Education · W-2 · Paycheck Taxes

How Much of My Paycheck Goes to Taxes as a W-2 Employee?

One of the most common questions I get from W-2 employees in Sugar Land, Fort Bend County, Katy, and Richmond is: “Why does my paycheck feel so much smaller than my salary?” You see federal tax, Social Security, Medicare, maybe benefits, and it starts to blend together. In this guide, I’ll walk you through how much of a typical paycheck goes to taxes, what that 7.65% from you + 7.65% from your employer actually means in Texas (with no state income tax), and give you visual examples you can match to your own paystub.

Umair Nazir, EA
Written by Umair Nazir, EA
Enrolled Agent · Owner, The Tax Lyfe
Based in Sugar Land, serving Texas & nationwide
← Back to Tax Guides & Articles

This is an education guide, not personalized tax advice. Exact percentages and dollar limits change from year to year. These visuals use simple, rounded examples so that W-2 employees in Texas (no state income tax) can get oriented. Always check current IRS guidance or talk with a professional about your specific situation.

If you’re also wondering whether to keep using DIY software or hire someone to review your paystubs and return, you may want to read: Do I Need a Tax Preparer or Tax Software?

Step 1: Start with your gross pay vs. your take-home pay

When you look at your paystub, you’ll usually see at least two big numbers:

  • Gross pay – what you earned for that pay period before any taxes or deductions.
  • Net pay – what actually lands in your bank account.

The gap between those two numbers is a mix of:

  • Federal income tax withholding,
  • Social Security and Medicare (FICA),
  • State and local taxes (in Texas, there’s no state income tax), and
  • Benefits and other deductions (401(k), health insurance, HSA, etc.).

This article focuses on the tax side of that gap — especially Social Security and Medicare, because those are the ones that quietly come out of every W-2 paycheck.

If you’re comparing paychecks between Texas and a state with state income tax, that extra state line is one reason your friends elsewhere may see more withholding than you do here.

Step 2: The 7.65% that comes out of every W-2 paycheck (FICA)

As a W-2 employee, you pay what most people shorthand as 7.65% in FICA taxes:

  • 6.2% for Social Security, plus
  • 1.45% for Medicare.

That 7.65% is calculated on your wages from your job and comes out of every paycheck. Your employer also pays another 7.65% on the same wages on their side.

Big picture: For every $1,000 of wages, you pay $76.50 in Social Security and Medicare from your check, and your employer pays another $76.50 behind the scenes. Your work costs more than you see in your own paycheck.

Visual 1 – Per-paycheck breakdown (Texas W-2)

Example: $2,000 gross paycheck for a Texas W-2 employee with simple assumptions (no pre-tax benefits yet).

FICA (you – 7.65%) ≈ $153
Estimated federal income tax (about 12%) ≈ $240
Sample benefits & pre-tax items (about 5%) ≈ $100
Take-home after these items (about 75.35%) ≈ $1,507

Percentages are rounded and for illustration only. Your actual federal withholding and benefits mix will be different based on your W-4 and employer plan.

Visual 2 – Annual view for a $60,000 salary in Texas

Now zoom out: here’s a simplified look at a $60,000 W-2 salary in Texas, assuming:

  • FICA at 7.65% on all wages, and
  • Approximate 12% average federal income tax on wages.
FICA (you – 7.65%)
≈ $4,590
Estimated federal income tax (~12%)
≈ $7,200
Rough take-home after just these
≈ $48,210

This ignores things like 401(k), HSA, and health insurance. The point is to show that between FICA and federal alone, roughly about 20% of a $60,000 salary can move to taxes before benefits and other planning even start.

If you want to go deeper on what happens to your refund or balance due at the end of the year, see: Should I Amend My Tax Return? and Tax Preparation Near Me – Prices & What You Get .

Social Security – 6.2% up to an annual limit

The Social Security portion of FICA is:

  • 6.2% of your wages,
  • only up to a certain annual wage base limit that changes over time.

Once your year-to-date wages hit that Social Security wage base for the year, you stop paying the 6.2% on any additional wages for that year. Your paycheck will often show that shift if you’re a high earner.

That wage base limit is a specific dollar number that the IRS updates periodically. Rather than memorize it, I recommend checking current IRS guidance, or asking a professional like your local Sugar Land tax accountant what the current-year Social Security wage base is.

Medicare – 1.45% with no standard wage cap

The Medicare portion is:

  • 1.45% of your wages,
  • with no basic wage cap like Social Security has.

For higher earners, there’s also an additional Medicare tax of 0.9% that can apply above certain income thresholds. That 0.9% is an employee-side tax only — your employer doesn’t match that part. But the core 1.45% is there for everyone with W-2 wages.

