Just did the math on what a 100k a year after taxes actually looks like and honestly it's wild how much varies by state. Like you'd think six figures is six figures, right? Nope.



So I pulled together some numbers and realized that depending on where you live, you could be taking home anywhere from around $70.5K to $78.7K. That's an $8K difference just from geography. Oregon hits hardest with total taxes eating up nearly $29.5K of that 100k salary, leaving just over $70K after taxes. Meanwhile states like Texas, Florida, Nevada, and Washington? They're basically the sweet spot - no state income tax means you're keeping closer to $78.7K a year after taxes.

The middle ground is interesting too. Colorado, Michigan, and New Jersey hover around $25K in total taxes, so you're looking at roughly $74-75K take-home. Even within similar tax brackets, the differences add up fast when you factor in FICA, federal withholding, and state income taxes all stacking together.

What surprised me most is how much FICA and federal taxes are the real culprit regardless of state - that's consistent everywhere. But then your state decides if you keep an extra $7-8K or not. If you're actually considering relocating for work or planning finances around a six-figure offer, this stuff actually matters. The difference between Oregon and Texas on a 100k salary is basically a used car payment every year.
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