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Salary Calculator FAQ

Clear answers about hourly pay, annual pay, deductions, and take-home estimates.

Read these answers to understand the assumptions behind gross-to-net and salary conversion estimates.

Key takeaway

Gross pay and take-home pay can differ a lot after taxes and benefits.

Key takeaway

Hourly, monthly, and annual views are useful for different decisions.

Key takeaway

Location and tax treatment change take-home estimates.

Most common questions

How much of my salary do I actually take home?

Typically 70-80% of gross salary after taxes and deductions. Deductions include: Federal taxes (10-37%), state taxes (0-13%), Social Security (6.2%), Medicare (1.45%), health insurance, 401k contributions. Higher earners keep less due to progressive tax brackets.

What's the difference between salary and hourly pay?

Salary: Fixed annual amount, typically exempt from overtime, benefits included, predictable income. Hourly: Paid per hour worked, overtime eligible (1.5x after 40 hours), benefits may vary, income fluctuates with hours. Salary often better for career advancement and stability.

How do I negotiate salary effectively?

Research market rates (Glassdoor, PayScale, industry reports), document achievements, practice the pitch, and consider total compensation beyond base salary. Common negotiation examples compare 10-20% increase scenarios with clear justification.

What benefits should I value in total compensation?

Health insurance ($500-1500/month value), 401k match (free money), paid time off, flexible work arrangements, professional development, stock options. Benefits can add 20-40% to base salary value. Sometimes lower salary with great benefits beats higher salary with poor benefits.

How often should I expect raises?

Annual merit increases: 2-5% for good performance. Promotions: 10-20% increase. Job changes: 10-30% increase (biggest raises). Cost of living adjustments: 2-3%. If no raise in 2+ years, consider discussing with manager or exploring other opportunities.

Salary vs hourly - what are the differences?

Salary typically offers: predictable income, career advancement opportunities, comprehensive benefits, management track. Hourly typically provides: overtime pay, work-life balance, flexibility, payment for exact time worked. Consider your career goals and lifestyle preferences.

How do I calculate if a job offer is worth it?

Compare total compensation: base salary + benefits value + bonus potential + stock options + work-life balance value. Consider: commute costs, relocation expenses, career growth potential, company stability. Use our calculator to convert between salary and hourly to compare different offer structures.

What are typical salary ranges by experience?

Entry level (0-2 years): $35K-60K depending on field/location. Mid-level (3-7 years): $50K-100K. Senior level (8+ years): $80K-150K+. Management: $100K-200K+. Research your specific role, location, and industry. High-cost areas pay 20-50% more but have higher living costs.

Related questions

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