2026 federal tax, single, full-time

$18 an hour biweekly,
after taxes in 2026

$18/hour at 40 hours/week is $1,440 gross every two weeks. Federal-only biweekly take-home: $1,241. Above every 2026 state minimum wage, just short of the single-adult living-wage line in most metros. Below: every state, the math, and what $37,440/year buys.

Federal-only biweekly, single, 2026

$1,241

biweekly take-home, no state tax

$1440 biweekly gross. $2,689 monthly. $32,263 annual. Effective 13.8%.

Biweekly gross$1440
Federal income tax($89)
Social Security 6.2%($89)
Medicare 1.45%($21)
Biweekly take-home$1,241
Tax estimate, not tax advice

Walk-through

How $18/hour becomes $1,241 biweekly net

Step 1: Annualise to $37,440

$18/hour times 40 hours/week times 52 weeks/year is $37,440 gross. The 2,080-hour annualisation is the federal standard. If you work fewer hours, scale proportionally: 35 hours/week is $32,760, 30 hours/week is $28,080.

Step 2: Standard deduction and federal brackets

The 2026 single standard deduction is $16,100. Subtracting from $$37,440 leaves $$21,340 of taxable income. The first $12,400 is taxed at 10% ($1,240). The remaining $$8,940 is taxed at 12% ($$1,073). Total federal income tax: $$2,313 per year, $$89 biweekly.

At $18/hour annualised, you remain inside the 12% federal bracket. The 22% bracket starts at $50,400 of taxable income; you have $$21,340. Source: IRS Publication 15-T (2026).

Step 3: FICA

Social Security 6.2% on $37,440 is $$2,321. Medicare 1.45% on $37,440 is $$543. Total FICA: $$2,864 annually, $$110 per paycheck.

Step 4: Annual net divided by 26 paychecks

Annual federal-only net: $$32,263. Divided by 26 biweekly pay periods: $1,241 per paycheck. Roughly $$15.51 per hour worked, after federal tax and FICA.

By state

$18/hour biweekly take-home, ranked by state

Single filer, 40 hours/week, 2026.

StateBiweeklyMonthlyAnnual
AlaskaNo tax$1,241$2,689$32,263
FloridaNo tax$1,241$2,689$32,263
NevadaNo tax$1,241$2,689$32,263
New HampshireNo tax$1,241$2,689$32,263
North Dakota$1,241$2,689$32,263
Ohio$1,241$2,689$32,263
South DakotaNo tax$1,241$2,689$32,263
TennesseeNo tax$1,241$2,689$32,263
TexasNo tax$1,241$2,689$32,263
WyomingNo tax$1,241$2,689$32,263
South Carolina$1,224$2,651$31,816
New Jersey$1,223$2,650$31,802
WashingtonNo tax$1,221$2,645$31,744
West Virginia$1,221$2,644$31,733
Indiana$1,217$2,636$31,634
New Mexico$1,216$2,635$31,620
Pennsylvania$1,216$2,634$31,608
Arizona$1,213$2,628$31,536
Louisiana$1,212$2,626$31,515
Iowa$1,210$2,621$31,452
Missouri$1,208$2,618$31,420
Wisconsin$1,206$2,614$31,366
Connecticut$1,206$2,614$31,366
Michigan$1,206$2,613$31,356
Utah$1,204$2,609$31,303
North Carolina$1,203$2,606$31,278
Vermont$1,203$2,605$31,265
Nebraska$1,202$2,605$31,263
Montana$1,202$2,605$31,260
Illinois$1,200$2,601$31,207
District of Columbia$1,199$2,599$31,183
Colorado$1,198$2,597$31,159
California$1,198$2,595$31,136
Idaho$1,197$2,594$31,132
Oklahoma$1,195$2,590$31,079
Kentucky$1,195$2,589$31,070
Massachusetts$1,193$2,585$31,024
Georgia$1,192$2,583$30,994
Arkansas$1,192$2,582$30,987
Minnesota$1,189$2,576$30,914
Virginia$1,187$2,573$30,871
Rhode Island$1,187$2,572$30,867
Mississippi$1,187$2,571$30,857
Maine$1,186$2,570$30,838
Delaware$1,183$2,563$30,752
Maryland$1,181$2,558$30,696
New York$1,180$2,556$30,677
Hawaii$1,177$2,550$30,602
Alabama$1,176$2,548$30,581
Kansas$1,172$2,539$30,462
Oregon$1,128$2,445$29,336

Living-wage context

$18/hour and the basic-needs threshold

The MIT Living Wage Calculator (livingwage.mit.edu) compiles county-level estimates of the wage required to cover basic needs: food, housing, healthcare, childcare, transportation, taxes, and other necessities. For a single adult with no children in 2026, the calculator typically reports $20-$25/hour as the living-wage threshold across most US counties. $18/hour sits just under that in most mid-cost areas and comfortably under it in high-cost coastal metros.

