Severance pay can provide a financial cushion when you lose your job, but it's also taxable income. Understanding how severance pay is taxed can help you plan for the tax impact and avoid surprises. This guide explains how severance pay is taxed, withholding rates, and strategies to minimize the tax burden.
Table of Contents
- What Is Severance Pay?
- How Severance Pay Is Taxed
- Withholding on Severance Pay
- Severance Pay and Tax Brackets
- Severance Pay vs. Regular Wages
- Strategies to Minimize Taxes on Severance
- Severance Pay and Unemployment
- Common Severance Pay Scenarios
- Mistakes to Avoid
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Bottom Line: Master Severance Pay Taxes
What Is Severance Pay?
Definition
Severance pay is compensation paid to employees when their employment is terminated, usually as part of a layoff or termination agreement.
Common forms:
- Lump sum payment
- Payments over time
- Salary continuation
- Separation pay
Why Employers Offer Severance
Employers offer severance:
- To help employees transition
- As part of termination agreement
- To avoid legal disputes
- As company policy
Amount varies: Usually based on years of service, position, or negotiated amount.
How Severance Pay Is Taxed
Tax Treatment: Ordinary Income
Severance pay is taxed as ordinary income:
- Same as regular wages
- Subject to income tax (10-37% brackets)
- Subject to Social Security tax (6.2%, if under wage base)
- Subject to Medicare tax (1.45%, plus 0.9% if over threshold)
There is no special tax treatment for severance pay—it's just income.
When You Pay Taxes
Tax year: Severance pay is taxable in the year you receive it.
Example:
- Terminated in December 2025
- Severance paid in January 2026
- Taxable in 2026 (year received)
Timing matters: If you can control when severance is paid, you may be able to time it for tax planning.
The Tax Calculation
Severance pay is added to your other income:
- Regular wages (if any)
- Other income
- Severance pay
- = Total income
- Apply tax brackets
- = Total tax
No special deduction or exclusion for severance pay.
Withholding on Severance Pay
Supplemental Wage Withholding
Severance pay is usually treated as "supplemental wages":
- Withheld at 22% federal rate (or 37% if very high)
- Plus Social Security (6.2%, if under wage base)
- Plus Medicare (1.45%, plus 0.9% if over threshold)
Total withholding: Usually 30-40% of severance pay.
Why Withholding Seems High
22% flat rate may be:
- Higher than your actual tax bracket (if you're in 12% bracket)
- Lower than your actual tax bracket (if you're in 32% or 37% bracket)
This is just withholding: Your actual tax is based on your total income and brackets.
If over-withheld: You'll get refund at tax time If under-withheld: You'll owe more at tax time
Example: $20,000 Severance
Withholding (assuming 22% federal + FICA):
- Federal (22%): $4,400
- Social Security (6.2%): $1,240
- Medicare (1.45%): $290
- Total withheld: $5,930 (29.65%)
But if you're in 12% bracket: Actual tax is only $2,400 You'll get back: $3,530 (refund)
But if you're in 32% bracket: Actual tax is $6,400 You'll owe: $470 (at tax time)
Severance Pay and Tax Brackets
How Tax Brackets Work
Tax brackets are marginal:
- You only pay higher rate on income above each threshold
- Severance pay may push you into higher bracket
- But you still keep most of it
Example:
- Regular income: $50,000 (12% bracket)
- Severance: $30,000
- Total: $80,000 (22% bracket on portion above $47,150)
Tax on severance:
- First $17,150 at 12% (fills 12% bracket)
- Remaining $12,850 at 22% (new bracket)
- Average: ~16%
You keep: ~84% of severance after taxes.
The Bracket Impact
If severance pushes you into higher bracket:
- Only the portion above threshold is taxed at higher rate
- You still keep most of severance
- Don't let "higher bracket" fear stop you from accepting severance
Example:
- Regular: $47,000 (top of 12% bracket)
- Severance: $20,000
- Tax on severance: Mix of 12% and 22%
- You keep: ~80% after taxes
Severance Pay vs. Regular Wages
Similar Tax Treatment
Severance pay is taxed the same as regular wages:
- Same income tax rates
- Same FICA taxes
- Same withholding rules (supplemental wage rate)
No special treatment: It's just income.
Differences
Withholding:
- Regular wages: Withheld based on your W-4
- Severance: Withheld at 22% supplemental rate (usually)
Timing:
- Regular wages: Paid throughout year
- Severance: Usually lump sum or short period
Impact: Severance may have different withholding, but actual tax is the same.
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Strategies to Minimize Taxes on Severance
Strategy 1: Understand It's Just Income
Don't panic about high withholding:
- It's just an estimate
- Your actual tax is based on total income
- You'll get over-withholding back (or owe if under-withheld)
Strategy 2: Time Severance Payment (If Possible)
If you can negotiate timing:
- Receive in lower-income year
- May reduce tax bracket
- But: Usually can't control timing
Example:
- Terminated in December
- Can receive severance in December or January
- If December: Added to current year income
- If January: Next year income (may be lower if unemployed)
Strategy 3: Maximize Deductions
Reduce taxable income:
- Contribute to 401(k) if still employed part of year
- Contribute to IRA (if eligible)
- Itemize if you have large deductions
- Claim all eligible credits
This reduces tax on all income, including severance.
Strategy 4: Plan for Tax Impact
Calculate expected tax:
- Estimate total income (including severance)
- Calculate expected tax
- Set aside money if under-withheld
- Or plan for refund if over-withheld
Strategy 5: Consider Retirement Contributions
If you receive severance early in year:
- May still be able to contribute to 401(k) or IRA
- Reduces taxable income
- Saves on taxes
But: Check contribution limits and eligibility.
