Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Interesting. I'm a single mom to two college-aged kids, and we live off $110k/mo plus $1200/mo child support, which covers my mortgage.
I don't know how child support works, but if it is tax free, that's massive amounts of income.
My biweekly paycheck making around $150k.afyer tax is only $2478 after maxing 401k contributions, health care, etc. You have huge cash flow due to child support, assuming it is tax free.
That doesn’t make sense. NP here. My salary of $145k with max 401k deductions including 50 plus, works out to $3100 take home every two weeks. Are you deducting too much in taxes so that you get a big refund check?
And $1200 a MONTH is not a big windfall. An extra $14400 a year isn’t substantial.
NP, but I'm looking at both my 2024 W2 right now and my biweekly pay stub issued today. My W2 for 2024 shows annual wages at $193,310. My latest pay stub (no major changes in salary so far this year) was a net of $3095.
So I'm making more than you, deducting 20% combined for 401K and 457 contributions (which is not maxing out; 20% = $1442 biweekly gets me to more like $40K towards 401K+457 combined vs the combined deferral limit is $47,000

, and yet still taking home less on a biweekly basis.
I did receive a tax refund last year of about $6K and will likely get a refund again although I made some adjustments to reduce that. I otherwise can't explain the differential between mine and yours, but surely other deductions need to be considered -- healthcare, state and city taxes, pension, whatever else. I'm not complaining the way OP is because I "count" my retirement contributions into my overall big picture, but there's more than just retirement deductions to consider in the biweekly take home.