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CalcWolf Finance Payroll Tax Calculator (Employer)
Finance

Calculate Employer Payroll Tax Costs

Calculate total employer payroll tax burden. FICA, FUTA, SUTA, and workers comp by state.

📅 Updated April 2026 Formula verified 📖 4 min read 🆓 Free · No sign-up

Employer Payroll Tax Breakdown

FICA (Social Security + Medicare): 7.65% of gross pay (6.2% SS on first $168,600 + 1.45% Medicare on all earnings). This is the employer match — employees pay the same 7.65%. FUTA (Federal Unemployment): 0.6% on first $7,000 per employee ($42/employee/year after state credit). SUTA (State Unemployment): Varies by state and employer history (0.5-5.4% on first $7,000-56,500 depending on state).

Total Employer Tax Burden

For a $65,000 employee: FICA match ~$4,973 + FUTA ~$42 + SUTA ~$200-1,500 + Workers Comp ~$325-2,600 = $5,540-9,115 total (8.5-14% above salary). This is the minimum employer cost beyond salary — before benefits, overhead, or any other expenses. Payroll taxes are non-negotiable costs that must be factored into every hiring decision.

⚡ CalcWolf Insight

The employer FICA match (7.65%) is an invisible tax that most employees never see. On a $65,000 salary, the employer pays $4,973 in FICA on top of your salary. Self-employed individuals pay both halves (15.3% total), which is why self-employment tax feels so much more painful than employee withholding.

Frequently asked questions
What payroll taxes does the employer pay?
Employers pay: Social Security (6.2% on first $168,600), Medicare (1.45% on all wages + 0.9% on wages over $200K), FUTA (0.6% on first $7,000), SUTA (varies by state), and Workers Compensation (varies by industry risk). Total: 8-14% above salary depending on state and industry.
How do I reduce payroll tax costs?
Legitimate strategies: use 1099 contractors for non-core functions (eliminates employer taxes but has legal restrictions), maximize pre-tax employee benefits (reduces taxable wages for some calculations), maintain low SUTA rate through low turnover, and properly classify employees by risk category for workers comp.
✓ Math logic verified against primary sources → See our verification process
Kevin Glover
Founder, CalcWolf · GLVTS · Blickr
All formulas sourced from primary references — IRS publications, peer-reviewed research, and official standards. Results are tested against independent reference calculators before publishing. Rates and brackets updated when official sources change. Editorial policy →
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Found a bug or outdated data? Reports go directly to Kevin and are reviewed personally.