Free New Mexico Paycheck Calculator 2026: Estimate Your Take Home Pay

Free New Mexico Paycheck Calculator 2026: Estimate Your Take-Home Pay

Updated for 2026 tax year

New Mexico Paycheck Calculator: See Your Real Take-Home Pay in 2026

Enter your salary or hourly rate and get an instant breakdown of your federal tax, New Mexico state income tax, Social Security, Medicare, and deductions. Built on the 2026 NM FYI-104 withholding formula and IRS Publication 15-T.

NM top rate: 5.9%
No local income tax
FICA SS wage base: $176,100
Instant results
NM Top Tax Rate
5.9%
On income over $210,000
NM Tax Brackets
5 Brackets
1.7% to 5.9%
SS Wage Base
$176,100
2026 SSA limit
Local Income Tax
None
No city wage tax in NM

Who This Calculator Is For

Salaried employees

W-2 workers at NM companies estimating take-home pay before or after a raise.

Hourly workers

Part-time and full-time hourly employees in Albuquerque, Santa Fe, Las Cruces, and elsewhere in NM.

Job changers

Comparing two New Mexico job offers side by side and wanting to know actual after-tax pay.

Benefit enrollees

Employees starting 401(k), health insurance, or FSA/HSA contributions who want to see the impact on net pay.

New NM residents

Workers relocating to New Mexico from a higher or lower tax state who need a quick paycheck estimate.

HR and payroll staff

Professionals who need a quick sanity check on employee net pay before payroll runs.

New Mexico Paycheck Calculator 2026

Enter your pay details below. All fields marked * are required.

Pay type *

Choose how your employer pays you.

Annual gross salary *

Enter your total annual pay before any deductions.

Hourly pay details *

NM minimum wage is $12.00/hr in 2026.

Standard full-time is 40 hours/week.

Pay schedule and filing status *

How often your employer pays you.

Use the same status as your W-4 and NM PIT-1.

Withholding allowances

From W-4 (older pre-2020 forms). Most new W-4s use 0.

From NM PIT-1 / withholding certificate. Default is 1.

Pre-tax deductions (per paycheck)

Pre-tax deductions reduce your income subject to both federal and NM state tax. Enter the per-paycheck amount for each deduction below.

2026 employee limit: $23,500 ($31,000 if age 50+).

Employer-sponsored Section 125 plan.

2026 annual FSA limit: $3,300.

2026 HSA limit: $4,300 individual / $8,550 family.

Commuter benefits, transit pass, etc.

Post-tax deductions (per paycheck)

Post-tax deductions come out of your paycheck after all taxes are calculated. They do not reduce your taxable income.

Taxed now, grows tax-free.

Wage garnishments, union dues, life insurance, etc.

Estimated net take-home pay
$0.00
per paycheck

Full paycheck breakdown

Category Per paycheck Annual % of gross

Where your paycheck goes

Insights for your paycheck

How This Calculator Works

This tool calculates your estimated New Mexico net pay using four separate tax components applied in the correct order. Here is exactly what it does:

  1. Determines your gross pay

    For salaried workers, the annual salary is divided by the number of pay periods. For hourly workers, the hourly rate is multiplied by weekly hours and then annualized. Pre-tax deductions are subtracted to get federal and NM taxable income.

  2. Calculates federal income tax

    Uses the IRS Publication 15-T 2026 Percentage Method with annual payroll period tables. Federal allowances (from pre-2020 W-4 forms) reduce taxable wages at $4,300 per allowance. The bracket rates range from 10% to 37% depending on your income and filing status.

  3. Calculates New Mexico state income tax

    Applies the 2026 NM FYI-104 annualization withholding method. A zero-bracket amount is subtracted based on your filing status ($8,050 single / $16,100 married filing jointly / $12,075 head of household), and then the five graduated NM brackets from 1.7% to 5.9% are applied. State allowances reduce taxable income by the NM per-allowance value.

