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New Hampshire Payroll Tax Guide for Small Business (NH) in 2026

Complete New Hampshire payroll tax guide. Withholding rates, unemployment insurance, new-hire reporting, and filing calendar.

April 24, 2026 2 min readby TinSuite Team
payroll nh new-hampshire-payroll employment tax

Hiring your first employee in New Hampshire? Or expanding a remote team? Payroll tax rules vary significantly by state. This guide covers what New Hampshire employers must do in 2026.

New Hampshire state income tax withholding

New Hampshire does not impose a state income tax on wages. You still withhold federal income tax (per W-4), Social Security (6.2%), and Medicare (1.45%), but no state withholding.

Notes: No state income tax on wages, unemployment: 0.1-8.5%

Federal payroll taxes (apply in every state)

  • FICA — Social Security: 6.2% employer + 6.2% employee (up to $176,100 wage base in 2026)
  • FICA — Medicare: 1.45% employer + 1.45% employee (no cap) + 0.9% additional Medicare over $200k
  • FUTA: 6.0% on first $7,000 per employee (credit brings effective rate to 0.6%)

State unemployment insurance (SUTA)

Every New Hampshire employer pays state unemployment tax. Rates are experience-rated — new employers start at a standard rate, then rates adjust based on how often former employees claim benefits.

Check your specific rate letter from the Department of Employment Security.

New-hire reporting

Federal law requires reporting every new hire to the state within 20 days. New Hampshire uses the same form/portal for both federal and state reporting.

Filing frequency

Federal (IRS Form 941): quarterly for most employers. Deposits monthly or semi-weekly based on liability.

New Hampshire withholding: frequency varies based on liability — most small employers file quarterly.

Year-end forms

  • W-2: to employees by January 31, to SSA by January 31
  • W-3: transmittal to SSA
  • 1099-NEC: to non-employee contractors who earned $600+ by January 31
  • State reconciliation: New Hampshire requires annual reconciliation, format depends on jurisdiction

Common New Hampshire payroll mistakes

  • Treating contractors as employees (or vice versa) — IRS uses the ABC test
  • Missing the quarterly 941 deposit deadline
  • Not withholding properly from supplemental wages (bonuses, commissions)
  • Failing to deposit FUTA if total owed exceeds $500 quarterly

How TinSuite handles New Hampshire payroll

  • Automatic federal + state withholding calculations for New Hampshire
  • SUTA rate applied per employee, tracked against wage bases
  • Direct deposit and printable pay stubs
  • 941, 940, W-2, W-3, and 1099 generation — filing-ready
  • New hire reporting exports
  • Year-end reconciliation reports

Try TinSuite free. Also see our complete US payroll tax overview.