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Local payroll taxes are the hidden layer beneath federal and state taxes. Over 4,000 local jurisdictions in the U.S. impose payroll, earned income, or commuter taxes. Many employers don’t know they’re subject to these taxes until an audit notice arrives, often years after the violation. Understanding local tax obligations is now essential for any distributed or multi-location workforce.
Where Do Local Payroll Taxes Exist?
Local payroll taxes are most prevalent in the Mid-Atlantic region: Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Ohio, Maryland, and DC. But they exist in over 15 states. Some jurisdictions impose a “payroll tax” or “gross receipts tax.” Others impose an “earned income tax” directly on employees. Some tax entire payrolls regardless of employee location. Others only apply to employees who work or live within their borders.
How Local Taxes Are Calculated
Local tax rates vary from 0.1% to 3%+ of employee wages, and they apply differently depending on where the employee works, where they live, where the employer is located, and the type of work. A single employee might be subject to multiple local taxes: working in City A, living in City B, doing part-time work in City C. Each jurisdiction has different filing deadlines, wage definitions, and credit rules.
Common Mistakes
Employers often forget to file and pay local taxes entirely. They assume remote employees aren’t subject to local tax even when they live in a high-tax jurisdiction. They fail to register when opening a new location. They apply federal FICA caps to local wages when local taxes often have no annual caps. They don’t account for local tax credits or reciprocity agreements between neighboring jurisdictions.
Bottom Line
Local payroll tax compliance requires jurisdiction-by-jurisdiction mapping and calculation. A single remote hire in a new city creates a new filing obligation. Ignoring these taxes leads to years of back-pay demands, interest, and penalties.
Frequently Asked Questions
Check if you have employees working or living in any jurisdiction with a local payroll tax. Over 4,000 U.S. jurisdictions impose local income, earned income, or payroll taxes. The Mid-Atlantic region (PA, NJ, OH, MD, DC) is particularly high-tax. Start by mapping your employee locations against your state and local tax maps, or consult a payroll tax specialist for a jurisdiction audit.
In most cases, yes. If an employee lives in a jurisdiction with local payroll or earned income tax, your company must withhold that tax regardless of where the company is headquartered. A single remote hire in a high-tax jurisdiction (like Philadelphia or Columbus) creates a new filing and withholding obligation.
Local tax agencies assess back taxes, plus penalties and interest that compound over years. A multi-year failure can result in thousands of dollars owed per employee. Some jurisdictions pursue criminal charges for repeated violations. Voluntary disclosure programs may reduce penalties if you self-report before an audit.
Never miss a local tax jurisdiction again.
Netchex maps every employee to applicable local tax jurisdictions and handles withholding and filing automatically across all 4,000+ U.S. taxing locations.
This guide reflects publicly available product information and independent reviewer data (G2, Capterra, Trustpilot, Yelp, Better Business Bureau, Reddit, Software Advice, GetApp) as of 2026. Feature availability and pricing may vary by plan. Contact each provider for current details.
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