Quick Orientation: What Your W-4 Actually Controls
Your W-4 tells your employer how much federal income tax to withhold from each paycheck. It does not change:
- Your tax rate (that’s set by law)
- Your total tax for the year (that’s based on your income, filing status, credits, deductions)
Instead, the W-4 controls timing:
- Higher withholding now → bigger amounts taken from each paycheck → more likely to get a refund when you file
- Lower withholding now → more in each paycheck → greater chance you’ll owe at tax time if you go too low
Think of the W-4 as a monthly/biweekly “payment plan” toward your eventual annual tax bill.
The 2025 W-4 still has five parts (Steps 1–5):
- Personal Information (filing status)
- Multiple Jobs or Spouse Works (and optional estimator)
- Claim Dependents
- Other Adjustments (other income, deductions, extra withholding)
- Signature
You can submit a new W-4 any time your life changes (marriage, second job, big raise, new child, significant bonus), or if last year’s return showed you consistently over- or under-withheld.
Pro tip: Use the same W-4 for federal withholding in every job you hold. States often have their own forms.
Before you fill it out: three decisions you should make
- Filing status you’ll use on your tax return
- Single or Married filing separately
- Married filing jointly
- Head of household (HOH) if you qualify
- Jobs & spouse income
- Do you (or your spouse) have more than one job at the same time?
- You’ll handle this in Step 2.
- Kids & other dependents
- If eligible, you can claim the Child Tax Credit (generally up to $2,000 per qualifying child under 17) and the Credit for Other Dependents (generally $500 per eligible dependent). You’ll reflect these in Step 3 so your employer withholds less.

Step-by-step guide: how to fill out W-4 (2025)
Step 1 — Enter Personal Information
- Name & address: as on your Social Security card/tax return.
- Social Security number: required.
- Filing status: check Single or Married filing separately, Married filing jointly, or Head of household.
This status influences the withholding tables your employer uses—Married filing jointly typically withholds less than Single at the same pay.
Step 2 — Multiple jobs or spouse works
Use this step if any of the following is true:
- You have more than one job at the same time, or
- You’re married filing jointly and your spouse works, or
- You expect to start/stop a second job during the year.
You have three ways to handle Step 2:
- Checkbox method (simple, conservative):
- If there are only two jobs total in the household and both jobs have similar pay, you can check the box on both W-4s (or on one, if instructed).
- This method increases withholding to reduce the chance you’ll owe.
- Online estimator / worksheet method (precise):
- Use an IRS-style estimator to compute an extra amount per paycheck for the higher-paying job.
- You’ll then put an extra $ amount in Step 4(c).
- One-job-only withholding (the “most accurate” approach when one job is much higher than the other):
- On the W-4 for the highest-paying job, complete Steps 2–4.
- For other job(s), leave Steps 2–4 blank (only Step 1 & Step 5).
- This weights withholding toward the higher bracket and often improves accuracy.
When to skip Step 2: If you (and your spouse) hold only one job total all year, you can leave Step 2 blank.
Step 3 — Claim dependents (credits)
If you expect to claim the Child Tax Credit or Credit for Other Dependents on your 2025 return:
- Multiply the number of qualifying children under age 17 by $2,000.
- Multiply other qualifying dependents by $500.
- Add the totals and enter on Step 3.
This number reduces the amount withheld each paycheck.
Example: Two kids under 17 → 2 × $2,000 = $4,000. Enter 4000 in Step 3.
Step 4 — Other adjustments (optional but powerful)
Use Step 4 if any of these apply:
- 4(a) Other income (not from jobs)
Interest, dividends, self-employment side income you want to pre-pay through withholding. Enter the annual amount. - 4(b) Deductions
If you expect to itemize deductions (mortgage interest, state/local taxes up to the cap, charitable gifts, medical over the threshold) or have above-the-line deductions (traditional IRA, HSA contributions), use the deductions worksheet. Enter the annual deduction amount that exceeds the standard deduction for your filing status. - 4(c) Extra withholding
Add a flat dollar amount per paycheck if you prefer to over-withhold or you need to cover tax from multiple jobs, bonuses, restricted stock vests, or to “pad” your refund.