$18/hour annualised is $37,440. Federal-only monthly take-home is $$2,689. The 30%-of-net-income rule on housing puts your sustainable rent at about $$807/month. That works in low- and mid-cost metros (Memphis, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, smaller Sun Belt cities) but is below median one-bedroom rent in expensive coastal metros (San Francisco, NYC, Boston, Seattle, San Diego), where rent commonly exceeds $2,000/month. Many $18/hour workers in expensive metros share with roommates, live with family, or commute from cheaper outer suburbs.

$18/hour clears the federal poverty line comfortably as a single earner. Per HHS, the 2026 poverty guideline is $15,960 for a single-person household and $21,640 for a household of two; $18/hour annualised ($37,440) is well above both. The poverty line, though, is a much lower bar than a living wage: it measures a minimum floor, not the income needed to cover typical basic needs in a given county.

Customise

Try a different rate or state

$

Detected as hourly rate. Annual equivalent: $37,440

Your Take-Home Pay

$2,689/mo

Take Home86.2%
Federal Tax6.2%
Social Security6.2%
Medicare1.5%
Gross Annual Salary$37,440
Standard Deduction (Single)-$16,100
Taxable Income$21,340

Federal Income Tax-$2,313
10% bracket ($0 - $12,400)-$1,240
12% bracket ($12,400 - $50,400)-$1,073

Social Security (6.2%)-$2,321
Medicare (1.45%)-$543
Total FICA-$2,864

Total Tax-$5,177
Effective Tax Rate13.8%
Marginal Tax Rate12%

Annual Take-Home Pay$32,263
Monthly$2,689
Biweekly (26 paychecks)$1,241
Weekly$620

Sources

Where the 2026 numbers come from

Frequently Asked Questions

How much is $18 an hour biweekly after taxes?+
$18/hour at 40 hours/week is $1,440 gross every two weeks (80 hours x $18). After federal income tax and FICA, biweekly take-home is approximately $1,241 for a single filer in 2026, federal-only. State tax further reduces this in most states. In a no-tax state like Texas or Florida, your biweekly deposit equals the federal-only $1,241. In California, expect $1,198 after state tax.
Is $18 an hour above minimum wage in 2026?+
Yes, everywhere. The federal minimum wage has been $7.25/hour since 2009, so $18/hour is about 2.5x federal minimum. $18/hour also clears every US state minimum wage in 2026 (the highest state minimums, in Washington and downstate New York, sit under $18). Some high-cost cities (Seattle, Denver, several California municipalities) set local minimum wages at or above $18, so in those places $18/hour is at or near the legal floor rather than above it. Always check your city and state minimum at dol.gov.
What is $18 an hour annually?+
$18/hour at 2,080 hours/year is $37,440 per year gross. After federal tax ($2,313 after the $16,100 single standard deduction) and FICA ($2,864), federal-only annual take-home is $32,263.
What is $18 an hour monthly after taxes?+
Federal-only monthly take-home on $18/hour full-time is approximately $2,689. State tax in most states reduces this by $0 to about $75 per month at this income level.
Is $18 an hour a living wage?+
Just below the threshold in most metros. The MIT Living Wage Calculator estimates a single adult with no children needs roughly $20-$25/hour in most US counties to cover basic needs (housing, food, transport, healthcare, taxes). $18/hour lands a little under that in most mid-cost areas and well under it in high-cost coastal metros, where the single-adult living-wage threshold is closer to $25-$32/hour. In lower-cost rural counties, $18/hour can meet or exceed the basic-needs benchmark. With dependents the threshold roughly doubles because childcare becomes the largest expense.
Is $18/hour above the median wage?+
Below the US median for full-time workers. Per BLS, median usual weekly earnings for the 121.0 million full-time wage and salary workers were $1,235 in the first quarter of 2026, equivalent to $30.88/hour at 40 hours/week or $64,220 annualised. $18/hour annualises to $37,440, well below that median. Source: BLS Usual Weekly Earnings, Q1 2026.
What if I work 35 hours instead of 40?+
At 35 hours/week, biweekly gross is $18 x 70 hours = $1,260 instead of $1,440, and annual gross drops to $32,760. Federal income tax and FICA scale roughly proportionally, so biweekly take-home falls in step. Many part-time retail, hospitality, and care roles fall in this 30-35 hour band, so confirm your scheduled weekly hours before assuming the full 80-hour biweekly figure.