Nebraska Severance Pay Calculator
Estimate your Nebraska severance after federal, state, and FICA tax — pre-set with the Nebraska rate.
Weekly pay: $1,250.00
$5,000.00
Gross severance
Est. taxes: ~$1,824.50 (36.5%)
$3,175.50
Estimated net take-home
Estimates only. PTO payout rights and tax withholding vary by state, employer policy, and individual circumstances. This is not legal, tax, or financial advice. Consult your state labor department or a qualified professional. See our methodology.
Nebraska Use-It-Or-Lose-It Prohibitions
Under Nebraska state supreme court precedents, accrued vacation and PTO are legally protected forms of earned compensation. Consequently, use-it-or-lose-it policies that result in the forfeiture of already earned paid leave are strictly prohibited in Nebraska. All accrued, unused vacation hours must be compensated at the employee's final rate of pay upon job separation.
Severance pay in Nebraska
Nebraska employers are not legally required to offer severance pay unless promised under contract or written separation agreement. In large-scale layoffs, employers must comply with federal WARN Act requirements. Under Nebraska Department of Labor rules, severance pay (lump sum or salary continuation) can disqualify or reduce weekly unemployment benefits for the weeks it is designated to cover.
Official Nebraska Wage Claim Resources
If you are denied your legal severance payout or have wage disputes under state labor codes, you can contact the official agency below:
- Wage Agency: Nebraska Department of Labor
- Phone Support: (402) 471-2239
- Official Website: https://dol.nebraska.gov/
Nebraska example: a $20,000 severance package has about $4,400 federal and $1,368 state tax withheld, plus FICA \u2014 roughly $12,702 net.
Final pay & your rights in Nebraska
Severance is usually paid with or near your final paycheck. In Nebraska, a final paycheck is generally due — if fired: Next scheduled payday or within 2 weeks, whichever is earlier; if you quit: Next payday or within 2 weeks, whichever is earlier — though severance itself follows your agreement’s timeline, not this deadline. Nebraska’s statute of limitations for unpaid-wage claims is 4 years (reference: Neb. Rev. Stat. § 48-1229); unpaid wages are pursued through the Nebraska Department of Labor. If your state also requires a Nebraska PTO payout, that is separate from and in addition to any severance — estimate it with the free PTO payout calculator.
Severance & unemployment in Nebraska
A one-time lump sum often does not reduce Nebraska unemployment benefits, while salary continuation can delay or reduce them for the weeks it covers. Report severance when you file your claim. See the main severance guide for how the math and taxes work.
Frequently asked questions
How much is severance taxed in Nebraska? +
Severance is a supplemental wage: 22% flat federal withholding, an estimated 6.8% Nebraska supplemental rate, and 7.65% FICA. On a $20,000 package in Nebraska, that leaves roughly $12,702 net.
Is severance pay required in Nebraska? +
No. Nebraska does not require private employers to pay severance — no US state does. It is owed only when promised in a policy, contract, or separation agreement. The federal WARN Act (and some state layoff-notice laws) can require notice or pay for large mass layoffs.
Does severance affect unemployment in Nebraska? +
It can. How Nebraska treats severance depends on whether it is a one-time lump sum or salary continuation, and the week it covers. Report any severance when you file your Nebraska unemployment claim and let the state determine the effect.
When must my final paycheck be paid in Nebraska? +
Final-pay timing in Nebraska is set by state law; the statute of limitations for unpaid-wage claims is 4 years. Reference: Neb. Rev. Stat. § 48-1229. Severance paid with your final check follows your agreement, not a state deadline.