Medicare tax is deducted from every paycheck, but many people don't understand how it works, especially the additional Medicare tax for high earners. Understanding Medicare tax helps you understand your take-home pay and plan for healthcare in retirement. This guide covers the basics of Medicare tax.
What Is Medicare Tax?
Definition
Medicare tax (also called HI - Hospital Insurance tax):
- 1.45% of wages (employee share)
- No wage base (applies to all wages)
- Funds Medicare program
Purpose: Provides health insurance for people 65+ and disabled.
Part of FICA
Medicare tax is part of FICA:
- FICA = Federal Insurance Contributions Act
- Includes: Social Security (6.2%) + Medicare (1.45%)
- Total FICA: 7.65% (employee share)
You see both: On your pay stub.
Medicare Tax Rate
Employee Rate
Employee pays: 1.45% of all wages
- No wage base (unlike Social Security)
- Applies to all income
- Plus: 0.9% additional on income above thresholds
Total: 1.45% on all wages, plus 0.9% for high earners.
Employer Rate
Employer pays: 1.45% of wages (matches employee)
- Total: 2.9% (employee + employer)
You don't see employer share: But it's part of your total compensation cost.
Self-Employed Rate
Self-employed pay: 2.9% (both shares)
- On all net earnings
- Plus: 0.9% additional on income above thresholds
This is significant: Self-employed pay both shares.
Additional Medicare Tax
What Is Additional Medicare Tax?
Additional Medicare tax:
- 0.9% on income above thresholds
- Only employee pays (employer doesn't match)
- Thresholds: $200,000 (single), $250,000 (married)
This is extra: On top of regular 1.45% Medicare tax.
How It Works
Example:
- $250,000 salary (single)
- Regular Medicare: $250,000 × 1.45% = $3,625
- Additional Medicare: $50,000 × 0.9% = $450
- Total Medicare: $4,075
High earners: Pay more Medicare tax.
Withholding
Employer withholds:
- Additional Medicare tax if wages exceed threshold
- May not be enough if you have other income
- You may owe more at tax time
Plan accordingly: May need to make estimated payments.
How Medicare Tax Is Calculated
Per Paycheck
Each paycheck:
- Take gross pay
- Multiply by 1.45%
- Withhold that amount
- Plus: 0.9% on amount above threshold (if applicable)
Example:
- $5,000 paycheck
- Regular Medicare: $5,000 × 1.45% = $72.50
- If above threshold: Additional 0.9% on excess
Annual Total
At year-end:
- Total Medicare: 1.45% of all wages
- Plus additional 0.9% on income above thresholds
- Reported on W-2, Box 6
No cap: Unlike Social Security, Medicare applies to all income.
Employee vs. Self-Employed
Employees
Employees pay: 1.45% (employee share)
- Withheld from paycheck
- Employer matches 1.45%
- Total: 2.9% (but you only see 1.45%)
Plus: 0.9% additional if income above thresholds.
Self-Employed
Self-employed pay: 2.9% (both shares)
- Pay as self-employment tax
- On net earnings
- Plus: 0.9% additional if income above thresholds
This is more: Because you pay both shares.
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Medicare Benefits
What You Get
Medicare provides:
- Health insurance at age 65+
- Health insurance if disabled
- Hospital insurance (Part A)
- Medical insurance (Part B)
You pay in: To receive benefits later.
How Benefits Work
Medicare coverage:
- Part A: Hospital insurance (usually free if you paid Medicare tax)
- Part B: Medical insurance (premium required)
- Part C: Medicare Advantage (private plans)
- Part D: Prescription drug coverage
You qualify: If you paid Medicare tax (or spouse did).
Common Medicare Tax Scenarios
Scenario 1: Average Earner
Situation: $50,000 salary
Medicare tax:
- $50,000 × 1.45% = $725
- No additional tax (below threshold)
Take-home impact: $725 less per year.
Scenario 2: High Earner (Single)
Situation: $250,000 salary (single)
Medicare tax:
- Regular: $250,000 × 1.45% = $3,625
- Additional: $50,000 × 0.9% = $450
- Total: $4,075
Take-home impact: $4,075 less per year.
Scenario 3: High Earner (Married)
Situation: $300,000 salary (married, filing jointly)
Medicare tax:
- Regular: $300,000 × 1.45% = $4,350
- Additional: $50,000 × 0.9% = $450
- Total: $4,800
Take-home impact: $4,800 less per year.
Mistakes to Avoid
Mistake 1: Not Understanding Additional Medicare Tax
Problem: Don't understand additional 0.9% tax, surprised by higher Medicare tax.
Fix: Understand additional Medicare tax for high earners.
Mistake 2: Not Planning for Additional Tax
Problem: High earner, don't plan for additional Medicare tax, owe at tax time.
Fix: Understand additional tax, plan for it, adjust withholding or make estimated payments.
Mistake 3: Thinking Medicare Tax Has a Cap
Problem: Think Medicare tax is capped like Social Security, but it's not.
Fix: Understand that Medicare tax applies to all wages (no cap).
Frequently Asked Questions
How Much Is Medicare Tax?
1.45% of all wages (employee share), plus 0.9% additional on income above $200,000 (single) / $250,000 (married).
Do I Pay Medicare Tax on All Income?
Yes: Medicare tax applies to all wages (no wage base, unlike Social Security).
What Is Additional Medicare Tax?
0.9% on income above $200,000 (single) / $250,000 (married). Only employee pays (employer doesn't match).
Do Self-Employed Pay More Medicare Tax?
Yes: Self-employed pay 2.9% (both employee and employer shares), while employees only see 1.45% (employer pays other 1.45%).
What Does Medicare Tax Fund?
Medicare program: Health insurance for people 65+ and disabled.
Bottom Line: Master Medicare Tax
Medicare tax is deducted from every paycheck, and high earners pay additional tax. Understanding it helps you understand your take-home pay and plan for healthcare.
Key Takeaways:
- Rate is 1.45%—employee share, on all wages (no cap)
- Additional 0.9%—for high earners (income above $200,000 single / $250,000 married)
- No wage base—unlike Social Security, applies to all income
- Self-employed pay 2.9%—both shares (employee + employer)
- Funds Medicare—health insurance for 65+ and disabled
Action Steps:
- Understand: Medicare tax rate (1.45% on all, plus 0.9% for high earners)
- Check: Your pay stub to see Medicare tax
- Know: Additional tax thresholds ($200,000 single / $250,000 married)
- Plan: For Medicare tax in your budget
- Understand: That it funds important healthcare benefits
Remember: Medicare tax funds important healthcare programs. Understanding it helps you understand your take-home pay and plan for healthcare in retirement.
Next Steps:
- Understand Medicare tax on your pay stub
- Know additional tax thresholds
- Understand that it applies to all income (no cap)
- Read our guide: "Payroll Taxes Explained"
- Learn about: "Additional Medicare Tax Explained"
- Plan for Medicare tax in your budget
Don't be confused by Medicare tax. Understand the rate, additional tax for high earners, and how it works.