Many people wonder if salary and hourly employees are taxed differently. The short answer is no—both are taxed the same way. However, there are some differences in how withholding works and how overtime is handled. This guide explains the tax differences (and similarities) between salary and hourly pay.
Table of Contents
- Are Salary and Hourly Taxed Differently?
- How Salary Employees Are Taxed
- How Hourly Employees Are Taxed
- Withholding Differences
- Overtime Tax Treatment
- Pay Frequency and Taxes
- Common Salary vs Hourly Tax Scenarios
- Mistakes to Avoid
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Bottom Line: Understand Salary vs Hourly Taxes
Are Salary and Hourly Taxed Differently?
The Short Answer: No
Salary and hourly employees are taxed the same way:
- Same income tax rates (10-37% brackets)
- Same Social Security tax (6.2%)
- Same Medicare tax (1.45%)
- Same state taxes (if applicable)
The tax code doesn't distinguish between salary and hourly—it's all just "wages."
The Differences
The differences are in:
- How withholding is calculated (due to pay structure)
- How overtime is handled (hourly get overtime, salary usually don't)
- Pay frequency (may affect withholding)
But actual tax: Same for both.
How Salary Employees Are Taxed
Regular Salary
Salary employees receive:
- Fixed annual salary
- Paid in regular installments (bi-weekly, semi-monthly, monthly)
- Same amount each paycheck (usually)
Tax treatment:
- Taxed as ordinary income
- Withholding based on annualized salary
- Same tax rates as hourly
Withholding on Salary
Employer calculates withholding:
- Takes annual salary
- Divides by pay periods
- Withholds based on that amount
- Consistent from paycheck to paycheck
Example:
- Salary: $60,000/year
- Bi-weekly: $2,308 per paycheck
- Withholding: Based on $60,000 annual
- Same each paycheck
How Hourly Employees Are Taxed
Hourly Wages
Hourly employees receive:
- Hourly rate
- Paid for hours worked
- Amount varies by hours worked
Tax treatment:
- Taxed as ordinary income
- Withholding based on annualized amount (from current paycheck)
- Same tax rates as salary
Withholding on Hourly
Employer calculates withholding:
- Takes current paycheck amount
- Annualizes it (multiplies by pay periods)
- Withholds based on that annualized amount
- May vary if hours vary
Example:
- Hourly: $20/hour
- Week 1: 40 hours = $800
- Week 2: 35 hours = $700
- Withholding varies based on each paycheck
Withholding Differences
Salary: Consistent Withholding
Salary employees:
- Same paycheck amount each period
- Withholding is consistent
- Easy to predict
Benefit: Predictable, easy to plan.
Hourly: Variable Withholding
Hourly employees:
- Paycheck amount varies with hours
- Withholding varies with paycheck
- May over or under-withhold if hours vary significantly
Challenge: If hours vary a lot, withholding may not be accurate.
Example: Variable Hours
Hourly employee:
- Regular: 40 hours/week = $800/week
- Busy period: 50 hours/week = $1,000/week
- Slow period: 30 hours/week = $600/week
Withholding:
- Varies with each paycheck
- May over-withhold in busy periods (thinks you make more)
- May under-withhold in slow periods (thinks you make less)
- May balance out over year, but can be inconsistent
Solution: Adjust W-4 if hours vary significantly, or use IRS Tax Withholding Estimator.
Overtime Tax Treatment
Hourly Employees Get Overtime
Hourly employees:
- Usually eligible for overtime (1.5× rate for hours over 40)
- Overtime is taxable income
- Withholding on overtime may be higher (supplemental rate or annualized)
Tax treatment: Overtime is taxed the same as regular pay, but withholding may be higher.
Salary Employees Usually Don't Get Overtime
Salary employees:
- Usually exempt from overtime (if meet FLSA exemption tests)
- No overtime pay (even if work more than 40 hours)
- But: Still taxed on salary (same rates)
Tax treatment: Salary is taxed the same, but no overtime income.
The Overtime Tax Myth
Myth: "Overtime is taxed at a higher rate"
Reality: Overtime is taxed at the same rates as regular pay. But withholding on overtime may be higher (making it seem like higher tax), but you'll get over-withholding back.
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Pay Frequency and Taxes
How Pay Frequency Affects Withholding
More frequent pay (weekly, bi-weekly):
- More paychecks per year
- Withholding calculated more frequently
- May be more accurate (adjusts to changes faster)
Less frequent pay (monthly, semi-monthly):
- Fewer paychecks per year
- Withholding calculated less frequently
- May be less responsive to changes
But actual tax: Same regardless of pay frequency.
