Taxes, Income, and Pay Calculators

Compensation, payroll, tax, and after-tax income tools for salary and cash flow planning.

25 calculators in this category hub. Last reviewed March 8, 2026.

Category Hub Guide

Tax and income calculators help you connect gross pay, tax impact, and take-home outcomes before accepting role, salary, or rate changes.

Use this hub to compare compensation scenarios quickly with consistent assumptions.

Popular tools include After-tax income calculator, Bonus calculator, Capital gains tax calculator, Commission calculator, and Cost of living calculator. Each calculator includes method notes, usage guidance, and related links to help you continue planning without context switching.

How to use this category hub

  1. Open the calculator that matches your current decision.
  2. Run a baseline result, then change one input at a time.
  3. Use related tools below to validate assumptions before acting.

Common scenarios

  • Compare multiple scenarios before committing to one decision.
  • Validate assumptions with at least one related calculator.
  • Use outputs as planning estimates and revisit when inputs change.

Popular search intents in this category

High-intent tools most users start with in this category.

All Taxes, Income, and Pay Tools

Use these quick links for direct access to every calculator in this cluster.

Calculator cards

Descriptions and direct links for each tool in this category.

Tip calculator

Tip calculator for quick estimates and planning scenarios.

VAT calculator

VAT calculator for quick estimates and planning scenarios.

Frequently asked questions

Key assumptions and usage clarifications for this tool.

How do I estimate take-home pay from salary?

Use salary and tax tools together, then compare net and gross outputs under different assumptions for rates and deductions.

Why combine pay and tax calculators?

Compensation decisions are stronger when you evaluate both earnings and tax impact rather than only gross pay.

Can these tools help freelancers and contractors?

Yes. Commission, freelance rate, and self-employment tax workflows help estimate practical after-tax income ranges.