Everyone quotes "Washington has no income tax." Fewer people quote what still shows up on your pay stub — or what a one-bedroom costs near South Lake Union.
Here's the situation.
$100,000 in Seattle in 2026 — single, standard deduction, no dependents, no pre-tax 401(k) — is a useful benchmark. Washington does not levy a state income tax on wages, but you still pay federal income tax and FICA, and most W-2 workers see Washington’s mandatory employee payroll premiums (we model them on the site the same way the live calculator does).
Take-Home From Our Engine (Same as the Live Calculator)
Annual take-home: about $78,565
About $6,547 per month (before health insurance, 401(k), etc.)
| Piece | Annual (approx.) |
|---|---|
| Federal income tax | $13,170 |
| Washington state income tax on wages | $0 |
| Social Security | $6,200 |
| Medicare | $1,450 |
| WA employee premium (PFML / long-term care — as modeled on site) | $615 |
Total tax + payroll: about $21,435.
Plug in your actual pay frequency and pre-tax deductions on the Washington paycheck calculator.
What “No State Tax” Does — and Doesn’t — Fix
At $100k gross, Washington’s wage income tax being zero is worth a lot compared to California or New York: on our engine math you keep roughly $7,700+ more per year after tax and modeled payroll items than the same gross in NYC, and thousands more than California at this income because of state tax + SDI.
The caveats:
Sales tax is high. Combined Seattle sales tax is around 10.25%. You feel it on every purchase — it’s a different shape than a state income tax, but it’s real.
Rent is “cheaper than SF” — not “cheap.” Our Seattle comfortable salary guide uses $1,800–$2,400 as a typical one-bedroom band depending on neighborhood; Capitol Hill, Belltown, and South Lake Union lean high; outer neighborhoods can dip lower. Relocation index for Seattle is 125 vs. 100 national.
Home prices are still West Coast. Metro median purchase prices sit far above national averages; all-in monthly housing for a buyer often lands $4,500–$5,500+ once principal, interest, taxes, and insurance are stacked — which is why our comfortable guide puts comfortable buying closer to $180k–$220k gross, not $100k.
Monthly Costs in Plain English (Single, 2026)
From the same methodology as our Seattle deep-dive:
Rent: Budget $1,800–$2,400 for a solid one-bedroom with a reasonable commute; Eastside (Bellevue/Redmond) often matches or exceeds core Seattle for proximity to major employers.
Transportation: Light rail + buses work for many; $200–$400/month if you’re car-light. Owning a car adds $600–$1,000+ all-in (payment, insurance, parking).
Groceries: ~10–15% above national average — think $400–$560/month cooking at home.
Utilities: $100–$170 utilities typical; internet $60–$90. Winters are gray, not brutal — but you’ll spend on indoor life.
Against ~$6,547/month take-home, a $2,100 rent plus food, transit, utilities, and health leaves real savings possible — unlike NYC or SF at the same gross — but not “money is no object.”
Life Stages at $100k Gross
Roommate: A two-bedroom split often puts your share at $1,400–$2,000. At $100k, you’re comfortably in workable territory — our comfortable salary guide calls $65k–$80k workable with a roommate; you’re above that in gross and well above in net.
Solo one-bedroom: $100k gross / ~$80k net is close to the band where Seattle stops feeling like a constant spreadsheet exercise. Our calculator’s “comfortable solo” anchor is closer to $125k gross for headroom; at $100k you’re livable, especially if rent is disciplined.
Family / kids: Childcare $2,200–$3,200/month for infant center care isn’t unusual. Household $200k–$240k is the range we associate with comfortable family life plus Seattle housing — see the full guide.
Seattle vs. San Francisco at the Same $100k Gross
Same employer band, same $100,000 on the offer letter:
- Seattle take-home (our engine): ~$78,565/year
- California (SF or LA wage tax rules): ~$72,794/year on the same baseline assumptions
That ~$5,770/year gap is tax structure, before rent differences. Seattle → SF comparison shows COL too — SF rent is still typically much higher than Seattle’s.
If the SF job pays $20k–$40k more for the same role, the spreadsheet flips. If the salaries are equal, Seattle usually wins on cash in pocket.
At a glance: $100k in Seattle (2026)
| Question | Straight answer |
|---|---|
| Monthly take-home (this baseline)? | ~$6,547 |
| Annual take-home? | ~$78,565 |
| Washington state income tax on wages? | $0 — but you still pay federal, FICA, and state payroll premiums (modeled on our site) |
| Is $100k enough here? | Often yes for a disciplined renter; tighter if you want a solo downtown-adjacent 1BR and aggressive savings |
Use the Washington paycheck calculator to mirror pay frequency, pre-tax deductions, and your actual premium lines.