  4. Calculates FICA taxes

    Social Security is 6.2% on wages up to the 2026 SSA wage base of $176,100. Medicare is 1.45% on all wages with no cap. Workers earning above $200,000 (single) or $250,000 (married) also pay an additional 0.9% Medicare surtax under IRC Section 3103. Section 125 benefits reduce FICA taxable wages; 401(k) deferrals do not.

  5. Applies deductions and returns net pay

    Pre-tax and post-tax deductions are subtracted in the correct order. The result is your estimated net take-home pay per paycheck and per year, along with effective and marginal tax rates and a full visual breakdown.

New Mexico Income Tax Brackets for 2026

New Mexico uses a five-bracket graduated income tax system. The rates below are based on the NM Taxation and Revenue Department's published 2026 withholding formula and the personal income tax rate schedule under NMSA 1978, Section 7-2-7. These are the same rates your employer uses to calculate withholding from your paycheck.

Single / Married Filing Separately / Head of Household

Taxable income range Tax rate Tax on bracket
$0 – $5,5001.7%Up to $93.50
$5,501 – $11,0003.2%Up to $176.00
$11,001 – $16,0004.7%Up to $235.00
$16,001 – $210,0004.9%Up to $9,506.00
Over $210,0005.9%On every dollar above $210,000

Source: NM Taxation and Revenue Department, 2026 FYI-104 Withholding Formula.

Married Filing Jointly

Taxable income range Tax rate
$0 – $8,0001.7%
$8,001 – $16,0003.2%
$16,001 – $24,0004.7%
$24,001 – $315,0004.9%
Over $315,0005.9%

MFJ thresholds are approximately doubled per NM statute.

Key things to know about New Mexico paycheck taxes in 2026

New Mexico does not have a local income tax. Whether you work in Albuquerque, Santa Fe, Las Cruces, Rio Rancho, or Roswell, only state and federal taxes apply to your wages. This is different from states like New York or Ohio where cities often add a separate wage tax.

New Mexico conforms to the federal definition of gross income for withholding purposes. Pre-tax contributions to 401(k) plans, health insurance under Section 125 plans, and FSA/HSA accounts all reduce your NM taxable wages the same way they reduce your federal taxable wages. This is why enrolling in workplace benefits has a measurable positive effect on your take-home pay. You can explore how deductions affect your paycheck with our pre-tax deduction calculator as well.

If you are comparing job offers with different pay structures, our salary to hourly calculator and gross to net calculator can help you compare apples to apples.

Real New Mexico Paycheck Examples (2026)

These estimates are based on a single filer, bi-weekly pay, no pre-tax deductions, and standard withholding allowances. Your actual paycheck will differ based on your specific filing status, deductions, and allowances.

Retail associate, Albuquerque $16.50/hr · 40 hrs/wk · ~$34,320/yr
Gross per bi-weekly check $1,320.00
Federal income tax –$97.00
NM state income tax –$48.00
Social Security + Medicare –$100.98
Estimated take-home ~$1,074

Approx. effective total tax rate: ~18.6%

State agency analyst, Santa Fe $58,000/yr · bi-weekly salary
Gross per bi-weekly check $2,230.77
Federal income tax –$234.00
NM state income tax –$103.00
Social Security + Medicare –$170.65
Estimated take-home ~$1,723

Approx. effective total tax rate: ~22.7%

Software developer, Rio Rancho $105,000/yr · bi-weekly salary
Gross per bi-weekly check $4,038.46
Federal income tax –$661.00
NM state income tax –$185.00
Social Security + Medicare –$308.94
Estimated take-home ~$2,883

Approx. effective total tax rate: ~28.6%

* All examples are approximations for illustrative purposes only and do not constitute tax advice. Use the calculator above for a personalized estimate. For detailed gross-pay calculations, try our gross pay calculator.

Frequently Asked Questions

New Mexico uses a 5-bracket graduated income tax system in 2026. Rates range from 1.7% on the first $5,500 of taxable income up to 5.9% on income over $210,000. These brackets apply to single filers; married filing jointly thresholds are approximately doubled. The rates are set by the NM Taxation and Revenue Department and have not changed from 2025.

