A plain-English overview of common Kansas paycheck taxes for 2026
This guide is for general informational purposes only and provides simplified overviews and estimates. It does not provide tax, legal, payroll, accounting, or financial advice.
Tax rules can change, and actual paycheck amounts may vary based on your employer, benefit elections, filing status, local taxes, deductions, credits, garnishments, and withholding elections. This guide does not cover every possible tax scenario.
For personalized tax advice, please consult a qualified tax professional.
For official guidance, review materials from the Kansas Department of Revenue and the Internal Revenue Service (IRS).
Last reviewed: June 2026
Kansas has a two-bracket income tax with a narrow range of 5.2% to 5.58%. The state offers both a standard deduction ($4,000 / $8,000) and personal exemptions ($2,250 per person) plus a $2,250 per-dependent deduction.
Kansas exempts Social Security benefits for filers with federal adjusted gross income of $75,000 or less.
Below are the Kansas state income tax brackets. Rates apply to taxable income within each range — you only pay the higher rate on the portion of income that falls in that bracket.
Single / Married Filing Separately
| Taxable Income | Tax Rate |
|---|---|
| $0 – $22,999 | 5.20% |
| Over $23,000 | 5.58% |
Married Filing Jointly
| Taxable Income | Tax Rate |
|---|---|
| $0 – $45,999 | 5.20% |
| Over $46,000 | 5.58% |
Every paycheck goes through the same basic pipeline from gross pay to the net amount that hits your bank account:
Kansas has two brackets: 5.2% on the first $23,000 of taxable income (single) and 5.58% on income above that. Married thresholds are doubled.
Kansas exempts Social Security benefits from state income tax for filers with federal AGI of $75,000 or less. Filers above that threshold are taxed on their benefits.
Kansas offers a standard deduction of $4,000 (single) / $8,000 (MFJ), a personal exemption of $2,250 per filer, and a $2,250 deduction per dependent.
The information in this guide is based on the following official and publicly available sources. Always verify current rates and rules before making financial decisions.