts Salary Calculator
When I moved to Massachusetts a few years back, the first thing I did was try to figure out my actual take-home pay. I Googled "massachusetts paycheck calculator" and found tools that were either buried in ads, required sign-ups, or gave vague estimates without showing the bracket math. I wanted to see exactly where each dollar went — federal tax, state tax, FICA — and how pre-tax deductions like my 401(k) actually changed the bottom line. That frustration is why PennyCalc exists. Every calculation runs in your browser with no data sent to any server. We show the full bracket breakdown so you understand your Massachusetts salary after taxes, not just a single number. If you’re negotiating a job offer, comparing a move to Massachusetts with another state, or just want to know how much of your Massachusetts paycheck you actually keep — this tool was built for exactly that.