Severance Pay and Unemployment
Impact on Unemployment Benefits
Severance pay may affect unemployment benefits:
- Some states reduce unemployment if you receive severance
- Rules vary by state
- Check your state's rules
Generally:
- If severance is "wages in lieu of notice": May delay or reduce unemployment
- If severance is "separation pay": May not affect unemployment (depends on state)
Check your state: Unemployment rules vary significantly.
Tax on Unemployment
Unemployment benefits are taxable:
- Reported on 1099-G
- Taxable as ordinary income
- No withholding (usually)
- You pay tax at tax time
Plan for tax: Set aside money for tax on unemployment benefits.
Common Severance Pay Scenarios
Scenario 1: Small Severance, Low Income
Situation: $5,000 severance, total income $30,000
Tax impact:
- Total income: $35,000
- Tax bracket: 12%
- Tax on severance: $5,000 × 12% = $600
- Plus FICA: ~$383
- Total tax: ~$983
Take-home: $4,017 after taxes.
Scenario 2: Moderate Severance, Middle Income
Situation: $20,000 severance, total income $60,000
Tax impact:
- Total income: $80,000
- Tax bracket: Mix of 12% and 22%
- Tax on severance: ~$3,200
- Plus FICA: ~$1,530
- Total tax: ~$4,730
Take-home: $15,270 after taxes.
Scenario 3: Large Severance, High Income
Situation: $50,000 severance, total income $100,000
Tax impact:
- Total income: $150,000
- Tax bracket: 22% and 24%
- Tax on severance: ~$11,000
- Plus FICA: ~$3,825
- Total tax: ~$14,825
Take-home: $35,175 after taxes.
Scenario 4: Severance Paid Over Time
Situation: $30,000 severance paid over 6 months
Tax impact:
- Taxed as received (each payment)
- May spread across tax years if paid across year-end
- Withholding on each payment
- Actual tax based on total income for year
Benefit: May reduce bracket impact if spread across years.
Scenario 5: Severance + Unemployment
Situation: Receive severance, then unemployment
Tax impact:
- Severance: Taxable in year received
- Unemployment: Taxable in year received
- Both are income
- Plan for tax on both
Also: Severance may affect unemployment eligibility (check state rules).
Mistakes to Avoid
Mistake 1: Not Understanding It's Taxable
Problem: Think severance is tax-free, surprised by tax bill.
Fix: Understand that severance is taxable income, plan for tax impact.
Mistake 2: Not Planning for Tax
Problem: Spend all severance, don't set aside for taxes, face tax bill.
Fix: Calculate expected tax, set aside money, or plan for refund if over-withheld.
Mistake 3: Assuming Withholding Is Correct
Problem: Think 22% withholding is your actual tax rate, don't realize you may owe more.
Fix: Understand your actual tax bracket, plan for additional tax if in higher bracket.
Mistake 4: Not Considering Unemployment Impact
Problem: Don't realize severance may affect unemployment benefits.
Fix: Check your state's rules, understand how severance affects unemployment.
Mistake 5: Not Maximizing Deductions
Problem: Don't take advantage of deductions and credits, pay more tax than necessary.
Fix: Maximize deductions, contribute to retirement accounts if possible, claim all credits.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Severance Pay Taxable?
Yes: Severance pay is taxable as ordinary income, same as regular wages.
How Much Tax Will I Pay on Severance?
Depends on: Your total income, tax bracket, and other factors. Generally 12-37% for income tax, plus FICA taxes.
Why Is So Much Withheld from Severance?
Supplemental wage rate: Severance is usually withheld at 22% federal rate (plus FICA), which may be higher or lower than your actual tax rate.
Will I Get Over-Withholding Back?
If over-withheld: Yes, you'll get it back as a refund when you file your tax return.
Can I Avoid Taxes on Severance?
Not entirely: Severance is taxable income. But you can minimize taxes by maximizing deductions and credits.
Does Severance Affect Unemployment?
Depends on state: Some states reduce unemployment if you receive severance, others don't. Check your state's rules.
When Do I Pay Taxes on Severance?
Year received: Severance is taxable in the year you receive it, not the year you're terminated (if different).
Bottom Line: Master Severance Pay Taxes
Severance pay is taxable income, but understanding the tax rules helps you plan for the impact.
Key Takeaways:
- Severance is taxable—ordinary income, same as regular wages
- Withholding may be high—22% supplemental rate, but actual tax depends on your bracket
- You keep most of it—even in high brackets, 60-80% after taxes
- Plan for tax impact—set aside money or plan for refund
- Check unemployment rules—severance may affect unemployment benefits
Action Steps:
- Understand: Severance is taxable income
- Calculate: Expected tax based on your situation
- Plan: Set aside money for taxes or plan for refund
- Check: How severance affects unemployment in your state
- Maximize: Deductions and credits to reduce tax
Remember: Severance pay can provide important financial support during job transition. Understand the tax impact, plan ahead, and you can maximize your after-tax severance while staying compliant.
Next Steps:
- Calculate expected tax on your severance
- Plan for tax impact (set aside money or plan for refund)
- Check how severance affects unemployment in your state
- Read our guide: "Layoffs and Taxes: What to Expect"
- Learn about: "Unemployment Benefits and Taxes"
- Consider consulting a tax professional for large severance amounts
Don't let tax surprises reduce the value of your severance pay. Understand the rules, plan ahead, and maximize your after-tax severance.