Kearney, NE Paycheck Calculator 2026
Estimate your take-home pay in Kearney, Nebraska, after federal, state, FICA, and any Kearney-specific local wage taxes.
About paychecks in Kearney
Kearney is one of the largest cities in Nebraska, with a population of about 34,260 and a median household income of $63,180. University town and I-80 logistics center. That economic mix drives the range of typical paycheck sizes in Kearney, but every worker sees the same three federal deductions on their pay stub — federal income tax, Social Security (6.2% up to $184,500), and Medicare (1.45%) — before Nebraska-specific rules apply.
Nebraska statewide rules that apply in Kearney
How paychecks work in Nebraska
Kearney, Nebraska residents follow the same statewide payroll rules as everyone else in Nebraska, with the additional local considerations noted below. Every paycheck issued in Nebraska has three federal withholdings — federal income tax, Social Security, and Medicare — followed by Nebraska's own withholding rules and any local wage tax that applies where you work. Nebraska has a progressive state income tax with a top marginal rate of 5.20%. Nebraska's economy is centered on agriculture, insurance and financial services in Omaha, and freight rail.
This page explains, step by step, how gross wages become take-home pay in Nebraska: what the federal government takes, what the state of Nebraska takes, which cities and localities add their own withholding, and how minimum wage, overtime, and pay-frequency rules interact with common benefits like 401(k) contributions and pre-tax health premiums.
Federal taxes on Nebraska paychecks
Regardless of where you live, the IRS applies the same federal income tax brackets, standard deduction, and FICA contributions. For 2026, the federal tax brackets range from 10% on the first ~$12,400 of taxable income (single) up to 37% on income above roughly $626,000. Most workers land in the 12%, 22%, or 24% brackets after subtracting the $16,100 single (or $32,200 married-jointly) standard deduction.
On top of federal income tax, every Nebraska employee pays FICA: 6.2% Social Security up to a $184,500 wage base, plus 1.45% Medicare on all wages, with an additional 0.9% Medicare surtax on wages over $200,000 (single). Employers match Social Security and Medicare dollar-for-dollar; you only see your half on the stub.
Nebraska state income tax
Nebraska uses 4 tax brackets ranging from 2.46% on the first dollars of taxable income up to 5.20% on income above $38,999. The state standard deduction is $8,300 single / $16,600 married.
The top marginal bracket of 5.20% kicks in only after the income thresholds shown above; most Nebraska residents effectively pay a lower blended rate because the first dollars of income are taxed at the lower brackets, and the state standard deduction reduce the amount actually taxed.
Local wage taxes in Nebraska
No local income taxes on wages.
FICA: Social Security and Medicare
Social Security is the biggest single deduction most middle-income Nebraska workers see besides federal income tax. It funds retirement, disability, and survivor benefits, and applies at 6.2% until you have earned $184,500 for the year (2026). If you earn more than that, Social Security stops for the remainder of the year — a highly visible bump in take-home pay for high earners late in the calendar year.
Medicare has no cap. All wages are hit at 1.45%, and an extra 0.9% Additional Medicare Tax applies to any wages above $200,000 (single) or $250,000 (married filing jointly). Employers begin withholding the additional 0.9% the pay period you cross $200,000, whether or not you'll actually owe it after year-end.
Overtime rules for Nebraska employees
Follows federal FLSA: 1.5x for hours over 40/week.
Overtime pay itself is taxed exactly the same way as regular wages — there is no special overtime tax rate. But because a paycheck with lots of overtime looks temporarily much larger, employer withholding formulas may withhold a higher percentage than your true annual rate. That withholding is reconciled at tax time via your federal 1040 and Nebraska state return, so if you consistently work overtime you may want to review your W-4 to avoid over-withholding.
Minimum wage in Nebraska
The current minimum wage in Nebraska is $13.50 per hour. Nebraska's minimum wage is scheduled to reach $15 in 2026 following a 2022 ballot measure. At 40 hours per week and 52 weeks per year, that equates to roughly $28,080 in gross annual wages before overtime.
