Phase 9 · Family & Protection
Childcare vs Second Income Calculator
“Daycare eats my whole paycheck” — does it? Net the second salary against childcare, taxes and work costs, add the FSA back, and see the real gain — plus the long-term cost the math hides.
Under the hood
The math, fully exposed
We take the salary down to take-home, subtract the costs of working, then add the FSA tax break:
Take-home salary = gross × (1 − tax + FICA rate)
FSA tax savings = FSA used × tax rate
Net gain = take-home − childcare − work costs + FSA savings
Effective hourly = net gain ÷ 2,080 work hours
- The second income is marginal-taxed from dollar one: stacked on the first earner, it never gets the low brackets — the biggest reason take-home looks thin.
- The FSA is the cheapest win: sheltering childcare pre-tax can swing a borderline decision by over a thousand dollars a year.
- The number isn't the whole story: retirement matching, career capital and future raises don't show here — but they're real, and they favor staying in.
Your directives
What to do next, based on your numbers
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Answers
Frequently asked questions
How do I know if a second income is "worth it" after childcare?
Compare the second earner's take-home pay against the costs that only exist because they work: childcare, commuting, and taxes on income stacked on top of the first earner's. What is left is the real household gain. It is often smaller than the salary suggests — but rarely as bad as the scary "daycare eats my whole paycheck" headline, especially once a dependent-care FSA is used.
Why is the second income taxed so heavily?
Because it stacks on top of the first earner's income, every dollar is taxed at your household's marginal rate from the first dollar — plus 7.65% FICA. A second earner in a household already in the 22% bracket effectively loses ~30% to taxes before childcare is even counted. That marginal stacking is why the second salary's take-home is lower than the same salary would be on its own.
What is a dependent-care FSA and why does it matter here?
A dependent-care FSA lets you pay up to $5,000 of childcare with pre-tax dollars, saving your marginal tax rate on that amount — often $1,500+ a year. It directly shrinks the net cost of working, so it can flip a marginal decision. If your employer offers one, using it is usually the single biggest lever on this calculation.
Should I quit if the net gain is small or negative?
Not necessarily — the short-term math misses a lot. Staying employed preserves your earning power, keeps retirement contributions and employer matches flowing, maintains career momentum and benefits, and avoids the steep "re-entry penalty" of a multi-year gap. Childcare is temporary; the hit to lifetime earnings from leaving can be permanent. Weigh the number here against that long arc. This is an educational model, not financial advice.