H-1B Visa Tax Calculator 2026 โ€” Federal + State + FICA

Calculate 2026 US taxes for H-1B visa holders: federal income tax (resident alien), FICA 7.65%, state tax by state. Substantial Presence Test check, resident vs non-resident comparison, treaty benefits table.

$
Salary:
$0
Total US Tax (Fed + State + FICA)
$0
Federal Income Tax
$0
FICA (SS + Medicare)
$0
Annual Net Take-Home

H-1B Tax Breakdown (2026)

H-1B Visa Taxation in the US โ€” 2026 Guide

H-1B visa holders who meet the Substantial Presence Test are taxed as resident aliens โ€” meaning they pay federal income tax, FICA, and state taxes exactly like US citizens. The main tax difference from citizens is in certain treaty benefits and the requirement to disclose foreign financial assets (FBAR/FATCA for assets above $10,000/$50,000 thresholds).

Substantial Presence Test (SPT)

Test met if: Days in US this year โ‰ฅ 31 AND weighted total โ‰ฅ 183:
Weighted total = Days this year ร— 1 + Days last year ร— 1/3 + Days 2 years ago ร— 1/6

Resident alien: taxed on worldwide income, standard deduction $15,000 (single 2026)
FICA: SS 6.2% on โ‰ค$176,100 + Medicare 1.45% (all wages)
Additional Medicare: 0.9% on wages above $200K single

Example โ€” $130,000, New Jersey (~6.6%), single

Federal: std deduction $15,000 โ†’ taxable $115,000
Federal tax: 10%ร—$11,925 + 12%ร—$36,550 + 22%ร—$54,875 + 24%ร—$11,650 = $21,844
SS: $130,000 ร— 6.2% = $8,060 | Medicare: $130,000 ร— 1.45% = $1,885
NJ state: ~$6,600 (approximate at 6.6% effective)
Total: ~$38,389 | Effective: 29.5% | Take-home: ~$91,611
Extended

Resident vs Non-Resident Comparison + Treaty Benefits Table

How H-1B resident alien status compares to non-resident taxation, plus common tax treaty benefits by country of origin

Resident aliens (SPT met) pay full US taxes. Non-resident aliens (NRA) only pay tax on US-source income, no standard deduction, and are exempt from FICA (but not all categories). H-1B is always FICA-liable regardless of NRA status in the year of arrival.

Resident Alien vs Non-Resident Alien โ€” Tax Comparison at $130K

ItemResident Alien (H-1B, SPT met)Non-Resident Alien

Common US Tax Treaty Benefits by Country of Origin

Note: H-1B holders are NOT exempt from employment income tax via treaty. Treaties mainly benefit specific income types (dividends, interest, pensions, students).

CountryTreaty?Employment Income Benefit for H-1BKey Treaty Benefits
IndiaYes (1989)None on H-1B employment incomeArticle 21 (students only), pensions, dividends 15%
ChinaYes (1986)None on H-1B employment incomeStudent/trainee Article 20, pensions, royalties 10%
UKYes (2003)Limited โ€” prevents double taxation on same incomeDividends 5%/15%, capital gains some exemptions, pensions
CanadaYes (1980, updated)Some protection for short assignmentsCross-border employees, pensions, full treaty network
GermanyYes (1989)Prevents double taxationDividends 5%/15%, interest 0%, pensions, professors
PhilippinesYes (1982)None on employment incomeDividends 20%/25%, interest 15%
MexicoYes (1992)Prevents double taxationDividends 10%, interest 10%, full treaty
South KoreaYes (1980)None on H-1B employment incomeStudents Article 21, teachers/researchers, dividends 15%
BrazilNo treatyNo treaty โ€” potential double taxationMay use foreign tax credit (Form 1116)
NigeriaNo treatyNo treaty โ€” potential double taxationMay use foreign tax credit (Form 1116)

H-1B Take-Home by State at Current Salary

StateState Tax RateState TaxTotal TaxNet Take-Home

Frequently Asked Questions

Are H-1B visa holders taxed as residents or non-residents in the US?
Most H-1B holders are taxed as resident aliens if they meet the Substantial Presence Test (SPT): present in the US for at least 31 days in the current year AND 183 days counting all days in the current year, 1/3 of days in the prior year, and 1/6 of days in the year before that. Once meeting the SPT, H-1B holders pay taxes on worldwide income at the same rates as US citizens โ€” using the same tax brackets, standard deductions, and credits. This applies to all regular H-1B holders who have been in the US for a full tax year.
Do H-1B visa holders pay FICA (Social Security and Medicare)?
Yes. H-1B holders are fully subject to FICA taxes from day one of employment: Social Security 6.2% on wages up to $176,100 (2026) and Medicare 1.45% on all wages (plus 0.9% Additional Medicare Tax on wages above $200,000 single / $250,000 married). Unlike F-1 and J-1 students, H-1B holders are not exempt from FICA. This is one of the key tax differences when transitioning from F-1 OPT to H-1B โ€” your take-home pay drops by approximately 7.65% compared to OPT.
What is the India-US tax treaty Article 21 benefit for H-1B holders?
The India-US tax treaty Article 21 provides an exemption for scholarship and fellowship income for students, but this does NOT apply to H-1B employment income. Indian nationals on H-1B receive no special income tax treaty benefit on employment income. The treaty does have provisions for pensions, capital gains, and other income types. Some Indian nationals who were on F-1 and used the treaty exemption during OPT incorrectly continue claiming it on H-1B โ€” this is improper. H-1B holders from India are taxed on employment income exactly like any other US resident alien.
Which US states have no income tax โ€” favorable for H-1B workers?
Nine states have no individual income tax: Alaska, Florida, Nevada, New Hampshire (no wage/salary tax), South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Washington (no general income tax, but 7% capital gains excise tax above $262,000 from 2025), and Wyoming. For H-1B workers choosing between job offers, living in Texas vs California can save 5%โ€“13.3% in state tax alone. At $150,000 salary, the difference between California (highest marginal ~13.3%) and Texas (0%) is approximately $13,000โ€“$20,000 per year in state taxes.
What happens to my taxes in the year I transition from F-1 OPT to H-1B?
The year you transition from F-1/OPT to H-1B is a "dual-status" tax year. For the period you were on F-1 (non-resident alien), you only pay US tax on US-source income and are not subject to FICA. For the H-1B period (once you meet SPT, typically after 183 days), you are taxed as a resident alien on worldwide income and must pay FICA. You generally file Form 1040 with a dual-status statement and Form 1040NR for the non-resident period. If you became a resident alien under the substantial presence test during the year, you may be able to make a "first-year choice" to be treated as a resident for the entire year.