Built for athletes, agents, and contract planners. Test withholding rates and payroll thresholds across scenarios. See net bonus outcomes before signing important sports deals.
These examples show how different sports contract scenarios can change the final take-home bonus.
| Scenario | Gross Bonus | Taxable Bonus | Total Tax | Net Bonus | Effective Tax Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rookie Guard | $85,000.00 | $80,000.00 | $27,479.00 | $52,521.00 | 34.35% |
| Veteran Forward | $250,000.00 | $235,000.00 | $74,142.50 | $160,857.50 | 31.55% |
| Free Agent Center | $1,200,000.00 | $1,175,000.00 | $573,987.50 | $601,012.50 | 48.85% |
This model estimates a sports sign-on bonus after common payroll deductions.
This simplified model treats entered pre-tax deductions as reducing the taxable bonus for all listed tax categories. Real payroll treatment can differ.
It estimates how much of a sports sign-on bonus may remain after federal, state, local, and payroll taxes. It is designed for planning, not final payroll processing.
Other wages affect Social Security limits and Additional Medicare exposure. A bonus paid late in the year can be taxed differently when earlier wages already used part of those thresholds.
Yes. Agents can test multiple payout structures, compare jurisdictions, and estimate take-home value before discussing contract language with teams, advisors, and players.
No. Payroll treatment can vary by method, bonus structure, and payment size. This file lets you edit the federal rate directly, so you can model different payroll assumptions.
Actual results can change because of work-state allocations, resident credits, deferred compensation rules, union items, retirement elections, and employer payroll settings. This estimator cannot capture every contract detail.
Usually no for employee bonuses. Keep them on unless you have a specific reason, confirmed by payroll or tax counsel, that the payment should not receive those taxes.
It can estimate any sign-on bonus, but the examples and wording fit sports contracts. Teams, agents, and players can use it during offer review and cash-flow planning.
Yes. They help save scenarios, share projections, and document assumptions during contract review meetings. They are especially useful when comparing several offer structures quickly.
Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.