Pay frequency rules
On regular paydays designated in advance; state law does not require a specific frequency. Most private-sector employees in Nebraska are paid either weekly or bi-weekly, with salaried professionals often on a semi-monthly schedule. Choosing the right pay-frequency assumption is important when using the calculator above, because the same annual salary produces different per-paycheck amounts depending on whether it's split over 26 (bi-weekly) or 24 (semi-monthly) periods.
Example take-home pay in Nebraska
The table below shows estimated federal, FICA, and Nebraska state tax for a single filer at several common salary levels, using 2026 rules and the standard deduction. Bi-weekly amounts assume 26 paychecks per year.
Common Nebraska payroll deductions to watch
- 401(k) contributions — pre-tax dollars reduce federal (and, in Nebraska, state) income tax. The 2026 employee limit is $24,500 ($32,000 if age 50+).
- Pre-tax health premiums — Section 125 cafeteria plan contributions reduce federal, state, and FICA-taxable wages.
- HSA contributions — for high-deductible health plans, HSA money is pre-tax at both federal and state levels in Nebraska.
- Garnishments, child support, and Roth 401(k) — these post-tax deductions do not reduce taxable wages but still cut take-home pay.
- Nebraska's top rate is scheduled to drop from 5.2% to 3.99% by 2027 under a phased reform.
- Omaha hosts Berkshire Hathaway, Mutual of Omaha, and several major insurance companies.
Key industries and pay levels in Nebraska
Nebraska's top industries include Agriculture, Insurance, Freight Rail, Food Processing, and Healthcare. Major employers like Berkshire Hathaway, Union Pacific Railroad, Mutual of Omaha, and Nebraska Medicine anchor a large share of state payrolls, and pay levels tend to track industry mix — states heavy on technology, finance, and aerospace typically show higher median household income than states dominated by agriculture, tourism, or retail.
Nebraska tax brackets that apply in Kearney
| Bracket | Single | Rate |
|---|---|---|
| #1 | $0 to $3,999 | 2.46% |
| #2 | $3,999 to $23,999 | 3.51% |
| #3 | $23,999 to $38,999 | 5.01% |
| #4 | $38,999 and up | 5.20% |
Example take-home pay for Kearney residents
| Annual salary | Federal tax | FICA | NE state tax | Take-home / year | Bi-weekly |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| $40,000 | $2,620 | $3,060 | $1,186 | $33,134 | $1,274 |
| $60,000 | $5,020 | $4,590 | $2,212 | $48,178 | $1,853 |
| $85,000 | $9,870 | $6,503 | $3,512 | $65,115 | $2,504 |
| $120,000 | $17,570 | $9,180 | $5,332 | $87,918 | $3,381 |
| $175,000 | $30,734 | $13,388 | $8,192 | $122,686 | $4,719 |
Estimates for a single filer using the 2026 standard deduction. Actual withholding varies with W-4 elections, dependents, and deductions.
More cities in Nebraska
FAQ
Does Nebraska have a state income tax?+
Yes. Nebraska imposes a progressive income tax with a top rate of 5.20% on wage income for the 2026 tax year.
What is the minimum wage in Nebraska?+
The minimum wage in Nebraska is $13.50 per hour. Nebraska's minimum wage is scheduled to reach $15 in 2026 following a 2022 ballot measure.
How does overtime pay work in Nebraska?+
Follows federal FLSA: 1.5x for hours over 40/week.
Are there local income taxes in Nebraska?+
No local income taxes on wages.
How much are Social Security and Medicare taxes on a Nebraska paycheck?+
Social Security is 6.2% of wages up to a $184,500 wage base (2026), and Medicare is 1.45% of all wages, plus an additional 0.9% Medicare surtax on wages over $200,000 for single filers.
How often are employees paid in Nebraska?+
On regular paydays designated in advance; state law does not require a specific frequency.