Step 5 — Sign and date
It’s a legal declaration. Your employer can’t use the form unless it’s signed.
How to fill out W-4 2025: detailed walkthroughs by situation
Below are practical templates. You can copy the pattern that fits you and then fine-tune in Step 4.
A) Single, one job, no dependents
- Step 1: Single
- Step 2: Leave blank (only one job)
- Step 3: Leave blank (no dependents)
- Step 4: Optional
- 4(a): blank
- 4(b): enter if you plan to itemize beyond the standard deduction
- 4(c): add extra $ if you owed last year or want a bigger refund
- Step 5: Sign
Result: Baseline single withholding. If you consistently owed last year, consider adding a small 4(c) amount (e.g., $25–$50 per paycheck) or use an estimator to get the exact figure.
CTA: Want to see the exact impact on take-home pay? Test your choices in our Paycheck Calculator.
B) Married filing jointly, one job total in the household, two kids
- Step 1: Married filing jointly
- Step 2: Leave blank (only one job)
- Step 3: Children under 17: 2 × $2,000 = $4,000 → enter 4000
- Step 4: Optional (mortgage interest? charitable giving?)
- Step 5: Sign
Result: Withholding decreases to account for the anticipated Child Tax Credit. If you prefer a refund cushion, put a small monthly buffer in 4(c).
CTA: Curious how much your paycheck rises after Step 3? Test your choices in our Paycheck Calculator.
C) Married filing jointly, both spouses work (two jobs)
Option 1 (checkbox, simple):
- Step 1: Married filing jointly
- Step 2: Check the Multiple Jobs box on both W-4s (if pay is similar).
- Step 3: Enter eligible dependent credits on only one W-4 (generally the higher-paying job)
- Step 4: If one job pays significantly more, you can add an amount in 4(c) for the higher-paying job to dial in accuracy.
- Step 5: Sign both
Option 2 (estimator, precise):
- Use an estimator to compute extra per-paycheck withholding for the higher-paying job and enter that in Step 4(c). Leave the other job’s Steps 3–4 blank (except the signature).
CTA: Two incomes can push you into a higher bracket. Run a quick forecast: Test your choices in our Paycheck Calculator.
D) Single with multiple jobs (two simultaneous jobs)
- Higher-paying job W-4:
- Step 1: Single
- Step 2: Use the estimator (preferred) or check the box if both jobs pay similar amounts
- Step 3: Enter dependents if applicable (only on this job)
- Step 4(c): Enter extra per paycheck if advised by the estimator
- Step 5: Sign
- Lower-paying job W-4:
- Step 1 & 5 only (leave Steps 2–4 blank), or check the Step 2 box if instructed by the estimator
- Sign
Result: Most of the withholding comes from the higher-paying job, which usually yields better accuracy.
CTA: Balancing two paychecks is tricky—see your combined take-home: Test your choices in our Paycheck Calculator.
E) Head of household with one job and one qualifying child
- Step 1: Head of household
- Step 2: Leave blank (only one job)
- Step 3: Enter $2,000 for one qualifying child under 17
- Step 4: Optional; add 4(c) if you prefer a refund cushion
- Step 5: Sign
Result: Lower withholding than Single due to HOH status and dependent credit.
CTA: Confirm your new per-pay amount: Test your choices in our Paycheck Calculator.
Example scenarios and outcomes (tables)
Below are simplified illustrations to show how different W-4 choices can affect per-pay withholding. These aren’t exact tax calculations; they’re realistic patterns that help you compare.
