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DeductionsUpdated June 3, 2026by NetPayGuide

How 401(k), HSA, and FSA Reduce Your Taxable Income and Take-Home Pay

How pre-tax deductions reduce your taxable income and paycheck — detailed breakdown of 401(k), HSA, FSA limits, tax savings, and real paycheck examples for 2026.

Pre-tax deductions like 401(k), HSA, and FSA contributions reduce your federal taxable income dollar-for-dollar before taxes are calculated. For a $75,000 salary in 2026, contributing $7,000 to a 401(k) means you pay federal income tax on only $68,000—saving roughly $1,540 in federal tax alone. These deductions hit your paycheck immediately but compound over a career into tens of thousands of dollars in tax savings.

Most workers don't realize they control the biggest lever on their take-home pay through benefits enrollment. Your salary is fixed, but the amount you send to pre-tax accounts—your 401(k), Health Savings Account (HSA), and Flexible Spending Account (FSA)—directly shrinks what the IRS considers taxable income. The math seems harsh at first: you make less money on paper. But the math works because you're paying 22%, 24%, or even 32% less tax on those dollars. If you're in the 22% federal bracket, every $1 you move into a 401(k) saves you roughly $0.22 in federal income tax, plus another $0.076 in Social Security and Medicare tax (FICA). That's real money.

The catch: you're trading take-home pay now for lower taxes now—and access to that money later. A dollar in your 401(k) isn't in your checking account. An HSA dollar is locked for medical expenses (unless you're over 65). An FSA dollar is use-it-or-lose-it by year-end.

Use our paycheck calculator to plug in your own 401(k) and HSA contributions and see exactly what lands in your bank account.

What Are Pre-Tax Deductions and How Do They Change Your Paycheck

Pre-tax deductions are contributions you make from your gross pay before federal income tax, state income tax (in most states), and sometimes Medicare and Social Security tax are calculated. They sit at the top of your paycheck—above the tax line—so they shrink your taxable income, not just your net pay.

Here's the order on a paystub, top to bottom:

  1. Gross pay — your salary or hourly wage before anything comes out
  2. Pre-tax deductions (401k, HSA, FSA, transit, dependent care) — subtracted here
  3. Taxable wages for federal and state income tax — calculated from the amount left
  4. Income tax withheld — 12–24% of taxable wages, depending on your bracket and filing status
  5. FICA tax (Social Security + Medicare) — 7.65% of gross pay (not reduced by pre-tax deductions)
  6. Post-tax deductions (Roth 401k, Roth IRA if payroll, garnishments) — subtracted from what's left
  7. Net pay — what you actually deposit

The tax savings from pre-tax deductions are real but immediate. You don't see them as a refund next year; they appear on your next paystub. A $500/month 401(k) contribution ($6,000/year) reduces your federal taxable income by $6,000. If you're in the 22% federal bracket, you save $1,320 in federal income tax for 2026. You don't get a check for $1,320; instead, your federal withholding is $1,320 lower throughout the year, so your paychecks are bigger.

The downside: that $6,000 never reaches your bank account unless you withdraw it (often with penalties before age 59½). It's locked in the account until retirement or until you leave the job. An FSA is stricter—you lose any money you don't spend by the end of the plan year, with a small carryover allowance (usually $680 in 2026).

401(k) Contributions: The Biggest Pre-Tax Deduction for Most Workers

A 401(k) payroll deduction is the workhorse of pre-tax savings. Your employer's plan lets you direct a portion of your paycheck into an investment account before taxes hit. In 2026, the 401(k) contribution limits are:

  • $24,500 for workers under 50
  • $32,500 for workers 50 and older (with an $8,000 catch-up contribution)

Most people contribute a percentage of pay (e.g., 6%, 10%, 15%) rather than a fixed dollar amount. If you earn $75,000 and elect 10%, you contribute $7,500/year ($625/month). That $7,500 never hits your federal taxable income.

How Much Does 401(k) Reduce Taxes

Take a $75,000 salary with a $7,500 401(k) contribution:

  • Gross pay: $75,000
  • Less 401(k): –$7,500
  • Taxable income for federal tax: $67,500
  • Federal income tax (22% bracket, assuming married filing jointly): ~$6,840 (instead of $8,160 without the 401k)
  • Tax saved: ~$1,320

That's in federal income tax alone, plus you save at your state's income tax rate too. One important caveat: a traditional 401(k) does not reduce FICA. Social Security (6.2%) and Medicare (1.45%) are still withheld on your full $75,000, because 401(k) contributions are exempt from income tax but not from payroll tax. (HSA and FSA contributions made through your employer's cafeteria plan do escape FICA — more on that below.)

