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Mandy Sleight Contributor, Personal FinanceMandy Sleight has been a licensed insurance agent since 2005. She has three years of experience writing for insurance websites such as Bankrate, MoneyGeek and The Simple Dollar. Mandy writes about auto, homeowners, renters, life insurance, disability and supplemental insurance products.
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Kenneth Chavis IV Senior wealth advisor at Versant Capital ManagementKenneth Chavis IV is a senior wealth counselor at Versant Capital Management who provides investment management, complex wealth strategy, financial planning and tax advice to business owners, executives, medical doctors, and more.
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Gross income refers to the total earnings a person receives before paying for taxes and other deductions. The amount that remains after taxes are deducted is called net income. When looking at a pay stub, net income is what’s shown after taxes and deductions. Net income is always lower than gross income unless the person is exempt from paying taxes and has no deductions.
Gross income typically comes from a paycheck, which can comprise a combination of hourly wages, salary, commission and bonuses. But gross income can come from other sources such as annuities, alimony, pension, capital gains, rental income, royalties and income from self-employment. These forms of income are often only partly subject to taxation. Other sources of gross income subject to taxation are:
Some examples of nontaxable income include inheritance, municipal or state bonds, workers’ compensation payments and life insurance proceeds.
Employers withhold state and federal income taxes, Medicare and Social Security taxes from your paycheck before you receive it. For business owners, self-employed and independent contractors/freelancers, payment is received as gross income and it is their responsibility to pay their share of taxes. A business’s gross income is calculated as gross revenue minus the cost of goods sold (COGS) and may be referred to as gross margin or gross profit margin as a percentage.
Here is an example of what gross income looks like for an individual on a weekly basis:
Here is an example of what gross income might look like on an annual basis:
To determine a business’s annual gross income, here is an example:
Gross income is what is used by lenders to determine how much they will allow someone to borrow for a loan, like an auto loan or mortgage. The lender will determine how much to lend based on the individual’s debt-to-income ratio, or DTI. The DTI is determined by dividing monthly debt payments by monthly gross income.
The higher someone’s DTI, the less likely a lender will want to loan money and the higher the interest rate on the loan will be. Ideally, DTI should be no higher than 36 percent; however, some lenders will lend as high as 50 percent DTI.
The total amount of pay received is the gross income, while the net income is the remaining amount after taxes and deductions are removed.
Deductions could include:
Most deductions lower taxable income. These are known as pretax deductions. Other deductions, such as contributions to a Roth IRA and certain voluntary benefits, do not lower taxable income. These are known as post-tax deductions.
Net income is often called take-home pay or disposable income. Net income is what is leftover to spend and can be used to make a budget. Living expenses, bills, debt payments and other obligations should be budgeted out of net income rather than gross income. Making a budget based on gross income will likely cause the budget to be short each month, because the amount required for the budget is reduced by the deductions and taxes taken.
Here’s an example of why a budget should not be based on gross income without accounting for deductions and taxes. Sally has a monthly gross income of $4,000 and a net income of $3,000. She creates a budget with her gross income amount with total expenses equalling $3,500. Because Sally only brings home $3,000, she is short $500 on the monthly budget. Sally will either have to adjust her budget to account for the $500 or find a way to increase her net income by $500 to cover the remaining expenses.
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