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Medicare Tax

The 1.45% payroll tax that funds federal healthcare for seniors and disabled persons.

Common paystub code: MED / MEDEE

Full Definition

Medicare tax is a 1.45% tax on ALL wages with no cap (unlike Social Security). High earners pay an additional 0.9% Medicare surtax on wages exceeding $200,000 (single) or $250,000 (married filing jointly), bringing their total Medicare rate to 2.35%. This tax funds Part A of Medicare, which covers hospital insurance for people 65 and older and those with certain disabilities.

Where Medicare Tax Appears on Your Paystub

On a typical US paystub, medicare tax information appears in one of three sections — the earnings summary, the deductions list, or the year-to-date (YTD) totals — depending on the type of item. Understanding where to find it helps you verify accuracy, catch payroll errors, and prepare for tax season or loan applications.

Whether you receive a digital paystub through your employer's payroll system (such as ADP, Gusto, QuickBooks Payroll, or Paychex) or a traditional paper stub, the information for medicare tax is required by federal labor law to be itemized and accurate. The Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) and state-specific wage transparency laws mandate that employees can review and verify each line of their paystub.

Why Medicare Tax Matters

Accurate knowledge of medicare tax is essential for several real-world scenarios common to US workers: when applying for an apartment rental (landlords typically require recent paystubs as proof of income), when applying for a car loan or mortgage (lenders verify gross and net pay across multiple paystubs), when filing your annual tax return (IRS Form 1040 reconciles to your year-to-date W-2 or 1099 totals), and when changing jobs (you may need to provide last paystubs to your new employer for benefits eligibility verification).

If you spot an error related to medicare tax on your paystub, US labor law requires your employer to investigate and correct the issue. The American Payroll Association reports that nearly 75% of US workers will experience at least one payroll error during their career, which is why understanding each line item — including medicare tax — is one of the most valuable financial literacy skills you can develop.

See It On a Real Paystub

Generate a professional paystub and see exactly where Medicare Tax appears.