Assumptions (for illustration):
- Pay frequency: biweekly (26 checks)
- Pre-tax deductions (401k/health) vary by scenario
- Federal supplemental bonus rate reference appears later in the bonus section
- Social Security/Medicare not shown to keep focus on federal income tax withholding
Scenario 1: Single, one job, $65,000 salary, standard deduction, no dependents
| Item | Value |
|---|---|
| Annual gross | $65,000 |
| Per-pay gross (biweekly) | $2,500.00 |
| Step 2 | Blank |
| Step 3 | 0 |
| Step 4 | 0 |
Illustrative outcome:
| Choice | Est. Fed Withholding / Pay | Est. Net Effect |
|---|---|---|
| Baseline (no 4(c)) | ~$265 | Standard fit; small refund or small balance due likely |
| Add 4(c) = $25 | ~$290 | Builds refund cushion |
| Add 4(c) = $75 | ~$340 | Aims for larger refund |
Try your exact numbers: Test your choices in our Paycheck Calculator.
Scenario 2: Married filing jointly, two earners (A: $90k, B: $55k), two kids
Approach A (checkbox on both jobs, dependents on higher-pay job):
| Item | Higher-pay Job | Lower-pay Job |
|---|---|---|
| Annual gross | $90,000 | $55,000 |
| Step 2 | Checked | Checked |
| Step 3 | $4,000 | 0 |
| Step 4(c) | $0 | $0 |
Illustrative per-pay withholding:
| Job | Est. Fed Withholding / Pay |
|---|---|
| Higher-pay job | ~$430 |
| Lower-pay job | ~$210 |
| Combined | ~$640 |
Approach B (estimator adds precise 4(c) to higher-pay job):
| Job | Est. Fed Withholding / Pay |
|---|---|
| Higher-pay job (with 4(c) = $55) | ~$485 |
| Lower-pay job (blank Steps 2–4) | ~$170 |
| Combined | ~$655 (closer to target per estimator) |
Dial this in for your household: Test your choices in our Paycheck Calculator.
Scenario 3: HOH, $58k salary, 1 child under 17, 5% 401(k)
| Item | Value |
|---|---|
| Annual gross | $58,000 |
| 401(k) deferral | 5% ($2,900) |
| Step 3 | $2,000 |
| Step 4(c) | $0 baseline |
Illustrative per-pay withholding:
| Choice | Est. Fed Withholding / Pay | Est. Take-Home Shift |
|---|---|---|
| Baseline | ~$170 | – |
| Add 4(c) = $30 | ~$200 | Lowers take-home; builds refund |
| Remove Step 3 (for comparison) | ~$245 | Take-home drops (no child credit adjustment) |
See how 401(k) reduces taxable pay: Test your choices in our Paycheck Calculator.
Scenario 4: Single with two simultaneous jobs ($50k + $28k), no dependents
Method: weight withholding to higher-pay job
| Job | Setting | Est. Fed Withholding / Pay |
|---|---|---|
| $50k job | Steps 2–4 completed, 4(c) = $35 | ~$220 |
| $28k job | Steps 2–4 blank | ~$90 |
| Combined | ~$310 |
If you only checked the box at both jobs (no 4(c)): combined withholding might rise to ~$340, creating a bigger cushion/refund.
Compare both methods with your exact pay schedule: Test your choices in our Paycheck Calculator.
Bonuses, overtime, and your W-4
How bonuses are taxed in payroll
Employers can withhold tax on bonuses in two common ways:
- Aggregate method
The bonus is added to your regular paycheck and taxed as if you earned that higher amount for the whole period. Withholding can spike because your “periodic” pay looks bigger. - Supplemental rate method (common)
Employers withhold a flat supplemental federal rate (typically 22%) for bonuses and other supplemental wages up to $1,000,000 in a year. Amounts above $1,000,000 are typically subject to a higher rate (commonly 37%).- This is withholding, not your final tax. Your true tax is reconciled on your return.
Overtime
OT is usually just regular wages at a higher hourly rate. Your withholding increases automatically because gross pay is higher that period. If you routinely work OT and your refund gets too big, you might reduce 4(c) slightly; if you owe at filing, increase 4(c).
Using Step 4(c) to manage spikes
If you expect a big year-end bonus or stock vest, add a temporary 4(c) extra amount a few pay periods before the payout—or set a recurring 4(c) amount year-round to avoid owing in April.
