How to apply the result
- Download a fresh W-4 from the IRS website (or get one from your HR/payroll team).
- Fill in Step 1 (name, address, SSN, "Married filing jointly").
- Skip Step 2 unless you also want to use the multiple-jobs worksheet — for most two-earner couples, the extra withholding approach below is simpler.
- In Step 4(c), write the per-paycheck dollar amount this calculator gave you.
- Sign Step 5 and submit the form to the higher earner's payroll department. The lower earner's W-4 does not need to change (assuming it has MFJ checked with no other adjustments).
How this calculator works
The IRS withholding tables assume the W-4 you submit reflects your entire household income. So when both spouses submit a W-4 with "Married filing jointly" checked and nothing in Steps 2–4, each employer calculates withholding using the full $31,500 MFJ standard deduction and starts at the 10% bracket. The standard deduction effectively gets used twice and the lower brackets get double-filled, so combined annual withholding undershoots the household's actual tax bill.
The calculator computes the gap directly:
- Joint tax owed = federal tax on (combined wages − $31,500), using 2025 MFJ brackets.
- Default withholding = sum of what each employer would withhold treating its job as the only household income.
- Shortfall = joint tax − default withholding.
- Per-paycheck extra = shortfall ÷ pay periods remaining.
What this calculator doesn't cover
- Non-wage income (1099, investment, rental, retirement distributions)
- Bonuses, RSUs, or other supplemental wages with separate withholding rules
- Itemized deductions, the QBI deduction, or above-the-line deductions beyond the standard deduction
- Tax credits (Child Tax Credit, Saver's Credit, etc.) — those go in Step 3 of the W-4 and reduce withholding further
- State and local income tax withholding
- Pre-tax 401(k), HSA, or insurance deductions that reduce taxable wages — if you contribute heavily, enter your wages after those deductions for a closer estimate
For a more comprehensive estimate, use the IRS Tax Withholding Estimator.
Frequently asked questions
Why do two-earner couples often under-withhold?
When both spouses check "Married filing jointly" on their W-4 with no other adjustments, each employer withholds as if that job were the household's only income. The standard deduction is effectively applied twice and the lower tax brackets get filled twice — so the combined withholding falls short of the actual joint tax liability.
What is Step 2(c) on the W-4?
Step 2(c) is a checkbox on the W-4 that signals "there are only two jobs total in this household and they pay roughly the same." When both spouses check it on their own W-4s, each employer uses approximately half the standard deduction and half-width brackets, which produces close-to-correct withholding. It works best when the two paychecks are similar; if one spouse earns much more, the math is off and you should use the extra withholding approach instead.
Where do I enter the extra withholding amount?
On the higher earner's W-4, in Step 4(c) ("Extra withholding"). Enter the per-paycheck dollar amount this calculator gives you. Submit the updated W-4 to that spouse's payroll/HR department; do not put extra withholding on the lower earner's W-4.
Why put the extra withholding on the higher earner?
Two reasons. First, the higher earner has more cash flow per paycheck to absorb the deduction without going negative. Second, the higher earner is more likely to have pay periods remaining throughout the year (less likely to be hourly/seasonal), making the per-paycheck math more reliable.
Does this account for bonuses, side income, or itemized deductions?
No — this is a wages-only estimate using the standard deduction. If you have substantial non-wage income (1099, investments, rental), large itemized deductions, or expect bonuses, the result will be off. Use the IRS Tax Withholding Estimator at irs.gov for those cases or consult a tax professional.
What tax year does this use?
This calculator uses the 2025 MFJ standard deduction ($31,500) and 2025 federal tax brackets.