Parma Paycheck Calculator — Local Income Tax

Parma, Ohio charges a flat 2.50% local income tax on top of your federal, FICA and Ohio state income tax. On a $100,000 salary that's about $2,500 a year in Parma local tax, leaving $74,646/year take-home ($2871.01 biweekly) for a single filer in 2026. Enter your own pay in the calculator above for an exact breakdown.

$2,296.83 take-home / paycheck

Gross: $2,884.62 · Federal: $295.00 · Social Security: $178.85 · Medicare: $41.83 · Parma: $72.12

Annual take-home: $59,718 on $75,000 gross · 80% of gross

Includes Parma local income tax.

Take-home 80% Federal 10% Soc. Sec. 6% Medicare 1% Local 3%
Full breakdown (per paycheck & annual)
LinePer paycheckAnnual
Gross pay$2,884.62$75,000
Federal income tax$295.00$7,670
Social Security (6.2%)$178.85$4,650
Medicare (1.45%)$41.83$1,088
Parma local tax$72.12$1,875
Take-home (net)$2,296.83$59,718

Federal & FICA: IRS Rev. Proc. 2025-32 + SSA 2026 (SS wage base $184,500). State: Tax Foundation 2026. Parma local tax: official jurisdiction source, 2026. Assumes constant pay. How we calculate →

How Parma's local income tax works

Parma levies a flat 2.50% local income tax on top of Ohio's state income tax — the same piggyback mechanism used across this jurisdiction. Because the rate is flat, your local tax is simply your taxable income multiplied by 2.50%, regardless of how much you earn.

On $60,000, that's $1,500 a year; on $100,000, $2,500 a year.

Parma vs. Ohio state tax and neighboring jurisdictions

Ohio's own state income tax (separate from Parma's local tax) applies statewide; on a $100,000 salary that's about $2,034 a year before any local tax is added.

Among the 26 local jurisdictions in this dataset for Ohio, Parma ranks #8 by dollar amount of local tax owed on a $100,000 salary — the highest is Euclid and the lowest is Findlay.

Parma paycheck example (2026, single filer)

$60,000 salary: federal $5,020, FICA $4,590, Ohio state tax $934, Parma local tax $1,500 → take-home $47,956/year ($1844.48 biweekly).

$100,000 salary: federal $13,170, FICA $7,650, Ohio state tax $2,034, Parma local tax $2,500 → take-home $74,646/year ($2871.01 biweekly).

These assume the standard deduction, no pre-tax 401(k)/health deductions and biweekly pay. Use the calculator above for your own salary, filing status and deductions.

Who pays Parma's local income tax

This tax applies to residents of Parma based on where you live, following the same piggyback withholding as Ohio's state income tax. Nonresidents working in Parma are generally not subject to this county/city tax (confirm with your employer's payroll department).

Parma local tax — frequently asked questions

How much is Parma's local income tax?

Parma charges a flat 2.50% local income tax. On a $100,000 salary that works out to about $2,500 a year for a single filer in 2026.

What is the take-home pay on $60,000 in Parma?

About $47,956 a year ($1844.48 biweekly) for a single filer in 2026, after federal tax, FICA, Ohio state tax and Parma's local tax of $1,500.

What is the take-home pay on $100,000 in Parma?

About $74,646 a year ($2871.01 biweekly) for a single filer in 2026, after federal tax, FICA, Ohio state tax and Parma's local tax of $2,500.

Is Parma's local tax the same as Ohio's state income tax?

No — they're separate. Ohio state income tax applies regardless of local jurisdiction; Parma's local tax (a flat 2.50% local income tax) is added on top, following the same piggyback withholding.

Is Parma's local tax higher or lower than other Ohio jurisdictions?

Parma ranks #8 of 26 local jurisdictions covered for Ohio by dollar amount of tax at $100,000 — Euclid is the highest and Findlay is the lowest.

How is Parma's local income tax calculated?

Your local taxable income (the same base used for Ohio state tax) is multiplied by 2.50%.

Other local income tax jurisdictions in Ohio

See all 26 Ohio jurisdictions →

More paycheck & tax tools

Ohio paycheck calculator (state-level) · Federal income tax calculator · National paycheck calculator

Researched & verified by the Calcuris Data & Research Team. How we build and check our tools →