Example: Same Salary, Different Frequencies
$60,000 salary:
- Weekly: 52 paychecks of $1,154
- Bi-weekly: 26 paychecks of $2,308
- Monthly: 12 paychecks of $5,000
Withholding: Calculated per paycheck, but total for year should be same.
Actual tax: Same for all (based on $60,000 annual income).
Common Salary vs Hourly Tax Scenarios
Scenario 1: Same Income, Different Structures
Salary: $50,000/year, paid bi-weekly Hourly: $24/hour, 40 hours/week = $50,000/year
Tax impact: Same
- Both taxed on $50,000
- Same tax rates
- Same total tax
Difference: Withholding may vary slightly (due to calculation method), but actual tax is same.
Scenario 2: Hourly with Overtime
Hourly: $20/hour, 40 regular + 10 overtime hours/week
Tax impact:
- Regular: $800/week
- Overtime: $300/week (1.5× rate)
- Total: $1,100/week = $57,200/year
- Taxed on $57,200
Withholding: May be higher on overtime paychecks, but actual tax is based on total income.
Scenario 3: Salary with Bonus
Salary: $60,000/year + $10,000 bonus
Tax impact:
- Salary: $60,000
- Bonus: $10,000
- Total: $70,000
- Taxed on $70,000
Withholding: Bonus may be withheld at 22% supplemental rate, but actual tax is based on total income.
Scenario 4: Variable Hours (Hourly)
Hourly: $25/hour, hours vary 30-50/week
Tax impact:
- Income varies with hours
- Withholding varies with each paycheck
- Actual tax: Based on total annual income
Challenge: Withholding may not be accurate if hours vary significantly.
Mistakes to Avoid
Mistake 1: Thinking Salary and Hourly Are Taxed Differently
Problem: Think salary is taxed at different rate, don't understand they're the same.
Fix: Understand that salary and hourly are taxed the same way—both are wages.
Mistake 2: Not Adjusting W-4 for Variable Hours
Problem: Hours vary significantly, don't adjust W-4, withholding is inaccurate.
Fix: Adjust W-4 if hours vary significantly, or use IRS Tax Withholding Estimator.
Mistake 3: Thinking Overtime Is Taxed More
Problem: Think overtime is taxed at higher rate, avoid working overtime.
Fix: Understand overtime is taxed the same as regular pay, withholding may be higher but you'll get it back.
Mistake 4: Not Understanding Withholding Differences
Problem: Don't understand why withholding varies, think tax rates are different.
Fix: Understand that withholding is just an estimate, actual tax is based on total income.
Frequently Asked Questions
Are Salary and Hourly Employees Taxed Differently?
No: Both are taxed the same way—same income tax rates, same FICA taxes, same state taxes.
Why Does My Withholding Vary (Hourly)?
Because your paycheck varies: Withholding is calculated on each paycheck, so if hours vary, withholding varies. But actual tax is based on total annual income.
Is Overtime Taxed at a Higher Rate?
No: Overtime is taxed at the same rates as regular pay. But withholding on overtime may be higher (making it seem like higher tax), but you'll get over-withholding back.
Does Pay Frequency Affect Taxes?
No: Pay frequency doesn't affect actual tax (based on annual income). But it may affect withholding calculation (more frequent = more calculations).
Should I Adjust My W-4 If My Hours Vary?
Yes: If your hours vary significantly, you may want to adjust W-4 or use IRS Tax Withholding Estimator to ensure accurate withholding.
Bottom Line: Understand Salary vs Hourly Taxes
Salary and hourly employees are taxed the same way, but there are differences in withholding and how overtime is handled.
Key Takeaways:
- Tax rates are the same—salary and hourly are both wages, taxed the same
- Withholding may differ—due to pay structure and variability
- Overtime is same tax—but hourly get overtime, salary usually don't
- Adjust W-4 if needed—especially if hours vary significantly
- Actual tax is based on total income—not individual paychecks
Action Steps:
- Understand: Salary and hourly are taxed the same
- Track: Your total annual income (regardless of pay structure)
- Adjust: W-4 if hours vary significantly
- Don't worry: About withholding variations (actual tax is based on total income)
- Use IRS estimator: To ensure accurate withholding
Remember: Whether you're salary or hourly, your taxes work the same way. Understand your total income, adjust withholding if needed, and you'll be fine.
Next Steps:
- Understand that salary and hourly are taxed the same
- Track your total annual income
- Adjust W-4 if your hours vary significantly
- Read our guide: "How Overtime Is Really Taxed"
- Learn about: "Why Your Employer Withholding Is Wrong"
- Use IRS Tax Withholding Estimator to check your withholding
Don't let pay structure confusion affect your tax planning. Understand that salary and hourly are taxed the same, and focus on your total income and withholding accuracy.