Planning a bonus or lots of OT this quarter? Estimate your cushion in seconds—Test your choices in our Paycheck Calculator.
The Deduction play: when Step 4(b) can raise your take-home
If you know you’ll itemize deductions and they’ll exceed the standard deduction, Step 4(b) lets payroll withhold less each check. Examples:
- Mortgage interest + property taxes + charitable giving
- Large medical expenses (subject to AGI thresholds)
- State and local taxes (subject to the SALT cap)
Caution: Don’t overestimate. If your itemized deductions end up less than you entered, you could owe at filing. When in doubt, stay conservative or pair this with a modest 4(c) buffer.
Not sure if you’ll itemize? Model both paths—Test your choices in our Paycheck Calculator.
How to avoid owing (and avoid an oversized refund)
Think in terms of $ per paycheck:
- Review last year’s result.
- Owed $1,300 at filing? Divide by your remaining paychecks this year. If you have 13 checks left, add $100 to Step 4(c).
- Got a $2,600 refund? You were likely over-withheld by about $100 per check—consider reducing 4(c) by $100 (or leaving it at $0).
- Account for changes
- Raise, second job, spouse’s job change, new child, mortgage closing—submit an updated W-4.
- Use Step 3 & 4 wisely
- Step 3 shifts withholding down if you’ll claim dependents.
- Step 4(a) shifts withholding up to pre-pay tax on non-W-2 income.
- Step 4(b) shifts withholding down if you’ll itemize beyond the standard deduction.
- Step 4(c) is your universal fine-tune knob.
Tweak and re-run until your refund/owe target looks right: Test your choices in our Paycheck Calculator.
Fill-in examples you can copy (by line)
These are illustrative. Always adapt numbers to your own situation.
Example 1 — Single, $70,000, no dependents, wants small refund
- Step 1: Single
- Step 2: Leave blank
- Step 3: 0
- Step 4(a): 0
- Step 4(b): 0
- Step 4(c): 25 (to create a modest refund)
- Step 5: Sign
Why this works: Baseline Single withholding often lands near break-even. Adding $25 per check × 26 ≈ $650 extra paid in → likely refund cushion.
Example 2 — Married filing jointly, two earners, two kids, wants to break even
- On the higher-pay job W-4:
- Step 1: Married filing jointly
- Step 2: (Use estimator)
- Step 3: $4,000 (two kids)
- Step 4(c): $55 (per estimator to zero-out expected balance due)
- Step 5: Sign
- On the lower-pay job W-4:
- Step 1 & Step 5 only; leave Steps 2–4 blank
Why this works: We centralize withholding where pay is higher, apply the dependent credit once, and use 4(c) to fine-tune.
Example 3 — HOH, $62k, one child, itemizes $4,500 beyond standard
- Step 1: Head of household
- Step 2: Blank
- Step 3: $2,000
- Step 4(b): 4,500
- Step 4(c): 0
- Step 5: Sign
Why this works: Step 3 lowers withholding for the child credit; Step 4(b) further lowers it by acknowledging itemized deductions beyond the standard deduction.
Example 4 — Single with a side gig (1099), wants to pre-pay that tax through W-2 job
- Step 1: Single
- Step 2: Blank (one W-2 job)
- Step 3: 0
- Step 4(a): Enter your estimated net profit from side gig for the year (e.g., $8,000)
- Step 4(c): Optional extra (e.g., $20 for cushion)
- Step 5: Sign
Why this works: Step 4(a) tells payroll to withhold more so your side-gig income doesn’t result in a big balance due.
Frequently asked “what-ifs”
Q: Can I claim “Exempt” on a 2025 W-4?
A: Only if you meet strict criteria (e.g., had no tax liability last year and expect none this year). If you claim Exempt incorrectly, you can face tax due plus penalties. When in doubt, don’t mark Exempt.
Q: I’m paid monthly, not biweekly. Does that change how I fill the form?
A: No—the W-4 is the same. Your employer’s payroll system applies the pay-period logic automatically.
Q: Should my spouse and I both put the kids on Step 3?
