Asking for a raise is nerve-wracking enough without worrying about taxes. Understanding how raises affect your taxes and planning ahead can help you make informed decisions and avoid surprises. This guide explains tax planning before asking for a raise.
How Raises Affect Your Taxes
More Income = More Tax
When you get a raise:
- Your income increases
- You pay more tax
- But you still keep most of the raise (60-80%+ after taxes)
The math: Even in high brackets, you keep most of the raise.
Tax Bracket Impact
Raises may push you into higher bracket:
- Only portion above threshold is taxed at higher rate
- You still keep most of raise
- Don't let "higher bracket" fear stop you
Example:
- Before: $47,000 (top of 12% bracket)
- After: $57,000
- Tax on raise: Mix of 12% and 22%
- You keep: ~80% after taxes
Tax Bracket Considerations
Understanding Marginal Brackets
Tax brackets are marginal:
- You only pay higher rate on income above threshold
- Not all income at higher rate
- You still keep most of raise
Don't fear brackets: You still come out ahead.
The "Tax Bracket Fear" Myth
Myth: "If I get a raise and go into higher bracket, all my income will be taxed at higher rate"
Reality: Only income above threshold is taxed at higher rate. You still keep most of raise.
Don't reject raises: You still come out ahead financially.
Withholding Adjustments
Why Adjust W-4 After Raise
After getting raise:
- Income increases
- Withholding may not adjust enough
- May under-withhold
- Result: Tax bill at tax time
Solution: Adjust W-4 after raise.
How to Adjust
Use IRS Tax Withholding Estimator:
- Enter new income amount
- Get W-4 recommendations
- Adjust W-4 accordingly
This ensures: Accurate withholding for the year.
Planning for Tax Impact
Calculate Expected Tax
Before asking for raise:
- Calculate current tax
- Estimate tax with raise
- Understand tax impact
- Plan accordingly
This helps: You understand true value of raise.
Plan for Withholding
After getting raise:
- Adjust W-4
- Ensure adequate withholding
- Avoid tax bills
This prevents: Surprises at tax time.
Try the tool
Strategies to Minimize Tax Impact
Strategy 1: Maximize Retirement Contributions
Increase 401(k) contributions:
- Pre-tax contributions reduce taxable income
- Significant tax savings
- Build retirement savings
Example:
- Raise: $10,000
- 401(k) contribution: $5,000
- Taxable income increase: $5,000 (instead of $10,000)
- Tax savings: ~$1,200 (if in 24% bracket)
Strategy 2: Use Pre-Tax Benefits
Maximize pre-tax benefits:
- Health insurance
- HSA contributions
- FSA contributions
- Other pre-tax benefits
This reduces: Taxable income.
Strategy 3: Plan Timing
If possible (rarely):
- Time raise for lower-income year
- But: Usually can't control timing
Reality: Usually not worth worrying about.
Common Raise Tax Scenarios
Scenario 1: Small Raise
Situation: $3,000 raise
Tax impact:
- Tax: ~$720 (if in 24% bracket)
- You keep: ~$2,280 (76%)
Action: Adjust W-4, ensure adequate withholding.
Scenario 2: Moderate Raise
Situation: $10,000 raise
Tax impact:
- Tax: ~$2,400 (if in 24% bracket)
- You keep: ~$7,600 (76%)
Action: Adjust W-4, may need to increase withholding.
Scenario 3: Large Raise
Situation: $20,000 raise
Tax impact:
- Tax: ~$5,200 (mix of brackets)
- You keep: ~$14,800 (74%)
Action: Adjust W-4 significantly, or make estimated payments.
Scenario 4: Raise Pushes Into Higher Bracket
Situation: Raise pushes from 12% to 22% bracket
Tax impact:
- Only portion above threshold at 22%
- You still keep most of raise
- Don't fear bracket change
Action: Adjust W-4, understand you still come out ahead.
Mistakes to Avoid
Mistake 1: Rejecting Raise Due to Taxes
Problem: Reject raise because worried about taxes, miss opportunity.
Fix: Understand you still keep 60-80%+ of raise, don't reject raises.
Mistake 2: Not Adjusting W-4
Problem: Don't adjust W-4 after raise, under-withhold, owe tax.
Fix: Adjust W-4 after raise, use IRS estimator.
Mistake 3: Not Planning for Tax Impact
Problem: Don't plan for tax on raise, surprised by tax bill.
Fix: Calculate expected tax, adjust withholding, plan ahead.
Frequently Asked Questions
Will I Pay More Tax If I Get a Raise?
Yes: More income = more tax. But you still keep 60-80%+ of the raise after taxes.
Should I Reject a Raise to Avoid Higher Taxes?
No: You still keep most of the raise (60-80%+ after taxes). Don't let tax concerns stop you from accepting raises.
Do I Need to Adjust My W-4 After a Raise?
Recommended: Yes, you should adjust W-4 after a raise to ensure accurate withholding. Use IRS Tax Withholding Estimator.
Will a Raise Push Me Into a Higher Tax Bracket?
Possibly: But only the portion above the threshold is taxed at higher rate. You still keep most of the raise.
How Much Tax Will I Pay on a Raise?
Depends on: Your tax bracket. Generally 12-37% for income tax, plus FICA taxes. You keep 60-80%+ after all taxes.
Bottom Line: Plan for Raise Taxes
Raises increase your taxes, but you still keep most of the raise. Planning ahead helps you avoid surprises.
Key Takeaways:
- You keep most of raise—60-80%+ after taxes, even in high brackets
- Adjust W-4 after raise—ensure accurate withholding
- Brackets are marginal—only portion above threshold at higher rate
- Don't reject raises—you still come out ahead financially
- Plan ahead—calculate expected tax, adjust withholding
Action Steps:
- Understand: You still keep most of raise after taxes
- Calculate: Expected tax on raise
- Adjust: W-4 after raise, use IRS estimator
- Maximize: Retirement contributions to reduce taxable income
- Don't worry: About "higher bracket" (you still come out ahead)
Remember: Raises are good news. You keep most of the raise after taxes. Just adjust your withholding to avoid surprises, and you'll be fine.
Next Steps:
- Understand tax impact of raises
- Adjust W-4 after getting raise
- Maximize retirement contributions
- Read our guide: "Pay Raises and Unexpected Tax Bills"
- Learn about: "Negotiating Salary With Taxes in Mind"
- Use IRS Tax Withholding Estimator
Don't let tax concerns stop you from asking for raises. Understand the tax impact, plan ahead, and maximize your income.