Skip to main content
visatakehome.com

Bonus / Supplemental wages

A $100,000 bonus on L-1 in California nets you $60,120

Federal supplemental withholding (22%) plus FICA and California supplemental withholding take $39,880 (39.88%) off the top of a $100,000 bonus check, leaving $60,120. Tax year 2026.

Withholding breakdown

Bonus (gross) $100,000
Federal supplemental withholding −$22,000
Social Security (6.2%) −$6,200
Medicare (1.45%) −$1,450
California state withholding −$10,230
Net bonus check $60,120

Other bonus amounts in California

Frequently asked questions

Specific to this visa, state, and salary. Sourced to IRS, SSA, and state DOR.

How is bonus pay taxed for L-1 holders in California?
Bonuses are "supplemental wages" under IRS Pub 15. The federal employer withholds a flat 22% on bonuses up to $1,000,000 cumulative per year (37% on the portion above that). FICA (Social Security 6.2% + Medicare 1.45%) applies to bonuses for L-1 holders. California supplemental withholding is 10.23%.
Why is so much withheld from my bonus?
Bonus withholding is a flat rate, not your marginal rate — by IRS rule, employers withhold federal supplemental at 22% (or 37% above $1M cumulative) regardless of your bracket. That can over-withhold for low earners and under-withhold for very high earners. Your actual tax is reconciled when you file your 1040 in April: see our annual take-home pages for the marginal-rate view.
Will the bonus push me into a higher tax bracket?
No — only the dollars above a bracket are taxed at the higher rate, and bonus withholding is a flat rate independent of brackets. The bonus increases your total annual income, which can shift your marginal bracket, but not retroactively re-tax earlier income.
Can a L-1 holder claim a bonus refund at tax time?
Yes — if the 22% federal flat withholding exceeds your marginal effective rate, the excess is refunded when you file. The opposite (under-withholding) requires owing at filing.

Sources

  1. IRS Pub 15 — Supplemental Wages (opens in new tab) — Federal flat 22% / 37% supplemental withholding rule.
  2. IRS Pub 15-T (2026) (opens in new tab) — Methods of federal income tax withholding.
  3. California supplemental withholding (opens in new tab)
  4. California Department of Revenue (opens in new tab)