Enter Paycheck Details
Formula Used
Regular Pay = Hourly Rate × Regular Hours
Overtime Pay = Hourly Rate × Overtime Multiplier × Overtime Hours
Gross Pay = Regular Pay + Overtime Pay + Bonus + Commission + Shift Differential
Taxable Pay = Gross Pay − Pre Tax Deductions
Total Taxes = Federal Tax + State Tax + Local Tax + Social Security Tax + Medicare Tax
Net Pay = Gross Pay − Pre Tax Deductions − Taxes − Post Tax Deductions + Reimbursements
Annual Estimate = Bi Weekly Pay × 26
How to Use This Calculator
- Enter your hourly rate.
- Add regular and overtime hours for both weeks.
- Enter bonus, commission, or shift differential if needed.
- Add pre tax and post tax deductions.
- Enter estimated tax percentages.
- Press the calculate button.
- Review gross pay, taxes, deductions, and net pay.
- Use CSV or PDF export to save your result.
Example Data Table
| Hourly Rate | Regular Hours | Overtime Hours | Tax Rate Total | Deductions | Estimated Net Pay |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| $20.00 | 80 | 0 | 18% | $100 | $1,212.00 |
| $25.00 | 80 | 7 | 24.65% | $175 | $1,621.96 |
| $32.50 | 78 | 10 | 27% | $220 | $2,076.88 |
Bi Weekly Hourly Paycheck Guide
What This Paycheck Tool Does
A bi weekly hourly paycheck calculator helps hourly workers estimate pay before payday. It combines two work weeks into one payroll period. It also separates regular pay, overtime pay, bonuses, commissions, taxes, deductions, and reimbursements. This makes the final take home amount easier to understand.
Why Bi Weekly Pay Needs Care
Bi weekly pay usually creates 26 checks in a year. Each check can change when hours, overtime, or deductions change. A small rate change can affect yearly income. Overtime can also move taxable income higher. That is why a detailed calculator is useful for planning.
Hourly Pay and Overtime
The calculator treats regular hours and overtime hours separately. Regular pay uses the base hourly rate. Overtime pay uses the hourly rate multiplied by an overtime factor. The common factor is 1.5, but the form lets you change it. This helps match different workplace rules.
Taxes and Deductions
Taxes are estimated from the taxable pay amount. Pretax deductions reduce taxable pay first. Post tax deductions reduce pay after estimated taxes. Reimbursements are added back because they are usually not wages. You can enter federal, state, local, Social Security, and Medicare percentages.
Planning With Results
The result section shows gross pay, taxable pay, total taxes, deductions, reimbursements, and net pay. It also shows annualized gross and net pay based on 26 checks. These yearly estimates help compare jobs or plan savings. The chart gives a quick visual breakdown of the paycheck.
Best Use Cases
Use the calculator before accepting extra shifts. Use it when a raise is offered. Use it before changing benefits. You can also compare different overtime schedules. The CSV download helps store the numbers. The PDF button creates a quick report for records.
Important Note
This tool gives an estimate, not payroll advice. Actual checks can differ because of benefits, tax tables, garnishments, unpaid leave, rounding, and employer rules. Always compare the output with your official pay stub. For best accuracy, update every field before each payroll period. Enter real deduction amounts from benefit elections. Review tax percentages whenever your filing situation, work state, or local rules change during the year carefully.
FAQs
1. What is a bi weekly hourly paycheck?
It is a paycheck based on hourly work completed across two weeks. Many workers receive 26 bi weekly checks per year.
2. Does this calculator include overtime?
Yes. It separates regular hours and overtime hours. You can also change the overtime multiplier to match your workplace rule.
3. Are the tax results exact?
No. They are estimates based on percentages you enter. Real payroll may use tax tables, benefits, credits, and employer settings.
4. What are pre tax deductions?
Pre tax deductions reduce taxable pay before estimated taxes are applied. Examples may include some retirement or benefit deductions.
5. What are post tax deductions?
Post tax deductions reduce pay after taxes are estimated. Examples may include certain insurance, repayments, or voluntary deductions.
6. Why are reimbursements added after deductions?
Reimbursements are often repayments for approved expenses. This calculator adds them after taxes to keep wage estimates clear.
7. Can I use this for salary pay?
This tool is designed for hourly pay. Salary workers can use it only after converting salary into an estimated hourly rate.
8. Why is annual pay multiplied by 26?
Bi weekly payroll usually has 26 pay periods in a full year. The calculator uses that number for annual estimates.