One extra shift
Enter the estimated take-home from one pickup shift, then add food, commute, and the total hours the shift takes from your day.
Is this shift worth it?
Compare your estimated take-home pay against commute, food, childcare, and other costs before picking up the shift.
Need to estimate take-home first?
Quick presets
This estimates paycheck withholding, not your final tax bill.
This is a planning shortcut. Only you can decide whether the money is worth the time, energy, and schedule tradeoff.
An extra shift can look worth it until the real-life costs show up. Gas, parking, food, childcare, and extra commute time can change the answer quickly.
Use this after you estimate take-home pay on the homepage or nurse overtime calculator. It turns the decision into a clearer question: how much money is left after costs, and what is that worth per hour of your time?
This calculator is an estimate only. It is not tax, legal, payroll, or financial advice. Your actual paycheck can vary based on your employer, benefits, withholding, state taxes, local taxes, and payroll rules.
Enter the estimated take-home from one pickup shift, then add food, commute, and the total hours the shift takes from your day.
Add childcare cost to see whether the shift still leaves enough money after the expense.
Include gas, tolls, parking, and commute time to see the real hourly value of saying yes.
Take-home pay is easiest. If you enter gross pay, use the tax estimate so the calculator can reduce it.
Include costs you would not have without the shift, such as commute, parking, childcare, meals, or extra supplies.
Yes. The math works for any extra shift, side shift, or overtime block.
It is the money left after costs divided by total hours including commute.
No. It gives a clearer money estimate so you can weigh it against energy, rest, family time, and schedule strain.