Your take-home for the year is $75,000 – $1,320 (fed tax) – state tax – $7,500 (401k) = roughly $64,000–$66,000 depending on your state. But you've moved $7,500 into a retirement account that's likely growing tax-free inside the 401(k) until you withdraw it.

Traditional 401(k) vs Roth 401(k) Paycheck Impact

The traditional 401(k) vs roth 401(k) difference is critical for paycheck math:

  • Traditional 401(k) — contribution reduces your taxable income now. Federal tax bill drops immediately. The full balance (contributions + growth) is taxed as ordinary income when you withdraw in retirement.
  • Roth 401(k) — contribution does NOT reduce your taxable income. You pay federal tax on the full $75,000 salary. But withdrawals in retirement are tax-free.

For take-home pay this year, traditional wins. Your paychecks are bigger because your withholding is lower. For someone in the 22% bracket, a $500/month traditional 401(k) contribution costs $388/month in lost net pay (the $500 minus the federal + FICA tax savings). The same $500/month Roth costs you the full $500 in take-home pay.

Many plans offer both, and some workers split contributions between them. The choice is a retirement tax-planning decision, not just a paycheck question—so understand your state-specific taxes and your expected retirement bracket before deciding.

Health Savings Accounts (HSA): Triple Tax Advantage Explained

An HSA (health savings account) tax benefit is unique: contributions reduce your taxable income (like a 401k), the money grows tax-free inside the account, AND withdrawals for qualified medical expenses are tax-free. That's triple tax-free.

The HSA contribution limit 2026 is:

  • $4,400 for self-only coverage
  • $8,750 for family coverage

You can only contribute to an HSA if you're enrolled in a high-deductible health plan (HDHP) — a plan with a deductible of at least $1,700 (self-only) or $3,400 (family). Many employers offer an HDHP alongside a traditional PPO or HMO, giving you a choice during open enrollment.

How HSA Reduces Your Paycheck and Taxes

An HSA is identical to a 401(k) in terms of paycheck impact: contributions are pre-tax and reduce federal taxable income dollar-for-dollar.

Example: $75,000 salary, 10% traditional 401(k) ($7,500), and $300/month HSA contribution ($3,600/year):

  • Gross pay: $75,000
  • Less pre-tax deductions: –$7,500 (401k) – $3,600 (HSA) = –$11,100
  • Taxable income for federal: $63,900
  • Federal tax savings: $2,464 (22% × $11,100)
  • FICA tax savings: $849 (7.65% × $11,100)
  • Total tax savings: $3,313

That $300/month ($3,600/year) for medical costs removes $3,600 from your taxable income and likely saves you $861 in combined federal and FICA taxes. Your effective cost for the HSA contribution is roughly $2,739/year instead of $3,600.

Unlike an FSA, an HSA balance rolls over indefinitely. If you contribute $3,600 and spend only $1,000 on medical costs in 2026, you have $2,600 left to use in 2027, 2028, or beyond. After age 65, you can withdraw HSA money for any reason (it becomes taxable as ordinary income, like a traditional 401k, but no penalty).

Flexible Spending Accounts (FSA): Fast Money for Dependent and Medical Care

An FSA (flexible spending account) deduction is a pre-tax account you elect during open enrollment to pay for predictable out-of-pocket medical or dependent care costs. Like a 401(k), contributions reduce your taxable income. Unlike a 401(k), you must spend the money by the end of the plan year or lose it.

The FSA annual limit 2026 is:

  • $5,000 for a dependent care FSA (childcare, preschool, adult day care for a dependent or spouse)
  • $3,400 for a medical FSA (copays, deductibles, prescription costs—after your health insurance pays)

These are separate accounts. You can contribute to both in the same year if your employer offers both.

Dependent Care FSA

The dependent care FSA reimburses childcare, preschool, after-school care, and day care for children under 13 or a disabled dependent. It doesn't cover school tuition (K–12 private school), overnight camp, or nannies who also do housework.

