New Hampshire variant. This is a New Hampshire-specific version of the Payroll Tax Estimator (Flat Rate), using pre-defined local figures (tax rates, median home and income values, and typical regional costs). For the full formula, methodology, and FAQ, open the main Payroll Tax Estimator (Flat Rate).
New Hampshire employers owe federal payroll taxes (Social Security, Medicare, FUTA) plus state obligations (state unemployment only - no state income tax withholding).
Payroll tax obligations in New Hampshire
Employers match the 6.2% Social Security and 1.45% Medicare withheld from employees, and pay FUTA (0.6% on the first $7,000 after credits) plus state unemployment insurance.
New Hampshire has no state income tax, so you don't withhold state income tax - but you still pay state unemployment.
About taxes and housing in New Hampshire
New Hampshire imposes no tax on earned wage income and no general sales tax, though it has historically taxed certain interest and dividend income.
New Hampshire relies heavily on property taxes, with one of the highest effective rates in the nation near 1.9%, and median home values around $470,000.
New Hampshire's economy benefits from its proximity to Boston, with strengths in manufacturing, technology, and cross-border retail spending.
Worked example: employer cost on $90,845
On a $90,845 salary, the employer's FICA match alone is 7.65% = $6,950, before FUTA and New Hampshire unemployment insurance.
Quick reference
- State income tax: No income tax on wages (3% on interest/dividends, phasing out)
- State sales tax: 0% (plus 0.00% avg local)
- Median home value: $470,000
- Median household income: $90,845
- Effective property tax rate: 1.93%
- Avg auto insurance: $1,064/yr
Frequently Asked Questions
What payroll taxes do New Hampshire employers pay?
Employer FICA match (7.65%), FUTA, state unemployment, and no state income tax withholding.
What is the employer FICA match?
Employers match 6.2% Social Security + 1.45% Medicare = 7.65% of wages.