Texas calculator

Texas Dual Scenario Hourly Paycheck Calculator

Choose a state-specific dual scenario hourly calculator to compare two hourly wage, overtime, or deduction setups before you run payroll or accept a schedule change. Texas does not tax wage income, so federal withholding and FICA usually drive the paycheck estimate.

Dual Hourly Calculator
Compare two paycheck setups side by side without leaving the same state route.

1. Shared setup

Scenario A

Model a different rate, shift mix, or overtime setup.

Scenario B

Model a different rate, shift mix, or overtime setup.

Included in this comparison

Both scenarios use the same state, filing status, and pay frequency so the net-pay difference stays easy to read.

Texas payroll guide

Understand the payroll details behind this Texas dual hourly calculator

This page combines the working calculator with state-specific payroll context so you can review withholding assumptions, payroll programs, and common paycheck questions without leaving the route.

Texas dual hourly paycheck comparison guide

Use this Texas dual hourly paycheck calculator to estimate take-home pay with federal withholding, FICA, deductions, and the state payroll factors that matter in Texas.

Texas does not tax wage income, so federal withholding and FICA usually drive the paycheck estimate.

Texas payroll factors at a glance

  • Texas does not currently add a state wage income tax layer in this calculator
  • Modeled supplemental wage rate: base state rate
  • No separate disability-style employee withholding is modeled here
  • No separate paid leave contribution is modeled here
  • State unemployment context benchmark: 2.70%
  • Current minimum wage in the state profile: $7.25

How Texas dual hourly calculator estimates work

The calculator begins with the gross-pay setup for the payroll run, then layers in federal income tax withholding, Social Security, Medicare, and the state payroll factors tied to Texas.

For hourly payroll, gross pay starts with the hourly rate multiplied by hours worked, then overtime and other taxable earnings are layered in before taxes are calculated.

Working across state lines

Texas has no state income tax, so federal withholding usually drives take-home pay changes unless you add local or custom deduction inputs.

If an employee lives in Texas but works somewhere else, or works in Texas while living elsewhere, residency, work-state rules, and local taxes can all change the final result. This page is best used as a planning estimate before confirming the live payroll setup.

Texas Dual Hourly Calculator

Short answers about withholding, payroll programs, gross pay, and take-home pay for Texas.

More Texas resources

Keep exploring calculators and payroll guides for Texas.

The calculators on this website are provided by HyprDev LLC and are designed to provide general guidance and estimates. These calculators should not be relied upon for accuracy, such as to calculate exact taxes, payroll or other financial data. Neither these calculators nor the providers and affiliates thereof are providing tax or legal advice. You should refer to a professional adviser or accountant regarding any specific requirements or concerns.