Example: Two kids in daycare costing $18,000/year. You elect the $5,000 maximum in a dependent care FSA:

  • Out-of-pocket cost: $18,000
  • Funded by FSA: –$5,000
  • You pay directly: $13,000
  • Tax savings: $5,000 × 22% (federal) + $5,000 × 7.65% (FICA) = $1,483

You've cut your out-of-pocket cost from $18,000 to $13,000 while saving $1,483 in taxes.

Medical FSA

A medical FSA covers copays, coinsurance, deductibles, and over-the-counter medications (if prescribed by a doctor). It does NOT cover health insurance premiums or cosmetic procedures.

The challenge: you must predict your medical expenses for the entire year. If you elect $2,500 and spend only $1,200, you forfeit the remaining $1,300 (with a $680 carryover allowance in 2026, meaning $620 is lost). This is the "use-it-or-lose-it" rule.

Real scenario: $75,000 salary, 10% traditional 401(k), $3,600 HSA, and $2,000 medical FSA:

  • Gross pay: $75,000
  • Pre-tax deductions: –$7,500 – $3,600 – $2,000 = –$13,100
  • Federal taxable income: $61,900
  • Federal income tax (22% bracket): ~$6,118 (vs. $8,160 without deductions)
  • FICA tax: $5,736 (7.65% × $75,000—FICA is not reduced)
  • Net federal + FICA tax: $11,854
  • Take-home after all taxes and pre-tax deductions: roughly $63,146

Without the pre-tax deductions, take-home would be $61,776. The pre-tax strategy nets you an extra $1,370 in your paycheck, but $13,100 is locked in accounts for medical and retirement use.

Other Pre-Tax Deductions: Transit, Parking, and Dependent Care

Beyond 401(k), HSA, and FSA, many employers offer smaller pre-tax deductions through a cafeteria plan (also called Section 125). These include:

Transit and Parking Pre-Tax

Transit and parking pre-tax benefits reduce your taxable income for public transportation, vanpools, and parking costs.

  • Combined limit 2026: $315/month ($3,780/year) for parking and transit combined
  • Some employers offer separate limits: $315 for parking, $315 for transit

If you spend $150/month on parking and $100/month on transit ($250/month total, $3,000/year):

  • Tax savings: $3,000 × 22% (federal) + $3,000 × 7.65% (FICA) = $885/year
  • Your effective cost: $2,115 instead of $3,000

This is invisible to most workers because it's so efficient: your employer deducts it pre-tax, and you never feel the pinch.

Dependent Care FSA (Recap)

See the dependent care FSA section above. This is technically part of the cafeteria plan offering.

Other Cafeteria Plan Items

Some employers offer:

  • Adoption assistance (up to $14,960 in 2026 tax-free reimbursement)
  • Commuter benefits (bus, subway, vanpool, parking as noted above)
  • Group term life insurance (premiums for coverage over $50,000)
  • Accident and disability insurance (employer-paid, usually)

These are less common and vary wildly by employer. Check your benefits summary or ask HR if you're unsure what's available.

Real Example: How Pre-Tax Deductions Reduce Federal and State Taxes

Let's build a complete paycheck scenario to show how pre-tax deductions cascade through federal, state, and FICA taxes.

Scenario: $85,000 salary, married filing jointly, two kids, California resident, employer offers 401(k), HSA, and dependent care FSA. You elect:

  • 10% traditional 401(k): $8,500/year ($708/month)
  • $300/month HSA: $3,600/year
  • $2,400/year dependent care FSA: $200/month

Step 1: Calculate taxable income reduction

  • Gross pay: $85,000
  • Less 401(k): –$8,500
  • Less HSA: –$3,600
  • Less dependent care FSA: –$2,400
  • Reduced gross for income tax: $70,500

Step 2: Federal income tax

Using 2026 married filing jointly brackets:

  • Standard deduction: $29,200
  • Taxable income: $70,500 – $29,200 = $41,300
  • Federal income tax (using 12% bracket): ~$4,956

Without pre-tax deductions, taxable income would be $55,800, and federal tax would be ~$6,696. Savings: $1,740.

Step 3: FICA tax

FICA applies to your wages minus any cafeteria-plan contributions that are payroll-tax exempt — your HSA ($3,600) and dependent care FSA ($2,400). Your 401(k) is not exempt. So the FICA base is $85,000 − $3,600 − $2,400 = $79,000:

  • Social Security (6.2%, wage base $184,500): $79,000 × 6.2% = $4,898
  • Medicare (1.45% all wages): $79,000 × 1.45% = $1,146
  • Total FICA: $6,044

This is the most commonly misunderstood part: a 401(k) does not reduce FICA — Social Security and Medicare still apply to that $8,500. But HSA and dependent care FSA contributions made through your employer's cafeteria plan are FICA-exempt, which is why the base above is $79,000, not $85,000. Versus FICA on the full $85,000 ($6,503), that exemption saves about $459.

