$200,000 in Austin After Taxes (2026)
$200k base in Austin tech is common for senior engineers, designers, and product managers. With no state income tax, take-home for a single filer runs near $145,500 — and Austin's housing affordability finally starts to match the income at this level.
Where this salary lands you
$200k supports a $700k–$800k home purchase in good Austin neighborhoods (Crestview, Brentwood, North Loop, Allandale) or a high-end rental anywhere in the metro. RSUs and bonuses on top routinely push total comp to $300k–$450k for Austin tech veterans.
Federal & FICA breakdown
- Federal income tax (single): $36,953
- Social Security (6.2% to wage base): $11,067
- Medicare (1.45% + any 0.9% surtax): $2,900
- Total federal/payroll taxes: $50,920
- Take-home (single): $149,080
- Per biweekly paycheck (approx): $5,734
32% federal marginal bracket; additional Medicare 0.9% kicks in above $200k single. Plan for under-withholding on supplemental wages.
Living on this salary in Austin
Austin’s cost of living index is approximately 119 (U.S. average = 100), with a median home price near $565,000 and an effective property tax rate of 1.97%. See our full Austin city profile for neighborhood-level context.
Run your own number
Adjust filing status, 401(k), and HSA contributions to model your real situation.
Estimates use 2026 projected federal brackets, the standard deduction for your filing status, and current FICA rates. Texas has no state income tax, so your gross is not reduced by any state withholding.
Frequently asked questions
What's the take-home on $200,000 in Texas?
For a single filer with no pre-tax contributions, take-home is approximately $149,080 per year — about $5,734 biweekly. Married filing jointly is higher due to wider brackets and a larger standard deduction.
Does this include state income tax?
Texas has no state income tax. The only deductions on your $200,000 are federal income tax, Social Security (6.2% up to the wage base), and Medicare (1.45% plus the 0.9% additional Medicare above thresholds).
How does this compare to California or New York?
California taxes wages 1%–13.3% progressively, plus 1.1% SDI. New York is 4%–10.9%, plus NYC's local tax for residents. Texas at $0 means meaningful savings — see the comparison tool above.
Does the take-home change if I contribute to a 401(k)?
Yes. Pre-tax 401(k) lowers your federal taxable income (saving roughly your marginal rate × contribution) but does not affect FICA. HSA contributions lower both. Use the calculator above with contributions filled in for personalized math.