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You don't give anywhere near enough info for anyone to answer your question about your takehome pay. Are you single? What do you claim on your W-4? Where do you live? Where do you work

The people who give you specific numbers above are giving them without enough info to really know or even estimate. I particularly like the answer from the "accountant" who tells you how much state tax will be deducted when you don't say what state you live in.

Go to paycheckcity.com and enter your info to get a pretty good idea of what will be taken out.

2007-08-16 10:28:14 · answer #1 · answered by Judy 7 · 1 0

You might have a complaint you could file but it hinges on the definition of your job title. Not sure what your job is. Salaried used to be a stipulated job description of a manger of 2 or more workers that answered to you and you had the hire/fire capabilities over. But, some of what I was familiar with has changed. I do know in disputes over overtime pay the rule changed so that the average over a 2-week period equals 80 hours, then the company can elect to pay straight time like 2 40-hour weeks. That is, one week could theoretically be 79 hours and the next week 1 hour. This was an effort to lesson the load of court filings. Otherwise, companies could pay piecemeal like requesting say for example, a print shop's pressman, be paid for each job assignment he produces instead of by the hour. Likewise, a carpenter's helper would get so much per wall that he erects. That's why hourly pay exists because two workers might accomplish a product for the owner's profits. Because each state also has their little regulations included in all this, you should go to your state's employment agency and ask for their opinions and literature.

2016-03-17 00:44:24 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

This will depend on your tax bracket and the number of deductions you're allowed.
Yahoo Finance has a calculator that can give you change information (e.g. adding a 401k deduction, adding a second deduction for a spouse, etc.)
If you're paid every other week, that would be 26 pay periods every year. This would yield $1,461.53 before taxes. If you're in about a 26% tax bracket, that would leave about $1,080 per paycheck. The Yahoo calculator will show you this.

2007-08-16 05:07:35 · answer #3 · answered by brewer_engineer 5 · 2 0

paycheck paid 38k salary weeks taxes

2016-02-02 13:47:22 · answer #4 · answered by Diena 4 · 0 0

I don't know what your withholding is, but I am guessing that after taxes, you would receive $1,298.33 every 2 weeks. I figured it this way:

$38,000 divided by 12 months = $3,166.66 per month
$3,166.66 x .82 (withholding) = $2,596.66 per month after taxes
$2,596.66 divided by 4 weeks = $649.16 every week after taxes
$649.16 x 2 weeks = $1,298.33 every 2 weeks after taxes.

I hope this helps!

2007-08-16 05:02:10 · answer #5 · answered by ♥ тнє σяιgιиαℓ gιяℓfяι∂αу ♥ 7 · 0 1

between 1200-1400 depending on taxes

2015-12-08 10:45:37 · answer #6 · answered by D'Andre 1 · 0 0

about 1100 -1200 bucks

2007-08-16 04:57:07 · answer #7 · answered by WJ 5 · 1 0

$1583 every two weeks.

1583 x 24 = 3799999999

2007-08-16 04:55:52 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

1461.54

38000 divided by 52 weeks in the year times 2

2007-08-16 04:57:47 · answer #9 · answered by spyder250 2 · 0 1

$38,000 Gross
$ 2,907 FICA
$ 5,700 Federal
$ 2,000 State
$27,393 Net
$ 1,054 Bi-weekly amount

2007-08-16 05:05:09 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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