Step 4: California state income tax

California taxes pre-tax 401(k) contributions but not HSA or dependent care FSA contributions. So:

  • Gross pay: $85,000
  • Less 401(k): –$8,500
  • California taxable income: $76,500
  • Standard deduction (MFJ): $9,182
  • Taxable: $67,318
  • California income tax (9.3% bracket): ~$6,261

Without the 401(k), California tax would be ~$7,087. Savings: $826.

Step 5: Paycheck math

  • Gross pay: $85,000
  • Federal income tax: –$4,956
  • California income tax: –$6,261
  • FICA: –$6,044
  • 401(k): –$8,500
  • HSA: –$3,600
  • Dependent care FSA: –$2,400
  • Take-home: $53,239/year ($4,437/month)

Total tax savings from pre-tax deductions: $1,740 (federal) + $826 (state) + $459 (FICA, via the HSA + dependent care FSA exemption) = $3,025/year.

Your pre-tax deductions cost you $14,500 in immediate take-home ($8,500 + $3,600 + $2,400), but they save you $3,025 in taxes. Net cost: $11,475. Much of that $14,500 isn't gone — it's moved into your 401(k) and HSA balances, and the dependent care FSA comes back to you as reimbursement for childcare you were paying for anyway.

The Trade-Off: Lower Take-Home Now, But Real Tax Savings

The biggest misconception about pre-tax deductions is that they're "hiding" money. They're not. They're trading take-home now for lower taxes now and access to the money later (or never, if you use an HSA wisely for medical expenses).

The math:

  • A dollar in a pre-tax 401(k) saves you $0.22–$0.37 in federal income tax (depending on your bracket) immediately.
  • That same dollar avoids 7.65% FICA tax = $0.0765 saved.
  • Total immediate tax savings: roughly $0.30–$0.45 per dollar contributed.
  • Net cost to your paycheck: $0.55–$0.70 per dollar.

If you're in the 24% federal bracket plus roughly 6% state income tax, a $7,500 401(k) contribution costs you about $5,264 in take-home pay and saves you about $2,236 in immediate income tax (FICA still applies, so it isn't part of the savings). The trade-off is that $7,500 goes to your 401(k), not your bank account.

When pre-tax deductions make sense:

  • You have stable income and predictable medical expenses (HSA and medical FSA).
  • You're in a higher tax bracket now than you expect to be in retirement (traditional 401k and IRA).
  • Your employer offers a match on 401(k) contributions (free money).
  • You're buying healthcare or childcare you'd pay for anyway, so redirecting pre-tax dollars is pure savings.

When pre-tax might not make sense:

  • You have irregular income or unexpected medical bills (FSA's use-it-or-lose-it rule is painful).
  • You're in a lower tax bracket now and expect to be in a higher one in retirement (though this is rare).
  • You're close to a tax credit threshold—some credits phase out based on AGI, and pre-tax deductions can lower your AGI, reducing eligibility.

The best paycheck calculator lets you toggle your 401(k) and HSA contributions to see the real impact on your net pay.

Bottom Line: Is Maxing Pre-Tax Deductions Right for You

Pre-tax deductions are the single biggest lever you control to reduce your tax bill in a given year. Maxing out a 401(k), contributing to an HSA, or using a dependent care FSA for expenses you'd pay anyway all reduce your taxable income and put immediate tax savings in your pocket—in the form of lower withholding and bigger paychecks throughout the year.

The trade-off is real: that money leaves your bank account and lives in an account you can't touch without restrictions or penalties (except for HSAs after age 65, and FSAs for their intended purpose). For most workers, though, the tax savings are worth it because you're funding retirement or healthcare costs you'd pay for anyway—just on a pre-tax basis instead of after-tax.

The specific right move depends on your income, tax bracket, employer benefits, family situation, and expected expenses. Calculate your actual paycheck impact by plugging in your own salary, filing status, state, and desired pre-tax contributions to see exactly what lands in your account each pay period.

Frequently Asked Questions About Pre-Tax Deductions

How do pre-tax deductions affect my take-home pay?

