Gross vs net pay: where the money goes

Job offers, leases and loan applications all speak different dialects of "income." The offer letter says $60,000 (gross). Your bank account sees maybe $3,800 a month (net). The lender wants "monthly income" and doesn't say which. Getting these straight is the first practical skill of personal finance.

Definitions

Gross pay is everything you earn before anything is taken out: base wages or salary, overtime, bonuses, commissions, tips.

Net pay ("take-home") is what remains after all deductions โ€” taxes and everything else โ€” hit your check.

Anatomy of a $60,000 paycheck (2026, single, no state tax)

LineBiweeklyYearly
Gross pay$2,307.69$60,000
Federal income taxโˆ’$193.08โˆ’$5,020
Social Security (6.2%)โˆ’$143.08โˆ’$3,720
Medicare (1.45%)โˆ’$33.46โˆ’$870
Net pay$1,938.07$50,390

Effective total tax: 16.0%. Add a state like Illinois (4.95% flat) and net drops to about $47,420; in California, around $47,540 after its progressive schedule with your circumstances excluded. Run your own state in the paycheck calculator.

The deductions beyond taxes

Real paychecks usually shrink further โ€” voluntarily:

The order matters. Pre-tax deductions make benefits cheaper than their sticker price; that's why maxing an employer 401(k) match is the highest-return "raise" available โ€” it's gross-pay money at a net-pay cost.

Which number to use when

SituationUse
Comparing job offersGross โ€” but adjust for benefits and state taxes
Renting (landlord "3ร— rent" rules)Gross (that's what they mean)
Mortgage/loan qualificationGross (lenders' DTI uses it)
Monthly budgetNet โ€” always
"Can I afford this car?"Net, after retirement contributions

The classic budgeting mistake is planning against gross. The 50/30/20 rule and every envelope system should start from take-home pay โ€” the check that actually clears.

The rules of thumb

Why your net changes without a raise

January FICA resets (if you crossed the Social Security cap), new-year tax tables, open-enrollment premium changes, FSA elections, a W-4 tweak after a life event, or crossing the extra-Medicare threshold mid-year all move net pay while gross stays put. When a check surprises you, read the stub line by line โ€” every dollar of the gap has a name.

Sources

Estimates for reference only, based on 2026 published rates. Not tax, legal or financial advice.