Calculate Your Federal Income Tax
| Bracket | Rate | Taxable In Bracket | Tax |
|---|
2026 Federal Tax Brackets
The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act was made permanent by the One, Big, Beautiful Bill (OBBB), signed into law in 2025. Brackets below reflect 2026 inflation adjustments per IRS Revenue Procedure 2025-32.
| Rate | Single | Married Filing Jointly | Head of Household |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10% | $0 – $12,400 | $0 – $24,800 | $0 – $17,700 |
| 12% | $12,400 – $50,400 | $24,800 – $100,800 | $17,700 – $67,450 |
| 22% | $50,400 – $105,700 | $100,800 – $211,400 | $67,450 – $105,700 |
| 24% | $105,700 – $201,775 | $211,400 – $403,550 | $105,700 – $201,750 |
| 32% | $201,775 – $256,225 | $403,550 – $512,450 | $201,750 – $256,200 |
| 35% | $256,225 – $640,600 | $512,450 – $768,700 | $256,200 – $640,600 |
| 37% | $640,600+ | $768,700+ | $640,600+ |
Standard Deduction (2026)
| Filing Status | Standard Deduction | Additional (65+ or blind) |
|---|---|---|
| Single | $16,100 | +$2,000 |
| Married Filing Jointly | $32,200 | +$1,600 per qualifying spouse |
| Head of Household | $24,150 | +$2,000 |
Standard vs Itemized: When to Itemize
Itemize when your total deductions exceed the standard deduction. Common itemized deductions:
- Mortgage interest on up to $750,000 of mortgage debt
- State and local taxes (SALT) capped at $10,000
- Charitable contributions up to 60% of AGI
- Medical expenses exceeding 7.5% of AGI
Most taxpayers (~90%) use the standard deduction after the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act increased it significantly.
FICA Taxes (Social Security + Medicare)
FICA taxes are separate from income tax and are not reduced by deductions:
- Social Security: 6.2% on wages up to $176,100 (2025). Your employer pays another 6.2%.
- Medicare: 1.45% on all wages (no cap). Plus 0.9% additional Medicare tax on wages over $200,000 (Single) or $250,000 (MFJ).
- Total FICA: 7.65% on most wages (up to SS wage base)
Self-employed individuals pay both the employee and employer portions (15.3% total) but can deduct the employer portion.
Tax Reduction Strategies
- Max out 401(k): $23,500 contribution reduces taxable income dollar-for-dollar ($34,750 if you're 60–63 under SECURE 2.0). At 24% bracket, that saves $5,640–$8,340 in tax.
- Contribute to HSA: $4,300 (individual) or $8,550 (family) in 2025. Triple tax advantage: deductible, grows tax-free, tax-free withdrawals for medical.
- Traditional IRA: $7,000 deduction ($8,000 if 50+) if eligible. Income limits apply if you have a workplace plan.
- Tax-Loss Harvesting: Sell losing investments to offset capital gains, reducing taxable income by up to $3,000/year beyond gains.
- Charitable Giving: Donate appreciated stock to avoid capital gains tax completely while claiming the full market value deduction.
- Child Tax Credit: $2,000 per qualifying child under 17. This is a credit (reduces tax directly), not a deduction.