Massachusetts Salary Paycheck Calculator
Processing payroll in Massachusetts doesn’t have to be complicated. With the knowledge you need to correctly calculate employees’ paychecks and payroll taxes, calculating payroll will be a cinch!
Here you will find answers to your most asked Massachusetts payroll questions. You will have the information to quickly process your Massachusetts payroll so you can get back to more important things... like running your business!
Massachusetts payroll taxes
Here’s what you need to know about withholding payroll taxes in Massachusetts.
Massachusetts payroll taxes start with employees filling out Form M-4. This information helps you determine how much you should withhold.
If an employee does not complete this form, you will need to withhold tax as though no exemptions were claimed.
Employees need to update Form M-4 in case of life events (such as marriage, divorce, birth or adoption of a child, etc.) that may impact their taxes.
The personal income tax rate in Massachusetts is 5%.
Additional Massachusetts forms
In addition to Form M-4 mentioned above, Massachusetts employers also need to file the following forms:
Employer’s Return of Income Taxes Withheld (M-941)*
Reconciliation of Massachusetts Income Taxes Withheld for Employers (M-3)
Wage and Tax Statement (State W2)
Paid Family & Medical Leave Quarterly Filings
Quarterly Employment and Wage Detail Report (SUI, EMAC, and workforce training fund)
MA New Hire Report
Massachusetts unemployment tax rate
Massachusetts requires most employers to pay unemployment insurance tax to help compensate workers who are out of work through no fault of their own.
Employers pay Massachusetts unemployment tax on the first $15,000 of an employee’s wages.
New employers in the construction industry pay at a rate of 5.55%.
New employers who are not in the construction industry pay at a rate of 1.45%.
Experienced employers pay at a rate of 0.56–8.62%.
Unemployment tax in Massachusetts should be paid quarterly through the Massachusetts Department of Unemployment Assistance.
Paying Massachusetts taxes
Here’s what you need to know about paying Massachusetts taxes:
How often employers pay depends on the amount of tax you withhold in a year.
Massachusetts’s payment frequencies are: annually, quarterly, or monthly.
Other Massachusetts taxes
Massachusetts employers are also required to pay or withhold the following taxes.
Massachusetts Employer Medical Assistance Contribution (EMAC)
Massachusetts Paid Family & Medical Leave (PFML)
Massachusetts salary threshold
Because Massachusetts doesn’t have its own salary threshold, it adheres to the federal salary threshold.
The federal salary threshold is now $684 per week on a salary basis or on an hourly basis at a rate not less than $27.63 an hour.
The Department of Labor permits employers to count some bonuses, commissions, and other incentive payments toward meeting the standard salary level (up to 10%).
Employees who earn at least $107,432 per year may qualify as 'highly compensated.'
See this Department of Labor fact sheet for details.
Workers’ Compensation
Requirements to obtain Workers' Compensation vary by state. This table outlines some of these requirements. If you determine that your company is required to purchase Workers' Compensation insurance in your state, learn how to sign up for this insurance with Gusto. Sometimes, companies get a request for a workers' comp audit—head to this article and click the workers’ comp audit reports dropdown for more information.
New hires
Employers in Massachusetts need to report new employees.
New hires must be reported to MassTaxConnect.
New hires must be reported within 14 days of their first day of work.
Payroll stubs
You must provide a pay stub to every employee that includes:
Company’s legal name and address
Employee’s name and last four digits of their Social Security number
Pay period beginning and end dates
Total hours worked
Rate of pay
Gross wages
The amount and reason for any deduction
Final paychecks
Employers must pay final wages to employees on their last day.
Time off
Massachusetts law requires employers to provide the following types of time off to employees:
Jury duty
If they request voting leave, employees in the manufacturing, mechanical, and mercantile (retail) industries do not have to work during the first two hours that the polls are open.
Family & parental leave, under the unemployment insurance law.
This appiles to employers with six or more employees for parental leave.
This additionally applies to employers with 50 or more employees for an employee’s child's or elderly relative's routine medical or dental appointments.
Sick leave applies to all employers and must be paid if the employer has 11 or more employees.
Domestic violence leave applies to employers with 50 or more employees under abusive behavior leave law. It applies to all employers under sick leave law.