Primary result
Annual take-home
Net pay
—
State tax stays at zero unless you enter a custom planning value.
Payroll
Estimate take-home pay in Nevada where there is no state individual income tax.
Primary result
Annual take-home
Net pay
—
State tax stays at zero unless you enter a custom planning value.
Monthly
—
Biweekly
—
State tax
—
No state income tax
Yes
Nevada paycheck planning is simpler than most states because there is no individual state income tax. That changes the cash-flow math immediately: the paycheck estimate mostly comes down to federal withholding, FICA, and any custom planning deductions you choose to model. If you are comparing job offers in Las Vegas, Reno, Henderson, or anywhere else in the state, the first thing you want to know is how much of the salary survives into take-home pay. This calculator answers that directly.
The niche vocabulary here is federal withholding, FICA, net pay, and take-home pay. The important concept is that a state with no income tax has a shallower deduction stack, so the gross-to-net gap is usually smaller than in states with progressive income tax brackets.
| Line item | Default | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| State tax | 0% | Nevada has no individual state income tax |
| Federal | Editable | Your federal withholding assumption |
| FICA | Editable | Social Security and Medicare |
An HR manager can use the calculator to communicate pay estimates without overpromising. A job seeker can compare offers on a true after-tax basis. A household can use the number to decide whether rent, transportation, and savings targets are realistic at the salary being discussed.
Because Nevada has no state income tax, the state-tax line should not silently disappear. Showing it as zero makes the logic explicit and prevents confusion when a user compares the result to a paycheck from another state.
That clarity is what turns a salary into a usable budget number.
Not at the state individual income-tax level, which is why the state-tax line stays at zero in the calculator.
Because Social Security and Medicare still reduce take-home pay.
Yes. Payroll estimates depend on your assumptions, so the calculator keeps federal and FICA editable.
It is a planning estimate. Real paychecks can differ because of benefits, pretax deductions, and local payroll specifics.