PIO
Hire in the United States

رؤى عالمية

Hire in the United States

United States hiring generally depends on federal payroll-tax withholding, SSA wage reporting, leave-rule administration, and defensible state-level wage and termination controls. Employers should align payroll operations, leave tracking, and worker records before local hiring.

9 يناير 2024
العودة إلى الرؤى العالمية

Operational snapshot

Hire in the United States

United States hiring generally depends on federal payroll-tax withholding, SSA wage reporting, leave-rule administration, and defensible state-level wage and termination controls. Employers should align payroll operations, leave tracking, and worker records before local hiring.

العاصمة

Washington, D.C.

Payroll cycle

Semi-Monthly/Monthly

Employer contribution

7.65%

Languages

English

العملة

United States Dollar (USD)

Last reviewed

23 مارس 2026

Employment and compliance summary

Employer cost and contributions

Employer planning should include payroll tax obligations, leave administration overhead, and the wider cost of multi-state employment compliance instead of modeling only base pay. Budget...

  • Employer planning should include payroll tax obligations, leave administration overhead, and the wider cost of multi-state employment compliance instead of modeling only base pay.
  • Budget assumptions should be tested against withholding workflow, reporting cadence, and final-pay exposure.

Payroll and tax operations

Payroll should be configured for IRS withholding, Form 941 workflow, and SSA wage reporting from the first cycle. Employers should verify pay frequency, worker files, and state registration...

  • Payroll should be configured for IRS withholding, Form 941 workflow, and SSA wage reporting from the first cycle.
  • Employers should verify pay frequency, worker files, and state registration requirements before onboarding or compensation changes.

Leave and holiday rules

Leave administration should account for the federal protected-leave baseline and any state or local paid-leave overlay that applies to the workforce. Leave balances and payroll treatment...

  • Leave administration should account for the federal protected-leave baseline and any state or local paid-leave overlay that applies to the workforce.
  • Leave balances and payroll treatment should be reviewed before extended absence, role changes, or separation.

Termination and notice

Employment exits should be checked against state notice and final-pay rules, protected-leave issues, and defensible documentation before execution. Final pay, accrued leave treatment, and...

  • Employment exits should be checked against state notice and final-pay rules, protected-leave issues, and defensible documentation before execution.
  • Final pay, accrued leave treatment, and reporting closeout should be reviewed together before separation.

Minimum Wage

The federal minimum wage in the United States is $7.25 per hour as of 2024. However, many states and cities have higher minimum wage rates. Employers must pay whichever minimum wage is highest – federal, state, or local.

StateMinimum Wage (2024)
California$15.50
New York$15.00 (varies by region)
Florida$12.00
Texas$7.25 (federal minimum)
Washington$16.28
Minimum wage in the United States

It is essential for employers to stay up-to-date with the minimum wage requirements in their state and city to ensure compliance and avoid potential penalties.

Income Tax

The U.S. has a progressive federal income tax system with rates ranging from 10% to 37% in 2024. Most states also levy their own income taxes.Federal Income Tax Brackets for 2024:

Tax RateSingle FilersMarried Filing Jointly
10%$0 – $11,600$0 – $23,200
12%$11,601 – $47,150$23,201 – $94,300
22%$47,151 – $100,525$94,301 – $201,050
24%$100,526 – $191,950$201,051 – $383,900
32%$191,951 – $243,725$383,901 – $487,450
35%$243,726 – $609,350$487,451 – $731,200
37%Over $609,350Over $731,200
Federal income tax tiers in the United States

Payroll Cost

Employers are responsible for various payroll taxes and contributions:

  • Social Security tax: 6.2% (employer portion)
  • Medicare tax: 1.45% (employer portion)
  • Federal Unemployment Tax (FUTA): 6% on first $7,000 of wages
  • State Unemployment Insurance (SUI): Varies by state

Overtime Pay

Under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), non-exempt employees must receive overtime pay at 1.5 times their regular rate for hours worked over 40 in a workweek. Some states have additional overtime requirements.

Last reviewed

23 مارس 2026

Sources

Reviewed by PIO Compliance Research Team against public labor, payroll tax, social contribution, leave, termination, and employer compliance references relevant to the approved country guide set.

Referenced sources

تجعل PIO التوظيف عبر الحدود بسيطاً وفعالاً.

+

فريق الخدمة العالمي

+

عدد العملاء العالمي

+

الأشخاص على المنصة