USCalcs

Indiana Salary Calculator 2026

Calculate your Indiana take-home pay after federal, state, and FICA taxes. Pre-loaded with 2025 Indiana tax rates.

Your inputs

$

Your take-home pay

Net annual
$58,634
$4,886/mo · $2,255/2wk · $1,128/wk
Gross annual
$75,000
Total tax
$16,366
Federal tax
$8,341
State tax
$2,288
Social Security
$4,650
6.2% up to wage base
Medicare
$1,088
1.45% + 0.9% over threshold
Effective tax rate
21.82%
Federal marginal rate
22.0%

About Indiana income tax

Tax structure

Indiana uses a flat tax rate of 3.05% on taxable income. Indiana state rate is 3.05%; counties add additional local income tax (not included).

Snapshot at $75,000 (single)

  • Take-home: $58,634 per year
  • Federal tax: $8,341
  • State tax: $2,288
  • Effective rate: 21.82%
  • vs. Texas (no income tax): Indiana keeps $2,288 more.

Compare to neighboring states

Indiana salary FAQ

How is take-home pay calculated in Indiana?

In Indiana, take-home pay equals gross pay minus federal income tax, Indiana state income tax (flat 3.05%), and FICA (Social Security 6.2% + Medicare 1.45%).

Does Indiana have a state income tax?

Yes. Indiana levies state income tax on wages. Indiana state rate is 3.05%; counties add additional local income tax (not included).

What's the highest marginal tax rate in Indiana?

Indiana uses a flat 3.05% rate, regardless of income. Indiana state rate is 3.05%; counties add additional local income tax (not included).

How is take-home pay calculated?

Take-home pay is your gross salary minus federal income tax, state income tax, Social Security (6.2% up to the wage base), and Medicare (1.45%, plus 0.9% on income above $200,000 for single filers). Pre-tax deductions like 401(k) contributions and health insurance reduce the taxable portion further.

What's the difference between effective and marginal tax rate?

Your marginal tax rate is the rate on your last dollar earned — the top bracket your income reaches. Your effective rate is total tax divided by gross income, which is always lower than your marginal rate because earlier dollars are taxed at lower brackets.