On a $100K salary, Michigan keeps you $1,129 more than New York.
New York
$74,228
take-home on $100K
Top rate: 10.9%
Michigan
$75,357
take-home on $100K
Top rate: 4.05%
State Tax Rate
10.9%
New York
Annual Savings on $100K
$1,129
Michigan advantage
State Tax Rate
4.05%
Michigan
Single filer, standard deduction, no other adjustments.
| Gross Salary | New York Take-Home | Michigan Take-Home | Michigan Saves |
|---|---|---|---|
| $40K | $32,878(17.8%) | $32,927(17.7%) | +$49/yr |
| $50K | $40,328(19.3%) | $40,557(18.9%) | +$229/yr |
| $60K | $47,778(20.4%) | $48,187(19.7%) | +$409/yr |
| $75K | $58,103(22.5%) | $58,782(21.6%) | +$679/yr |
| $100K | $74,228(25.8%) | $75,357(24.6%) | +$1,129/yr |
| $125K | $90,289(27.8%) | $91,868(26.5%) | +$1,579/yr |
| $150K | $105,914(29.4%) | $107,943(28.0%) | +$2,029/yr |
| $200K | $138,003(31.0%) | $141,054(29.5%) | +$3,050/yr |
2026 IRS brackets · FICA included · State tax estimated · Numbers rounded
| New York — $100K Salary | |
|---|---|
| Federal Income Tax | −$13,170 |
| New York State Tax | −$4,952 |
| Social Security (6.2%) | −$6,200 |
| Medicare (1.45%) | −$1,450 |
| Total Tax | −$25,772 |
| Annual Take-Home | $74,228 |
| Michigan — $100K Salary | |
|---|---|
| Federal Income Tax | −$13,170 |
| Michigan State Tax | −$3,823 |
| Social Security (6.2%) | −$6,200 |
| Medicare (1.45%) | −$1,450 |
| Total Tax | −$24,643 |
| Annual Take-Home | $75,357 |
Michigan has lower income taxes than New York. On a $100,000 salary (2026), Michigan residents take home $1,129 more per year. Michigan top state rate: 4.05%; New York: 10.9%. At $200K the gap grows to $3,050/year.
New York top state income tax rate: 10.9%. Michigan top rate: 4.05%. Both states also have the same federal income tax rates and FICA (Social Security + Medicare) taxes.
Moving from New York to Michigan could save you $1,129/year on a $100K salary — that's $94/month. Over 10 years, that's potentially $11,287 in tax savings, not accounting for raises or investment growth. However, cost of living differences (housing, property taxes, sales tax) should also factor in.
Income tax is only part of the picture. Be sure to also compare sales tax, property taxes, and cost of living. This tool focuses on state income tax differences. For a complete picture, research each state's total tax burden.
At $200,000 gross salary, Michigan take-home is $141,054 vs $138,003 in New York — a difference of $3,050 per year. The gap widens significantly at higher incomes due to progressive tax brackets.
All figures are for a single filer using the standard deduction with no other adjustments (no 401k, no pre-tax benefits). Federal income tax, Social Security (6.2% up to $176,100), and Medicare (1.45%) are the same in both states. The difference is entirely due to state income tax: New York charges up to 10.9% vs Michigan charges up to 4.05%.
See how New York stacks up against other states.
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Add 401k, health insurance, filing status, and more for a precise number.