A: Generally no. To avoid double-counting, claim the dependent credits on one W-4 (usually the higher-pay job).
Q: I expect a large year-end bonus. Should I add extra withholding?
A: Yes, consider increasing Step 4(c) for a few periods around the bonus—or keep a steady 4(c) all year so you don’t owe.
Q: My refund was huge last year. Is that bad?
A: It’s not “bad,” but it means you over-withheld. If you’d prefer more cash during the year, reduce 4(c) (or adjust Step 2/3/4(b) inputs) and re-check with a calculator.
Troubleshooting your W-4
You owed more than $1,000 last year
- Add a specific per-pay 4(c) amount equal to what would have covered your balance, divided by the remaining checks for this year.
- If you have multiple jobs or two earners, revisit Step 2 accuracy.
Your refund was over $3,000
- Consider reducing 4(c) by refund/number of checks (e.g., $3,000/26 ≈ $115 reduction per pay).
- If you used Step 4(b) aggressively (big itemized estimate), scale it back.
You started a second job mid-year
- Update W-4s for both jobs.
- On the higher-paying job, use the estimator and add the advised 4(c).
You got married / divorced / had a child
- Submit a new W-4 promptly.
- Married filing jointly generally reduces withholding; Step 3 reduces it further if you have a new qualifying child.
Advanced fine-tuning tips
- Use 4(c) like a thermostat
If your projection says you’ll owe $780, adding $30 to 4(c) per biweekly pay (~26 checks) gets you close to even. - Coordinate with your spouse
- Pick one job to carry Step 3 dependents.
- Use the higher-pay job for Step 2 calculations and any 4(c) extra.
- Annual rhythm
Re-check your W-4 after performance reviews, promotions, open enrollment changes (pre-tax deductions change taxable wages), or major life events. - Side incomes & RSUs
- Put estimated other income in 4(a) to pre-pay tax.
- For RSU vests/large bonuses, many people add a temporary 4(c) for a few periods.
Putting it all together: one-page W-4 game plan
- Step 1: Choose the filing status you’ll use on your tax return.
- Step 2: If two incomes are in play, use the estimator or the checkbox; weight accuracy to the higher-pay job.
- Step 3: Enter dependent credits once (usually on the higher-pay job).
- Step 4(a): Add non-W-2 income you want to pre-pay.
- Step 4(b): Enter only the portion of itemized deductions above the standard deduction.
- Step 4(c): Add a per-pay buffer to hit your refund/owe target.
- Step 5: Sign and hand it in.
Now make it real: Test your choices in our Paycheck Calculator to see your exact per-pay change and year-end projection.
Sample “what happens if…” comparison table
| Situation | Step 2 choice | Step 3 amount | Step 4(b) | Step 4(c) | Likely Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Single, 1 job | none | 0 | 0 | 0 | Near break-even; small refund/owe |
| Single, 1 job, wants refund | none | 0 | 0 | +40 | Larger refund; lower take-home |
| Married, 2 earners, 2 kids | checkbox on both | 4000 | 0 | 0 | Good baseline; may still owe if incomes uneven |
| Married, 2 earners, 2 kids | estimator | 4000 | 0 | +55 | Closer to break-even |
| HOH, 1 child, itemizes | none | 2000 | 4500 | 0 | Higher take-home due to reduced withholding |
| Single + side gig | none | 0 | 0 | +60 | Covers SE/extra tax from the side gig |
Personalize your row in the table: Test your choices in our Paycheck Calculator.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Double-claiming dependents across two W-4s in the same household
- Forgetting Step 2 when there are two incomes (often leads to owing)
- Overstating 4(b) deductions that you don’t actually exceed over the standard deduction
- Ignoring side gig income and then being surprised by a balance due
- Not updating after a change in jobs, pay, or family size
State taxes note
Many states have their own W-4-style forms (or accept the federal W-4). Your federal W-4 does not control state withholding. If your state has income tax, fill out that form too—especially if you’ve adjusted federal Step 3 or Step 4 and want a similar effect at the state level.












