It depends on a zillion things.
There are many things deducted, many of which may be taxes depending on what you define taxes as.
The term gross can't be used in this circumstance either...as each separate thing defines the wages it is applicable to differently.
For example: FICA (or social security)...is taken...and it has 2 components that add up to a total of 15.30% of which only half comes from the employee 9the employer pays the other half). Of that 7.65% most of it is limited to the first @100K of earnings (and earnings includes 401k contributions, etc.), but a small %, the Medical portion, continues without any earnings limit.
Income Taxes are taken, yes, but they are controlled by your W-4 status (so your potential deductions from taxable income are involved), are only paid over to the government as an estimate on your behalf, and if your return and actual tax for the year is different, you get the excess refunded or pay it. Also, many things change the definition of what earnings are considered for this withholding. Finally, State income taxes (and even local/city) ones may also be involved.
Then depending on locations and the laws there...you may well have other things deducted, like workmans comp, unemployment insurance, etc. Again, what wages are considered are each defined differently for each.
They are all virtually always shown on your pay stub...for both the current period and YTD. The one doing the payroll should be able to answer any specific questions as to who or why...but they are virtually all absolutely required. (Clearly, there is no advantage to the employer making unneeded withholdings...it just costs them cash flow, accounting costs, possible penalties, and they want their employees to receive as much as possible).
Gross pay to date is the amount of money an employee has earned, up to a certain date, before taxes are taken out. After taxes are taken out it is called net pay.
It's called your Net Pay... So that's what's left after taxes and everything else has been taken out of your gross pay. The Gross Pay is your full check IF nothing had been taken out of it. However, no one gets all of their Gross Pay on payday, because SS, taxes, and other deductions are withheld on your behalf.
Decrease. The tax is taken OUT of the gross leaving a net.
Yes they are withheld from your gross pay.
Roughly 78% of gross pay is left after Federal, State, Medicade, and Social Security taxes are taken out. For example, a worker with an annual gross income of $40,000 - or $3,333 monthly gross income - would receive about $2,633 after taxes are removed.
Gross pay to date is the amount of money an employee has earned, up to a certain date, before taxes are taken out. After taxes are taken out it is called net pay.
By collecting your paycheck..? Your gross pay is the amount you are paid, before taxes are taken out.
It's called your Net Pay... So that's what's left after taxes and everything else has been taken out of your gross pay. The Gross Pay is your full check IF nothing had been taken out of it. However, no one gets all of their Gross Pay on payday, because SS, taxes, and other deductions are withheld on your behalf.
Decrease. The tax is taken OUT of the gross leaving a net.
Yes they are withheld from your gross pay.
If I remember right, gross pay is what you make before any thing such a taxes is taken from your pay and net is what you bring home on your check
Roughly 78% of gross pay is left after Federal, State, Medicade, and Social Security taxes are taken out. For example, a worker with an annual gross income of $40,000 - or $3,333 monthly gross income - would receive about $2,633 after taxes are removed.
Is the take-home pay; it is the amount of money received after taxes and deductions have been taken out of gross pay.
the pay before taxes net pay is after taxes
Gross pay is pay before taxes have been deducted were net pay is after taxes.
a sum of money before any thing like taxes or insurances or pension funds are taken off, that is called ' gross salary" after all the deductions are taken off you have what is called "net salary" or take-home pay.
No. Gross pay is your total pay, before any taxes, fines, insurance, child support etc. are taken out. Net pay is what you receive after those items have been deducted.