Pre-tax deductions reduce your federal and (usually) state taxable income, lowering your income tax withholding and boosting your net pay compared to not contributing. However, the money itself leaves your paycheck and goes into the account—so you don't see a dollar-for-dollar gain in take-home, only a tax-savings gain. A $500/month 401(k) contribution costs roughly $350–$370 in take-home pay (after federal and state income-tax savings — a 401(k) doesn't cut FICA), not the full $500.

Can I contribute to both a traditional 401(k) and a Roth 401(k)?

Yes. Many employers offer both plans, and you can split your $24,500 (2026 limit) between them however you want. A traditional 401(k) contribution reduces your taxable income now; a Roth contribution doesn't. Most workers choose traditional for the immediate tax break, but some split the contributions to diversify their retirement tax treatment.

What's the difference between an HSA and an FSA?

An HSA is a savings account you own; it rolls over indefinitely and grows tax-free. An FSA is use-it-or-lose-it (with a small carryover). HSAs require a high-deductible health plan (HDHP); FSAs work with any health plan. HSAs are far more flexible and valuable long-term. You can only contribute to an HSA if enrolled in an HDHP; you can't have both an HSA and an FSA in the same year.

Do I lose my FSA money if I don't spend it?

Yes, mostly. The FSA annual limit 2026 is $3,400, and any unused balance at year-end is forfeited—with a $680 carryover allowance (so you can carry over up to $680 to the next plan year). Anything above that is gone. This is why FSAs are risky if you have variable medical expenses; estimate conservatively.

Can I use HSA money for anything?

HSA money must be used for qualified medical expenses—copays, deductibles, prescriptions, dental, vision, physical therapy, and many over-the-counter medications (if you have a prescription). Non-medical withdrawals are taxed as ordinary income plus a 20% penalty (before age 65). After 65, non-medical withdrawals are taxed but not penalized. This is still much better than a 401(k) or FSA in terms of flexibility.

Does a 401(k) contribution reduce Social Security and Medicare tax?

No. A traditional 401(k) contribution reduces your federal (and usually state) income tax withholding, but Social Security (6.2%) and Medicare (1.45%) are still withheld on your full salary — 401(k) money is exempt from income tax, not from payroll tax. It's HSA and FSA contributions made through your employer's cafeteria plan that escape FICA. So if FICA savings matter to you, the HSA and FSA are the accounts that deliver them, not the 401(k).

What happens to my pre-tax deductions if I change jobs?

A 401(k) belongs to you; it remains in the plan until you leave the job, then you can roll it into a new employer's 401(k) or an IRA. An HSA belongs to you; it's portable and stays with you forever. An FSA is plan-specific; any unused balance (except the carryover allowance) is forfeited when you leave the job. Dependent care FSA is the same. Always withdraw or spend FSA money before you quit.

How much can I contribute to a 401(k) in 2026?

401(k) contribution limits 2026 are $24,500 for workers under 50, and $32,500 (with an $8,000 catch-up) for workers 50 and older. These limits apply across all 401(k)s you own; if you have two jobs, the combined contributions can't exceed $24,500. Your employer match doesn't count toward your limit.

How do pre-tax deductions affect my tax refund?

Pre-tax deductions reduce your taxable income, which usually means you owe less tax overall and might get a smaller refund (or owe more if you didn't withhold enough). They don't directly affect your refund amount; they affect the underlying tax bill. If you use an FSA to cover medical costs you'd claim on Schedule A, the FSA use reduces taxable income more efficiently than itemizing (so you might not itemize anymore if pre-tax deductions bring you below the standard deduction threshold).

Should I max out my 401(k) or my HSA first?

Prioritize employer 401(k) match first (free money). Then, if you have an HDHP and predictable medical expenses, fund the HSA (triple tax advantage). Then max out the 401(k) if you can afford it. Then consider a dependent care FSA if you have childcare costs. Each situation is different; a tax professional can help you rank them based on your income and expected retirement timeline.

Can I change my pre-tax deductions mid-year?

401(k) and HSA contributions can usually be changed whenever you want (some plans limit changes to payroll cycles). FSA and dependent care FSA are locked in during open enrollment unless you have a qualifying life event (birth, job loss, health plan change, etc.). Plan carefully: you can't reduce an FSA election mid-year and reclaim forfeited money.

Tax figures verified against current IRS & SSA primary sources — see our methodology & sources. Educational estimates only, not tax advice.

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