Maryland is one of the only states where your county of residence directly changes your tax bill. Enter your salary to see the state-level impact.
Your estimated take-home pay
$2,242
per paycheck
$58,299 annually · Effective tax rate: 22.3%
Maryland is unique in that every county and Baltimore City levies its own income tax on top of the state rate, and it is not optional. The county rates range from 2.25% (Worcester County) to 3.20% (Howard, Montgomery, Prince George's, and several others). That means two Maryland residents earning identical salaries can have noticeably different take-home pay depending purely on which side of a county line they rent an apartment. If you are relocating to the DC suburbs, the difference between living in Montgomery County, Maryland versus Fairfax County, Virginia is not just a state tax comparison. It is a state-plus-county comparison that most online calculators collapse into a single number.
A large share of Maryland's workforce commutes into Washington, DC. Maryland taxes you based on where you live, not where you work, so your DC salary is taxed at Maryland state rates plus your county rate. DC does not tax Maryland residents on wages earned in the district (reciprocity agreement). The question most people face is whether to live in Maryland, Virginia, or DC itself. Maryland's combined state-plus-county burden runs higher than Virginia's for most income levels, but Maryland housing costs in the outer suburbs (Frederick, Hagerstown) are materially lower than Northern Virginia. The paycheck calculator gives you the Maryland tax piece. The commute time and housing cost are the variables that complete the picture.