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District of Columbia Bonus Tax Calculator

Data compiled and maintained by Edmond Daher · Updated 2026-06-16

Wondering why your District of Columbia bonus shrank so much? It's withholding, a flat prepayment, not a higher rate on bonuses. District of Columbia has no separate bonus rate, so it withholds using the aggregate method on top of the 22% federal prepayment and FICA. Run your numbers to see the "now" withholding next to the "at tax time" total, and how much comes back or is still owed. Everything runs in your browser.

Quick answer: a separately paid bonus in District of Columbia is withheld at a flat 22% for federal income tax plus no separate District of Columbia rate — it's withheld as ordinary wages, plus 7.65% FICA. Those are withholding rates, not the tax itself; your bonus settles at your marginal rate on your return — the tool below shows by how much.

Your salary or wages for the year, not counting this bonus. Drives your true marginal rate and the Social Security wage cap.

Advanced options

Only matters past $1,000,000 of total bonuses in a year, where federal withholding jumps to 37% on the excess.

Estimate only, not tax advice — terms.

The three cuts on a District of Columbia bonus: federal, state, and FICA

Federal withholding on a bonus. The IRS default holds back a flat 22% for federal income tax when the bonus is separate from your regular pay (IRS Pub 15). It rises to a mandatory 37% on any bonus dollars past $1,000,000 in a year — the third bracket's rate as a default, not a bonus tax.

District of Columbia folds the bonus into regular pay. Lacking a flat supplemental rate, District of Columbia uses the aggregate method: withholding is figured on your wages plus the bonus. District of Columbia's income tax is graduated across seven District of Columbia brackets topping out at 10.75%, so an aggregated bonus is withheld somewhere along that schedule.

FICA: withheld and owed. Social Security and Medicare take 7.65% of the bonus — a true tax, not a prepayment. It reads the same in the "now" and "at tax time" columns because none of it comes back — just the income-tax slice is a prepayment that reconciles.

Working out a whole paycheck? See the District of Columbia paycheck calculator.

Run the numbers on a $11,000 bonus for a $47,000 earner in District of Columbia

Here's how a $11,000 bonus plays out for a single filer making $47,000 in District of Columbia:

  • Withheld now: $2,420 federal (22%) + $670 District of Columbia + $842 FICA = $3,931 held back, leaving about $7,069 in hand — a 35.7% bite.
  • What it actually costs: the true income tax on the bonus is about $1,990 (federal $1,320 + District of Columbia $670), plus the same $842 FICA.
  • The gap: the flat 22% over-shoots your real rate by about $1,100, so that much is a refund later. Either way, the $842 FICA is final and won't come back.

Example single-filer numbers from the calculator above; your own refund or bill shifts with your total income and filing status.

How District of Columbia bonus withholding stacks up against Maryland, Virginia and Pennsylvania

Take a $10,000 bonus for someone on $70,000 and compare District of Columbia with bordering Maryland, Virginia and Pennsylvania:

StateBonus methodState withheldTotal withheld
District of Columbiaaggregate method$728$3,693
Marylandaggregate method$475$3,440
Virginiaflat 5.75%$575$3,540
Pennsylvaniaaggregate (~3.07%)$307$3,272

Total = federal 22% + state + FICA. Illustrative single-filer figures; the income tax you actually owe trues up at filing.

Why your District of Columbia bonus looks over-taxed — and mostly isn't

A bonus doesn't trigger a different tax — just a flat withholding up front. When you file, it's folded into your income and taxed at your marginal rate through the normal brackets. Under 22% (most people) the extra comes back as a refund; over 22% you owe the difference. In this page's $11,000 example, about $1,100 of what's withheld is really over-payment you'd get back. Just the 7.65% FICA slice is a real tax you won't get back.

What District of Columbia holds back on a $5,000, $25,000, or $100,000 bonus

Three bonuses — $5,000, $25,000, $100,000 — and what District of Columbia withholds from each on a $70,000 salary:

BonusFederalDistrict of ColumbiaFICATotal% of bonus
$5,000$1,100$325$383$1,80836.1%
$25,000$5,500$2,003$1,913$9,41637.7%
$100,000$22,000$8,378$7,650$38,02838.0%

The % shifts as Social Security stops at the wage base; the income-tax portion still trues up when you file.

District of Columbia bonus tax FAQ

Is there a special bonus tax rate in District of Columbia?

No. The 22% federal and the state supplemental rate are withholding defaults, not rates that apply only to bonuses. Your real tax is your ordinary marginal rate.

Will I get some of my District of Columbia bonus withholding back?

Often, yes — if your true marginal rate is below the 22% withheld, the difference refunds at filing; above 22%, you owe it. FICA is a true tax and never refunds.

How much is withheld from a bonus in District of Columbia for 2026?

On a separately paid bonus, District of Columbia takes the aggregate method, the federal side takes a flat 22% (37% beyond $1,000,000/yr), and FICA takes 7.65%. Those are withholding rates that settle up when you file — not a final tax.

Does District of Columbia have a separate bonus withholding rate?

No. District of Columbia has no separate supplemental rate, so a bonus is withheld with the aggregate method — as if it were part of your regular wages.

Bonus tax calculators near District of Columbia

District of Columbia paycheck calculator · all state bonus tax calculators →

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