Michigan Paycheck Calculator

Michigan Take-Home Pay
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Michigan's flat 4.25% — confirmed for 2026 by MI Treasury. Salary, hourly, or 1099. Detroit city tax option. Instant results, no sign-up.

⚡ Instant Results 📊 Salary + Hourly + 1099 🎁 Bonus Calculator 📈 Income Comparison Table ✅ 2026 IRS + MI Treasury Rates
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Michigan Paycheck Calculator
MI 4.25% · Local Taxes
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Detroit resident?
Detroit adds 2.4% local income tax. Turn on if you live inside city limits.
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Bonus Calculator — Optional
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Federal Income Tax
0% effective
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MI State Tax
4.25% flat
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Social Security
6.2% up to $184,500
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Medicare
1.45% (+ 0.9% over $200K)
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401k, health ins...
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Take-Home Federal MI State Social Security Medicare
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Michigan vs. Illinois & Indiana — 2026

Michigan's 4.25% flat rate sits below Illinois (4.95%) but above Indiana (2.95%). On a $65,000 salary, here's how Michigan compares to its neighbor Illinois:

🚗 Michigan — 4.25%
$50,150
Annual take-home (est.)
🏙️ Illinois — 4.95%
$49,600
Annual take-home (est.)

Michigan workers keep roughly $550 more per year than identical filers in Illinois at $65K. Detroit residents paying the 2.4% city tax take home less — closer to $48,600 at this salary. Indiana's lower 2.95% rate beats both, but Michigan's auto, manufacturing, and tech employers in metro Detroit and Grand Rapids often pay enough more to offset the gap. Use the Detroit toggle above to see exactly how the city tax changes your bottom line.

2026 Michigan Tax Summary

ItemRate / AmountNotes
MI State Income Tax4.25% flatConfirmed for 2026 — flat rate, same since 2012 (briefly 4.05% in 2023)
Personal Exemption$5,800/personPer taxpayer and qualifying dependent; reduces taxable income
Detroit City Tax2.4%Residents only; non-residents working in Detroit pay 1.2%
Other MI City Taxes1%–1.5%Grand Rapids 1.5%, Lansing/Flint ~1%; 24 cities total
Social SecurityNot taxedMichigan fully exempts all Social Security benefits
Military RetirementFully exemptAll military pension income exempt in Michigan
SE Tax (1099 workers)15.3%On 92.35% of net profit; 50% deductible
Bonus Withholding22% federal + 4.25% MISupplemental method (under $1M)

Frequently Asked Questions

QWhat is Michigan's income tax rate for 2026?
Michigan has a flat 4.25% state income tax for 2026 — the same rate it has used since 2012 (it briefly dipped to 4.05% in 2023 due to a revenue trigger, then returned to 4.25%). Every taxpayer gets a $5,800 personal exemption per person and per dependent, which is subtracted from income before the 4.25% is applied. Michigan does not have graduated brackets.
QHow is 1099 income taxed differently in Michigan?
1099 contractors pay the same 4.25% MI state tax, plus 15.3% self-employment tax on 92.35% of net profit. You can deduct 50% of the SE tax before calculating income tax. Detroit-based contractors also owe the 2.4% city tax on net earnings. Quarterly estimated payments are required — use Form MI-1040ES.
QHow much is Detroit's city income tax?
Detroit residents pay 2.4% on all income; non-residents who work in Detroit pay 1.2% on income earned in the city. A Detroit resident therefore pays 4.25% state + 2.4% city = 6.65% combined before federal tax. Use the Detroit toggle above to add the city tax to your calculation. 23 other Michigan cities levy 1%–1.5% local income taxes.
QHow is a bonus taxed in Michigan?
Federal withholding on bonuses under $1M uses the 22% supplemental flat rate. Michigan withholds at 4.25%. FICA applies on top. Detroit residents add 2.4%. Use the bonus calculator above for your exact take-home number.
QDoes Michigan tax Social Security?
No — Michigan does not tax Social Security benefits, and military pensions are fully exempt. Other retirement income (401k, IRA, pension) follows a three-tier system based on birth year: those born before 1946 get generous exemptions, 1946–1952 get partial exemptions after age 67, and post-1952 get expanded deductions phasing in through 2026 under the "Lowering MI Costs" law.
QWhat is the take-home pay on $65,000 in Michigan?
For a single filer earning $65,000 outside Detroit with the $5,800 personal exemption and biweekly pay: approximately $50,150/year or $1,929/paycheck. Detroit residents take home roughly $48,600 due to the additional 2.4% city tax. Use the calculator above to adjust for your deductions, filing status, and city.