Rain
64°
Crystal Lake, IL
Rain|Forecast »

New increase in FICA tax hitting paychecks

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

You've probably noticed by now your net pay has gone down as you received your first paychecks of 2013.

That's because a two-year payroll tax holiday expired on Dec. 31,and was not renewed as part of the fiscal cliff deal.

Every worker will see a 2 percent FICA tax increase now that the rate has reverted from 4.2 percent to 6.2 percent. The increase in the FICA tax, which is deducted from workers' paychecks, will cause take-home pay to decrease by $600 per year for workers with an annual income of $30,000. Workers with an annual income of $50,000 will bring home $1,000 less per year, while workers with an annual income of $100,000 will bring home $2,000 less per year.

"While two percent may sound like a modest increase, the toll it takes on discretionary spending is much greater," said Barry Habib, chief market strategist at Residential Finance Corp.

Consider a couple, each of whom earns $45,000 per year. They will likely pay $26,000 in taxes, and their living expenses may be in the range of $46,000 a year. That leaves a couple earning $90,000 in combined income with $18,000 in discretionary spending.

A 2 percent tax hike resulting in $1,800 less per year will feel more like a 10 percent reduction, as they're losing 10 percent of their discretionary income, Habib said in a press release.

Comments

About the Author

Chris Cashman

Business Editor

Northwest Herald

Crystal Lake, IL

ccashman@shawmedia.com

Chris has more than 20 years experience in journalism. He spent 11 years running the newsroom of the Lake County News-Sun, first as managing editor and then editor. He wrote news, feature and business stories as a correspondent and then staff writer for the Northwest Herald before being named as business editor in April.

Follow this blog:

Get updates from this blog when they happen by following it on Twitter or using its RSS feed.


Reader Poll

Do you feel you are saving enough for retirement?

Yes
No
Already retired