No. New Mexico cities and counties do not impose a local income tax on wages. Your paycheck deductions consist of federal income tax, New Mexico state income tax, and FICA (Social Security and Medicare). This is different from states like Ohio, Pennsylvania, and New York where many cities add a separate wage tax.

New Mexico's statewide minimum wage is $12.00 per hour in 2026 for most employees. Tipped employees may receive a lower direct wage rate. However, several cities in New Mexico have enacted higher local minimum wages: Albuquerque, Santa Fe, and Las Cruces all have local rates that exceed the state minimum. Always check your city's current rate if you work in one of those areas.

New Mexico uses the annualization method from its FYI-104 withholding formula, effective January 1, 2026. Your per-period wages are first annualized. A zero-bracket amount is then subtracted based on your filing status: $8,050 for single filers, $16,100 for married filing jointly, and $12,075 for heads of household. The graduated brackets from 1.7% to 5.9% are applied to the remaining income. The resulting annual tax is divided by the number of pay periods to get each paycheck's withholding amount.

For state withholding purposes in New Mexico, overtime wages are combined with regular wages and taxed at the graduated rates using the annualization method. There is no separate flat rate for overtime at the state level. Federal rules allow employers to withhold a flat 22% supplemental rate on separately paid bonuses or supplemental wages; NM applies 5.9% in that case. Use our overtime calculator to estimate your overtime gross pay first.

FICA is a federal payroll tax that applies in all 50 states including New Mexico. For 2026, employees pay 6.2% Social Security tax on wages up to the $176,100 SSA wage base and 1.45% Medicare tax on all wages. There is no cap on Medicare. Workers earning above $200,000 (single) or $250,000 (married filing jointly) also pay an additional 0.9% Medicare surtax. Use our FICA tax calculator for a dedicated breakdown.

Yes. Pre-tax contributions to a 401(k), health insurance under a Section 125 cafeteria plan, FSA, and HSA all reduce the income subject to both federal and NM state income tax. Section 125 benefits (health, FSA, HSA) also reduce FICA taxable wages, which lowers your Social Security and Medicare contributions. Standard 401(k) deferrals reduce income tax but do not reduce FICA wages. See the results section of this calculator for a detailed breakdown of your deduction savings.

Data Sources

This calculator is built on official 2026 tax data from the following sources:

  • New Mexico FYI-104 (2026 Withholding Formula) — NM Taxation and Revenue Department. Released November 20, 2025 for tax year 2026. Contains zero-bracket amounts, allowance values, and graduated withholding brackets.
    tax.newmexico.gov
  • New Mexico Personal Income Tax Rates (NMSA 1978, Section 7-2-7) — Graduated brackets from 1.7% to 5.9% as published by the NM Taxation and Revenue Department.
    tax.newmexico.gov/personal-income-tax-rates
  • IRS Publication 15-T (2026) — Federal income tax withholding tables and Percentage Method for payroll periods. Used for federal withholding calculations.
    irs.gov/publications/p15t
  • Social Security Administration — 2026 FICA Wage Base — Social Security wage base of $176,100 for 2026.
    ssa.gov
  • IRS Topic 751 — Social Security and Medicare Withholding Rates — FICA rates, Additional Medicare Tax threshold, and employer/employee rate guidance.
    irs.gov/taxtopics/tc751
  • NM House Bill 218 (2025) — New Mexico withholding tax reporting changes effective January 1, 2026, including mandatory electronic filing for all employers.
Your data stays private

This calculator runs entirely in your browser. No salary, income, deduction, or personal information is stored, transmitted, or sent to any server. We do not collect, log, or share any data you enter into this tool.

Eman Ali Mughal — developer and reviewer of the New Mexico Paycheck Calculator
Developed and reviewed by
Eman Ali Mughal

This New Mexico paycheck calculator was developed and reviewed for accuracy and usability by Eman Ali Mughal. All tax logic is based on official 2026 sources including the NM FYI-104 withholding formula, IRS Publication 15-T 2026, and SSA 2026 FICA rules.

Last updated: April 22, 2026 Tax year: 2026 Sources: NM TRD, IRS, SSA