What Is the Difference Between Gross and Net Income?

Gross income and net income are two different numbers that describe your earnings — and confusing them is one of the most common financial mistakes people make, especially when budgeting or evaluating a job offer. Here’s exactly what each means.

What is gross income?

Gross income is your total earnings before any deductions. If your salary is $60,000/year, that’s your gross income. If you’re paid $3,000 every two weeks, your gross biweekly income is $3,000. This is the number employers advertise for job salaries and what’s used for loan applications and tax calculations.

What is net income?

Net income — often called “take-home pay” — is what actually hits your bank account after all deductions: federal income tax, state income tax (where applicable), Social Security tax (6.2%), Medicare tax (1.45%), health insurance premiums, 401k contributions, and any other pre-tax deductions. A $60,000 salary often results in $42,000–$47,000 in actual take-home pay.

Why confusing them causes problems

Many first-time earners see their salary offer and budget from that number — only to be shocked when their paycheck is thousands less than expected. Budgeting from gross income means your budget doesn’t work in real life. Always budget from your net income — the actual money you receive.

How to calculate your net income

For salaried employees: divide your annual salary by your pay periods (26 for biweekly, 24 for semi-monthly) to get gross per paycheck, then check your actual pay stub for the net amount. For freelancers and self-employed: subtract self-employment taxes (15.3%) and income taxes from gross revenue, plus business expenses, to estimate net income.

Gross income for different purposes

Mortgage lenders use gross income to calculate your debt-to-income ratio. The IRS taxes your adjusted gross income (gross minus certain deductions). Landlords typically want rent to be no more than 30% of gross income. Understanding which number applies in each situation prevents surprises.

Free money tips, every week

Simple, honest money advice straight to your inbox. No selling, no spam.

Budgeting tips that actually work How to build credit from nothing Beginner-friendly investing advice
style> div>