Commission Calculator

Calculate flat-rate, tiered, split, and gross margin commissions — with take-home pay after federal taxes, W-2 vs 1099 comparison, and sales target planning built in.

Commission Calculator

Select a commission type and enter your details — results update live.

$
Gross revenue of the deal
%
Your agreed commission percentage
$
Monthly base pay (used for OTE & totals)
$
Recoverable advance to subtract from commission
$
100% attainment target for OTE calculation
Affects self-employment tax calculation
%
Your state marginal rate (0% for TX, FL, etc.)
Used to annualize projections
$
Total cost to deliver the deal
%
Applied to gross margin, not total revenue
%
Rep 2 receives the remainder
Tier Up to ($) Rate (%)
Tier 1
Tier 2
Tier 3
Tier 4+ Unlimited

Commission is calculated incrementally — each tier's rate applies only to sales within that band.

$
How much commission do you want to earn?
$
Sales needed to hit your target
%
% of quota required to hit target
Gross Commission $0
Net Commission (After Tax) $0
Total Period Pay $0
Estimated Annual OTE $0
Effective Tax Rate 0%
Quota Attainment 0%
Quota Attainment 0%

Pay Breakdown

$0 Total Pay

Tax & Take-Home

Tax ComponentRateAmount
Annual Base $0
Annual Commission $0
Annual Gross $0
Annual Net (est.) $0

Quick Summary

  • A commission calculator converts sales figures and commission rates into gross earnings, estimated net take-home pay, and annual projections.
  • Supports flat-rate, tiered/accelerator, split, and gross margin commission structures — the four most common models in U.S. sales compensation.
  • Commission income is subject to the IRS supplemental wage withholding rate of 22% for amounts under $1 million, plus FICA (7.65%) and state taxes.
  • W-2 employees and 1099 independent contractors are taxed differently on commission income — this calculator shows the after-tax impact of each classification.
  • On-Target Earnings (OTE) = base salary + commissions earned at 100% of quota — the standard U.S. benchmark for evaluating sales compensation plans.
  • If your commission income exceeds $50,000 annually, consult a CPA about estimated quarterly tax payments to avoid IRS underpayment penalties.

What Is a Commission Calculator?

A commission calculator converts your sales figures, commission rates, and compensation structure into the numbers that actually land in your bank account. Most salespeople know their commission rate but significantly underestimate how taxes transform gross commission into take-home pay. This calculator closes that gap — showing gross commission, federal and state tax deductions, FICA or self-employment tax, and final net pay in one place.

Commission-based compensation is the foundation of American sales culture. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, over 14 million U.S. workers receive some form of commission-based pay. Understanding how different structures work — flat rate, tiered, gross margin, split — gives salespeople and managers the clarity to evaluate compensation plans before accepting a role or restructuring a team.

The Four Commission Structures This Calculator Supports

Flat-Rate Commission

The simplest structure: commission equals sale amount multiplied by a fixed percentage. A 5% flat rate on a $60,000 deal produces $3,000 regardless of total monthly volume. Flat-rate structures are transparent, easy to forecast, and common in real estate, insurance, and staffing industries. The limitation is that they provide no additional incentive to push beyond a certain revenue level.

Tiered (Accelerator) Commission

Tiered structures apply escalating rates as sales volume crosses defined thresholds. A rep selling $120,000 against tiers of 3% (first $50,000), 5% ($50,001–$100,000), and 8% (above $100,000) earns $1,500 + $2,500 + $1,600 = $5,600 — significantly more than the $3,600 a flat 3% rate would produce. Critically, each rate applies only to the sales within that band, not retroactively to all sales.

This incremental calculation — which this calculator implements correctly — is the most common error in manual commission computations. Sales reps at many companies mistakenly believe reaching a higher tier retroactively raises their entire payout. The incremental model used here is the correct and standard method.

Gross Margin Commission

Gross margin commission aligns sales incentives with profitability. The rep earns a percentage of the deal's profit (revenue minus cost), not the full revenue. This structure discourages discounting — every dollar of discount comes directly out of the commission base. It is common in manufacturing, distribution, and value-added reseller (VAR) environments where deal margins vary significantly.

Split Commission

Enterprise deals often involve multiple contributors: an account executive who manages the relationship, a solutions engineer who handles technical scope, and a sales development rep who sourced the lead. Split commissions divide the total commission across contributors according to a predefined policy. This calculator handles two-party splits with a custom percentage, calculating each party's gross and net payout separately.

How Taxes Work on Commission Income

The IRS treats commissions as supplemental wages. For W-2 employees, the 22% federal supplemental withholding rate applies to most commission payments (37% above $1 million). This withholding is separate from your regular paycheck withholding and appears as a lump deduction on your pay stub. Social Security tax (6.2%) applies up to the annual wage base ($168,600 in 2024), and Medicare (1.45%) has no cap.

For 1099 contractors, no withholding occurs at source — but self-employment tax (15.3% on net earnings up to the Social Security wage base, 2.9% above) applies on top of federal and state income tax. The effective total tax burden for a 1099 contractor often runs 35–45% of gross commission depending on state and total income. The tradeoff is deductibility of legitimate business expenses, which can meaningfully reduce taxable self-employment income.

Understanding OTE and Quota Attainment

On-Target Earnings (OTE) is the total compensation at exactly 100% quota attainment: base salary plus commission at 100%. A job offering "$180,000 OTE" with a 60/40 split means $108,000 base and $72,000 in commission at quota. Quota attainment percentage tells you where you stand: $45,000 in sales against an $80,000 quota is 56.25% attainment. Most accelerator tiers kick in above 100% attainment, making the push from 95% to 110% disproportionately valuable.

Sales Target Planning

This calculator's planning tool works backward: enter your target commission earnings and it tells you exactly what sales volume you need to generate them. If you want to earn $8,000 in commission at a 5% flat rate, you need $160,000 in sales. At 56% of a $300,000 quota, that means you need to close an additional $44,000 to hit your target. This reverse calculation is more useful than forward projection for weekly pipeline management.

Common Commission Mistakes to Avoid

Spending commission income before the clawback window closes is the most financially damaging mistake. If a deal cancels within 90 days and you already spent that commission, you now owe your employer money from future earnings. Treat commission income as tentative until the risk window passes.

Neglecting quarterly tax payments as a 1099 contractor creates a compounding problem. If you earn $100,000 in commission and make no estimated payments, your April 15 tax bill — including penalties and interest — can easily reach $35,000–$40,000. Open a dedicated tax savings account and transfer 35% of every commission payment immediately.

When to Talk to a Professional

If your annual commission income exceeds $50,000 as a 1099 contractor, the cost of a CPA (typically $500–$1,500 for a sales professional's return) will almost always pay for itself through deductions and entity structuring advice. An S-corporation election, for example, can save a high-earning independent contractor $5,000–$15,000 in self-employment tax annually by converting some earned income to dividend distributions.

If you are evaluating a new sales role, ask the hiring manager for the last 12 months of median quota attainment data for the team. OTE means nothing without achievability context — a plan where only 30% of reps hit quota is not a $180,000 OTE opportunity for most people.

Frequently Asked Questions

Know What You Earn Before You Earn It

Commission income is variable by design — but your understanding of it does not have to be. Whether you are evaluating a new plan, planning your pipeline, or modeling your tax exposure, this calculator gives you the full picture: gross commission, taxes, net take-home, OTE, and the sales volume needed to hit any income target.

Bookmark this page and run your numbers at the start of every sales period. Knowing exactly what you need to close — and what it nets after tax — is the foundation of intentional performance.

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