What a post-tax deduction is, how it affects net pay, and why it differs from a pre-tax deduction.
A post-tax deduction is a payroll deduction taken after the applicable taxes have been calculated.
Because it happens later in the payroll sequence, a post-tax deduction usually does not reduce the wages used for those tax calculations. It still lowers net pay, but it does so after payroll has already determined the employee’s taxable wages and withholding.
Post-tax deductions matter because employees often feel them directly in take-home pay. They help explain why two employees with similar gross pay and similar withholding can still receive different final payment amounts.
Payroll also needs to identify post-tax deductions correctly so it can:
Payroll usually applies a post-tax deduction after it has already handled the relevant tax calculations. In practice, that means payroll:
Examples can include certain dues, repayments, or other employee-authorized amounts, depending on the employer’s payroll setup.
An employee has:
$2,200$320$40The $40 post-tax deduction lowers the employee’s net pay, but it does not change the wage amount payroll already used for the withholding calculation in that example.
Post-tax deduction is often confused with: