Guide
Not every deduction is money lost. The 401(k), HSA, and FSA lines on your pay stub shrink your paycheck too — but unlike taxes, that money is still yours, and it comes with a bonus: it lowers the income you're taxed on. Understanding pre-tax deductions is the difference between resenting a smaller check and using it to quietly build wealth.
Pre-tax deductions come out of your pay before federal income tax is calculated. So if you earn $5,000 a month and put $500 into a pre-tax 401(k), you're only taxed on $4,500. That means a $500 contribution doesn't cost you $500 of take-home pay — because part of what you set aside would have gone to taxes anyway. In a 22% bracket, $500 into your 401(k) reduces your take-home by roughly $390, not $500.
| Account | What it's for | Key trait |
|---|---|---|
| 401(k) / 403(b) | Retirement savings | Often includes an employer match |
| HSA | Medical costs (with a high-deductible plan) | Triple tax advantage; rolls over & is yours to keep |
| FSA | Medical or dependent-care costs | Use-it-or-lose-it within the plan year |
| Health / dental premiums | Insurance coverage | Usually deducted pre-tax automatically |
If your employer matches contributions — say, 50% of the first 6% you put in — that match is an immediate, guaranteed return you can't get anywhere else. Contributing at least enough to capture the full match is one of the few genuinely universal pieces of financial guidance. Skipping it is leaving part of your compensation on the table.
One caution: many employer matches come with a vesting schedule, meaning you have to stay at the company for a set number of years before the matched money is fully yours to keep if you leave. Your own contributions are always 100% yours immediately, but the match may vest gradually. It's worth checking your plan's vesting rules before you count on the full match — and worth capturing it anyway, since even partially vested matched dollars beat none.
Take Sam, who earns $5,000 in gross pay per month and decides to contribute 10% ($500) to a traditional 401(k). Assume Sam is in a 22% federal bracket:
| Line | Amount |
|---|---|
| Gross monthly pay | $5,000 |
| Pre-tax 401(k) contribution | −$500 |
| Taxable wages for income tax | $4,500 |
| Approx. federal tax saved on that $500 (22%) | $110 |
| Real cost to take-home pay | ≈ $390 |
So Sam moved $500 into retirement savings but only felt about $390 leave the paycheck — the other $110 was tax that simply wasn't paid. If Sam's employer also matches 50% of the first 6% of pay, that adds another $150 a month of free money on top. Note that FICA (7.65%) still applies to the $500, because Social Security and Medicare tax are not reduced by traditional retirement contributions — only income tax is.
Both let you pay medical costs with pre-tax dollars, but the HSA (paired with a high-deductible health plan) is the stronger account: contributions are pre-tax, growth is tax-free, and withdrawals for medical costs are tax-free — and the balance rolls over year to year and stays yours even if you change jobs. The FSA is generally "use it or lose it" within the plan year, so you fund it to match expenses you're confident you'll have.
Pre-tax money isn't tax-free forever — traditional 401(k) withdrawals are taxed in retirement, and HSA/FSA funds must be spent on qualified costs to keep their tax benefit. You're mostly deferring tax to a point when your rate may be lower. That's still a powerful advantage, but it's a shift, not a disappearance.
See how a 401(k) percentage or benefit deduction changes your net pay using the paycheck calculator — it has fields for 401(k), HSA, FSA, and premiums so you can watch take-home and taxable income move together.
Do pre-tax deductions lower my Social Security and Medicare tax too? Usually only some of them. Health insurance premiums and HSA contributions run through an employer cafeteria plan can reduce the wages FICA applies to, but traditional 401(k) contributions do not — you still pay the full 7.65% FICA on money you defer into retirement. Pre-tax retirement contributions lower income tax, not payroll tax.
What happens to unused FSA money at the end of the year? FSAs are generally "use it or lose it." Some employers offer a small carryover or a short grace period, but funds beyond that are forfeited. Because of this, you fund an FSA to match expenses you're fairly confident you'll incur, whereas an HSA balance rolls over indefinitely and stays yours.
Is it better to contribute to a traditional or Roth 401(k)? That depends on whether you expect your tax rate to be higher now or in retirement, and it's a personal decision — this is exactly the kind of question a licensed tax professional or financial advisor can help you weigh. Traditional lowers your taxable income today; Roth is funded with after-tax dollars but grows and withdraws tax-free later. The IRS publishes the rules and current limits for both.
→ Model your pre-tax deductions