2026 Federal Income Tax Brackets

The IRS adjusts federal tax brackets each year for inflation. For 2026, these brackets apply to income earned during the 2026 tax year and help explain how federal income tax is calculated.

The US uses a progressive (marginal) tax system — you don't pay your top rate on all income. Only the income that falls within each bracket is taxed at that rate.

💡 Key concept: Being in the "22% bracket" doesn't mean you pay 22% on everything. It means your income above the 12% threshold is taxed at 22%. Most people's effective tax rate is several points lower than their marginal rate.

Interactive Evidence
Progressive bracket ladder
Switch filing status to see how the taxable-income ladder widens. Each rung shows the bracket rate, the income range it covers, and the tax inside that layer only.
Standard deduction $16,100 Before brackets apply
Top bracket starts $640,600 37% threshold for this status
Mid bracket 22% Common planning reference point
Reading rule Layered Only the slice in each rung gets that rate
For single filers, the 22% bracket starts at taxable income above $50,400. That does not turn the whole salary into 22% tax.

2026 Tax Brackets — Single Filers

Tax RateTaxable Income RangeTax on This Bracket
10%$0 – $12,400Up to $1,240
12%$12,401 – $50,400Up to $4,560
22%$50,401 – $105,700Up to $12,166
24%$105,701 – $201,775Up to $23,058
32%$201,776 – $256,225Up to $17,424
35%$256,226 – $640,600Up to $134,531.25
37%Over $640,60037% on excess

2026 Tax Brackets — Married Filing Jointly

Tax RateTaxable Income RangeTax on This Bracket
10%$0 – $24,800Up to $2,480
12%$24,801 – $100,800Up to $9,120
22%$100,801 – $211,400Up to $24,332
24%$211,401 – $403,550Up to $46,116
32%$403,551 – $512,450Up to $34,848
35%$512,451 – $768,700Up to $89,687.50
37%Over $768,70037% on excess

2026 Standard Deductions

Before applying tax brackets, you subtract the standard deduction from gross income:

Filing Status2026 Standard Deduction
Single$16,100
Married Filing Jointly$32,200
Married Filing Separately$16,100
Head of Household$24,150

Real Examples: What You Actually Pay

Example 1: Single Filer, $60,000 Gross Income

$60,000 gross
− $16,100 standard deduction
= $43,900 taxable income

10% on $12,400 = $1,240.00
12% on $31,500 ($43,900 − $12,400) = $3,780.00
Total federal tax: $5,020.00
Effective rate: 8.4% of gross / 11.4% of taxable income

Example 2: Single Filer, $100,000 Gross Income

$100,000 gross
− $16,100 standard deduction
= $83,900 taxable income

10% on $12,400 = $1,240.00
12% on $38,000 = $4,560.00
22% on $33,500 ($83,900 − $50,400) = $7,370.00
Total federal tax: $13,170.00
Effective rate: 13.2% of gross / 15.7% of taxable income

Example 3: Married Filing Jointly, $150,000 Combined Income

$150,000 gross
− $32,200 standard deduction
= $117,800 taxable income

10% on $24,800 = $2,480.00
12% on $76,000 = $9,120.00
22% on $17,000 ($117,800 − $100,800) = $3,740.00
Total federal tax: $15,340.00
Effective rate: 10.2% of gross

Effective vs Marginal Tax Rate

Your marginal rate is the rate on your last dollar of income — the highest bracket you reach. Your effective rate is total tax ÷ total income.

Gross Income (Single)Marginal RateEffective RateFederal Tax Owed
$40,00012%~7.1%~$2,840
$60,00012%~8.6%~$5,162
$80,00022%~11.3%~$9,060
$100,00022%~13.6%~$13,614
$150,00024%~18.3%~$27,450
$200,00032%~22.2%~$44,400

Use our Tax Estimator to calculate your exact federal and state tax for your specific income and filing status. Or use the Take Home Pay Calculator to see your net paycheck after all taxes.

Other Taxes That Affect Your Paycheck

Federal income tax is just one piece. Your total paycheck deductions also include:

  • FICA — Social Security (6.2%): On wages up to $184,500 in 2026
  • FICA — Medicare (1.45%): On all wages, no cap
  • State income tax: 0% to 13.3% depending on state
  • Local taxes: Some cities (NYC, Philadelphia, Detroit) have additional income taxes

Learn more about FICA in our complete FICA Tax guide.

What Could Change After 2026?

The 2026 tax brackets reflect current law as of early 2026. Several provisions from the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) are scheduled to sunset or be revised. Key items to watch:

  • Standard deduction: The current 2026 standard deduction ($16,100 single / $32,200 married filing jointly / $24,150 head of household) reflects the inflation-adjusted amounts under current law. If Congress allows major TCJA-era individual provisions to sunset or revises them, taxable income for many filers would rise.
  • Marginal rates: Some individual income tax rates could revert upward. For example, the current 22% bracket rate could return to 25% for some income ranges.
  • Child Tax Credit: The expanded CTC may be reduced if TCJA provisions expire. This does not affect brackets but does affect final tax owed.
  • AMT thresholds: Alternative Minimum Tax exemptions would drop significantly, affecting more middle- and upper-income filers.

📌 Recommendation: These brackets are accurate for tax year 2026. If you're doing multi-year tax planning or projecting income beyond 2026, consult a tax professional about potential legislative changes. IRS.gov publishes official inflation adjustments each fall for the following tax year.

Federal Tax Bracket Questions

What are the federal tax brackets for 2026?
For 2026, single filers move through seven federal brackets from 10% to 37%, while married filing jointly brackets are broader at each level. The exact tax you owe depends on taxable income after deductions, not just the top bracket you reach.
What is the standard deduction for 2026?
The 2026 standard deduction is $16,100 for single filers, $32,200 for married filing jointly, and $24,150 for head of household. That deduction reduces taxable income before bracket rates are applied.
What is the difference between marginal and effective tax rate?
Your marginal rate is the rate applied to the last portion of taxable income you earn. Your effective rate is total federal income tax divided by gross income, which is usually lower because earlier dollars are taxed at lower rates.
How do I calculate my federal income tax?
Start by subtracting the standard deduction or itemized deductions from gross income to get taxable income. Then apply each bracket rate only to the portion of income inside that bracket and add the results together.
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Data Sources: IRS Pub. 15-T (2026) · BLS Wage Statistics · SSA Wage Base
Data & Methodology: This guide uses IRS inflation-adjusted bracket thresholds and standard deduction figures to explain how federal income tax is layered across income ranges. Use it for planning and paycheck context, not as a filing-ready substitute for tax software or professional advice. Methodology
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