Step 3: What 7.65% from you + 7.65% from your employer really means

It’s easy to think, “I pay 7.65% in FICA, that’s it.” But there are two layers:

  • You – 6.2% Social Security + 1.45% Medicare = 7.65% withheld from your paycheck.
  • Your employer – another 6.2% + 1.45% on their side on the same wages.

For a $1,000 paycheck:

  • You pay $62.00 in Social Security + $14.50 in Medicare = $76.50 (7.65%).
  • Your employer also pays $76.50 (you don’t see this, but it’s part of what it costs to employ you).

So the total Social Security and Medicare cost tied to that $1,000 of wages is:

  • $153.00 – half from you, half from your employer.

That’s before we even talk about federal income tax, or any benefits you’re using to reduce your taxable income.

Step 4: Federal income tax withholding – why it’s not a fixed percentage

On your paystub, you’ll also see a separate line for federal income tax. This is different from FICA:

  • FICA is the 7.65% we just discussed.
  • Federal income tax is based on your overall annual income, filing status, credits, and how you filled out your Form W-4.

That means:

  • Two people with the same gross paycheck can have very different federal withholding.
  • Increasing or decreasing your pre-tax deductions (401(k), HSA, etc.) can change how much income tax gets taken out each period.
  • Bonuses might have different withholding treatment than regular wages.

If you’re adjusting your W-4 and want a step-by-step walk-through instead of guessing, you can always sit down with a trusted local tax firm to model the changes before you submit anything to HR.

Step 5: Where Social Security and Medicare stop and everything else begins

Beyond FICA and federal income tax, you might also see:

  • State income tax – in Texas, this is zero, which is why Texans pay a lot of attention to federal and FICA instead.
  • Local or city taxes – in some states and cities.
  • Pre-tax benefits:
    • 401(k) contributions,
    • Health insurance premiums,
    • HSA or FSA contributions.
  • After-tax deductions – like Roth 401(k), some insurance, or other elected benefits.

Not all of these are “taxes,” but they all reduce your take-home pay, which is why your net number can feel far away from your salary.

Step 6: A simple example to tie it together

Imagine a W-2 employee in Fort Bend County with:

  • $2,000 gross pay for a pay period,
  • No pre-tax benefits yet (to keep the example simple),
  • Standard federal withholding based on their W-4.

Roughly, their paystub might look something like:

  • Gross pay: $2,000
  • Social Security (6.2%): $124.00
  • Medicare (1.45%): $29.00
  • Federal income tax: maybe around $200–$260 depending on their situation.
  • State income tax: $0 in Texas.

Just from FICA, they’ve lost $153.00 out of $2,000. Add federal withholding, and it’s easy to see why the net deposit feels smaller, even though the taxes are doing exactly what the law says they should.

If you’re also starting a side business or thinking about LLCs and S corps alongside your W-2 job, you might find these helpful: How to Open an LLC in Texas for Professional Services and Texas Franchise Tax – Annual Filing Guide .

Step 7: How to read your own paystub and ask better questions

When clients bring in their paystubs and ask, “Where is all my money going?” I usually walk them through three quick steps:

  1. Circle FICA. Add up Social Security and Medicare. That should be 7.65% of your wages for that period (up to the Social Security cap).
  2. Look at federal income tax. Compare it to your year-to-date income and what you put on your W-4. If it feels too high or too low, that’s where planning happens.
  3. List your deductions. 401(k), HSA, insurance, other benefits — some are reducing your current taxes on purpose (which can be good), but they still make the paycheck feel smaller.

Once you see those three buckets clearly, your paycheck stops feeling like a mystery and starts feeling like a math problem you can plan around. If you want help getting organized before a meeting, this checklist is a good place to start: What Documents Do I Need for Tax Preparation?

Related guides for W-2 employees & paycheck planning

Want a human to walk through your paycheck with you?

The Tax Lyfe is based in Sugar Land and helps W-2 employees across Fort Bend County, Katy, Richmond, and the greater Houston area understand what’s really happening on their paystubs. If you’d like to sit down with an Enrolled Agent and map out where your money is going — and how to adjust things for your goals — we can do that calmly and in plain English.

Sugar Land tax office page Richmond tax office page Katy tax office page

Ready to stop guessing about your paycheck?

If you’re not sure how much of your paycheck should go to taxes, or you want to see what happens if you change your W-4 or benefits, we can review your paystubs and build a simple plan — so your take-home pay and your tax bill stop feeling like a surprise. You can also see how we price things here: tax preparation near me – prices .