take-home pay in English

noun
1
the pay received by an employee after the deduction of taxes and other obligations.
The fact of the matter is that rising inflation is setting at naught the modest gains in take-home pay granted through tax reform and income rises.

Use "take-home pay" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "take-home pay" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "take-home pay", or refer to the context using the word "take-home pay" in the English Dictionary.

1. 3 He was earning £215 a week before tax: take-home pay, £

2. Think of it as a tax on your take-home pay (Federal, State, Family).

3. About a third of our take-home pay is spent on grocery and household items.

4. Even as consumer incomes have withered in this recession, the government has helped stabilize take-home pay.

5. Their average monthly take-home pay is $200 to $240 -- compared with about $160 for all Wuhan residents.

6. John's lease payment would be an easier-to-Afford $400 per month, or 12.7% of his take-home pay

7. There was an error initially it overestimated my take-home pay, skewing the amount I could put to savings.

8. I thought you might explain to me the big difference between my gross pay and my net take-home pay?

9. With no savings from his monthly take-home pay of as little as $700, he said, he faced certain homelessness.

10. Their take-home pay is $150 a month — meaning it would take four months' wages to buy the cheapest model iPad.

11. Then fill out a new W-4 and adjust your withholdings (carefully: there's a calculator at irs.gov that will help) to increase your take-home pay by $200 a month.

12. The well-off not only have much higher take-home pay than the rank-and-file but also tend to be the ones who have access to the benefits of hoarded corporate cash.