Who this is for
Tech and corporate hires weighing Seattle vs. the Bay Area, Amazon/Microsoft-adjacent neighborhoods, or remote workers picking the Pacific Northwest for lifestyle. You care about net pay, not slogans about “no state tax.”
What changes your real check vs. our table
Same clean baseline as the rest of the series: single, standard deduction, no 401(k) in the example. In practice:
- 401(k) / HSA / FSA: Lower taxable income — rerun the Washington calculator with your elections.
- RSUs and bonuses: Withholding can look “weird” on vest days; annual tax may still settle — our table is straight salary.
- Married filing jointly: Brackets widen — don’t use single numbers if that’s not you.
- Bellevue / Redmond rent: Often matches or beats core Seattle for per-square-foot cost near big employers — budget accordingly if you’re Eastside-first.
Mistakes people make comparing Seattle to California
1. Assuming “no income tax” means no paycheck deductions. WA Cares / PFML-style premiums still show up for many W-2 workers — we include them in our model.
2. Ignoring sales tax at 10.25%. It’s not income tax, but it eats discretionary spending on goods and many services.
3. Forgetting that SF salaries often run higher. $100k in Seattle can beat $100k in SF on net + rent, but $130k in SF vs. $100k in Seattle is a different fight.
4. Under-budgeting for car ownership. If you need parking downtown or a payment + insurance, add $600–$1,000+/month before you call life “comfortable.”
Short answers to common searches
Is $100,000 a good salary in Seattle? It’s strong for many singles, especially with no WA wage income tax — but housing is still a major US market, not a bargain bin.
How much is $100k after taxes in Seattle? Roughly $78,565/year or ~$6,547/month in our 2026 baseline (rounded).
Does Washington tax paychecks? Not with a state income tax on wages — federal and payroll premiums still apply.
For the long version of lifestyle bands, Seattle comfortable salary goes deeper on buying and kids.
Make these numbers yours (and when to rerun them)
Tax rules drift — brackets, standard deductions, and payroll premium caps get updated. The story of this post (Washington doesn’t tax wages like California, but federal + FICA + premiums still apply) holds; the exact dollars should be refreshed in our Washington paycheck calculator whenever you’re close to a lease or offer decision.
Other tools that pair well with this article:
- Relocation salary calculator — same COL index 125 logic we cite above
- Life budget planner — sanity-check needs vs. wants once you know net pay
- Seattle comfortable salary — deeper dive on buying and kids
If your employer offers mega-backdoor Roth, ESPP, or irregular RSU vesting, treat this $100k salary baseline as only one line of your real tax year — good for rent math, not for your full Form 1040 story.
FAQ
How much is $100,000 after taxes in Seattle in 2026?
About $78,565/year take-home (~$6,547/month) for single, standard deduction, $100k W-2, no pre-tax 401(k) — from our Washington paycheck calculator (includes modeled state payroll premiums). Rounded; your stub may differ.
Does Washington State have income tax on wages?
No general wage income tax — you still pay federal, FICA, and employee premiums (e.g. long-term care / PFML-style lines) that show up on many W-2s.
Why is Seattle take-home higher than California on the same $100k gross?
California takes state income tax plus SDI on wages; Washington does not tax wages that way at the state level — so ~$5,700+/year more net in our 2026 baseline before rent enters the picture.
Is $100k enough to live in Capitol Hill or South Lake Union?
Often workable for a disciplined renter — one-bedrooms near major employers can still run $2k–$2.4k+. Roommates or farther neighborhoods add slack on ~$6,547/month net.
What about Bellevue or Redmond rent vs. Seattle?
Eastside rents are often similar or higher per square foot near Microsoft/major campuses — budget housing, not just “Seattle” in the abstract.
Does Seattle’s 10.25% sales tax replace income tax?
No — it’s a different burden (hits spending). High earners still usually net more here than in high income-tax states at the same gross, but day-to-day purchases add up.
The Bottom Line
Washington’s zero wage income tax is real — on this math you keep meaningfully more than high-tax states at the same federal bracket — but $100k in Seattle is not “cheap metro” money once rent and West Coast housing wealth show up. It’s enough for many singles who manage housing; it’s below our “genuinely comfortable solo with slack” band unless your rent is unusually good.
*Take-home uses this site's paycheck tax engine for Washington, tax year 2026. Rent and COL: relocation calculator (Seattle index 125), Zillow/RentCafe/King County references as in our Seattle comfortable salary post. Not financial advice.*