Bonus Tax in Wisconsin (2026)

A bonus is supplemental pay, and it is usually withheld at a flat federal rate rather than your normal bracket. Employers apply 22% to supplemental wages up to a yearly threshold, and a higher rate on the part above it. FICA comes out on top, and then the Wisconsin state layer applies.

Some states have no separate bonus withholding rate. In Wisconsin, the aggregate method applies instead, combining the bonus with your regular wages and withholding as if it were one larger paycheck. Wisconsin publishes no separate flat supplemental/bonus withholding rate; employers withhold supplemental wages using the regular WT-4 withholding tables/formula.

Worked example: a $5,000 bonus in Wisconsin

Federal withholding (22%)$1,100
FICA (Social Security + Medicare)$383
Wisconsin withholdingaggregate method — varies

Assumes year-to-date wages under the $184,500 Social Security wage base. Withholding, not final tax — it reconciles on your return.

Bonus tax calculator (2026)

Federal withholding (flat 22%)$1,100
FICA (Social Security + Medicare)$383
Wisconsin withholdingaggregate method — varies

Wisconsin has no flat supplemental rate — employers combine the bonus with regular wages (aggregate method), so the exact withholding depends on your paycheck. Assumes your year-to-date wages are under the $184,500 Social Security wage base. Withholding, not your final tax — it reconciles on your return.

See what your regular paycheck keeps in Wisconsin: Wisconsin paycheck calculator.

Frequently asked questions

Why is my bonus taxed so high?

What you see is withholding, not your final tax. Federal rules withhold supplemental pay like a bonus at a flat 22%, which is often more than your normal rate, so the bonus looks heavily taxed. It squares up when you file, where your real rate is applied to your total income.

Does Wisconsin have a flat bonus withholding rate?

It depends on the state. The breakdown above shows Wisconsin's supplemental rate if it has one, or notes when the aggregate method applies instead.

Federal: IRS 2026 brackets (Rev. Proc. 2025-32) · FICA: IRS Topic 751 · Wage base: SSA · Wisconsin: Wisconsin Department of Revenue. Rates current as of July 16, 2026. Annual-liability estimates, not payroll withholding — see methodology.