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2026 Federal Tax Brackets: Rates, Thresholds & Strategies

ByThe ExplainerComplex ideas, made clear.
·11 min read
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Key Takeaways

  • A single filer earning $100,000 pays an effective federal rate of 13.2%, not the 22% marginal rate — the standard deduction creates a $16,100 tax-free floor before brackets even apply.
  • The OBBBA made the TCJA's seven-rate structure permanent and boosted the standard deduction 7.3% to $16,100 (single) / $32,200 (MFJ) — the largest increase since 2018.
  • Max contributions across 401(k) ($24,500), IRA ($7,500), and HSA ($4,400) reduce taxable income by $36,400, saving $8,736 in federal tax at the 24% bracket.
  • The 2025-to-2026 bracket shift saves about $340 for a single filer at $50K and $520 for a married couple at $100K — modest savings, but the permanence is the real win.
  • A new $6,000 senior deduction stacks with the existing additional standard deduction — a single filer 65+ earning $60,000 pays just $4,058 in federal tax.

A single filer earning $100,000 in 2026 pays $13,170 in federal income tax — an effective rate of 13.2%, not the 22% marginal rate most people assume. That 8.8-percentage-point gap is the most expensive misunderstanding in personal finance, and it costs people real money every time they turn down overtime, a bonus, or a side gig because they think they'll "move into a higher bracket."

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act, signed in July 2025, made the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act's individual rates permanent and pushed bracket thresholds higher than originally projected. The 2026 standard deduction jumps to $16,100 for single filers and $32,200 for married couples — meaning a couple's first $32,200 of income faces zero federal tax. Combined with wider bracket ranges, a new $6,000 senior deduction, and IRA limits bumped to $7,500, the 2026 code is the most taxpayer-friendly in a decade.

This guide shows you exactly how much you owe at each income level, how the 2026 thresholds compare to 2025, and which moves reduce your bill. Use our tax calculator to model your specific situation.

Quick Reference: 2026 Tax Rates at a Glance

Single filers:

RateTaxable IncomeTax on 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
37%Over $640,600No cap

Married filing jointly:

RateTaxable IncomeTax on 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 – $768,600Up to $89,653
37%Over $768,600No cap

Head of household:

  • 10%: Up to $17,700
  • 12%: $17,701 to $67,450
  • 22%: $67,451 to $105,700
  • 24%: $105,701 to $201,775
  • 32%: $201,776 to $256,200
  • 35%: $256,201 to $640,600
  • 37%: Over $640,600

Married filing separately thresholds mirror single filers through the 32% bracket, then compress: the 35% bracket runs from $256,226 to $384,350, and the 37% rate kicks in above $384,350.

2026 vs 2025: What Changed

The OBBBA applied a 4% inflation adjustment to the 10% and 12% brackets — roughly double the 2.3% adjustment for higher brackets. Here's the single filer comparison:

Rate2025 Threshold2026 ThresholdChange
10%Up to $11,925Up to $12,400+$475 (+4.0%)
12%$11,926 – $48,475$12,401 – $50,400+$1,925 (+4.0%)
22%$48,476 – $103,350$50,401 – $105,700+$2,350 (+2.3%)
24%$103,351 – $197,300$105,701 – $201,775+$4,475 (+2.3%)
32%$197,301 – $250,525$201,776 – $256,225+$5,700 (+2.3%)
35%$250,526 – $626,350$256,226 – $640,600+$14,250 (+2.3%)
37%Over $626,350Over $640,600+$14,250 (+2.3%)

The <a href="/posts/standard-deduction-2026-filing-status-thresholds-and-when-to-itemize">standard deduction</a> also jumped: $15,000 to $16,100 for single filers (+7.3%), and $30,000 to $32,200 for married couples filing jointly (+7.3%). That's a bigger increase than any year since the TCJA's original near-doubling in 2018.

Bottom line: a single filer with $50,000 in gross income pays roughly $340 less in 2026 than in 2025. A married couple at $100,000 saves about $520. The savings are real but modest — the bigger story is permanence. These rates aren't expiring.

What You Actually Owe: Three Income Scenarios

The progressive system taxes each dollar only at the rate for its bracket. Your marginal rate is always higher than your effective rate. Here's what real filers pay at three common income levels.

Single filer, $75,000 gross income:

  • Standard deduction: $16,100
  • Taxable income: $58,900
  • $12,400 at 10% = $1,240
  • $38,000 at 12% = $4,560
  • $8,500 at 22% = $1,870
  • Total tax: $7,670 — effective rate 10.2% (marginal rate: 22%)

Married filing jointly, $150,000 gross income:

  • Standard deduction: $32,200
  • Taxable income: $117,800
  • $24,800 at 10% = $2,480
  • $76,000 at 12% = $9,120
  • $17,000 at 22% = $3,740
  • Total tax: $15,340 — effective rate 10.2% (marginal rate: 22%)

Single filer, $250,000 gross income:

  • Standard deduction: $16,100
  • Taxable income: $233,900
  • $12,400 at 10% = $1,240
  • $38,000 at 12% = $4,560
  • $55,300 at 22% = $12,166
  • $96,075 at 24% = $23,058
  • $32,125 at 32% = $10,280
  • Total tax: $51,304 — effective rate 20.5% (marginal rate: 32%)

Notice: the $150,000 married couple and the $75,000 single filer pay the same effective rate (10.2%). That's the joint filing advantage — double-wide brackets mean a couple's combined income gets taxed as if each spouse earned half.

Model your own numbers with our tax bracket calculator.

Standard Deduction: Your Tax-Free Floor

The standard deduction is subtracted from gross income before brackets apply. For 2026:

  • Single / Married filing separately: $16,100
  • Married filing jointly: $32,200
  • Head of household: $24,150

Seniors (65+) get an additional $2,050 (single) or $1,650 per spouse (married). The OBBBA also created a new $6,000 deduction for taxpayers 65 and older — available whether you itemize or take the standard deduction — that phases out at 6% of income above $75,000 (single) or $150,000 (joint). A couple both 65+, both under the phase-out: $32,200 + $3,300 + $12,000 = $47,500 in total deductions before a single dollar gets taxed.

A married couple under 65 earning $80,000 has taxable income of $47,800 after the $32,200 standard deduction. Their entire bill falls within the 10% and 12% brackets — $5,240 total, an effective rate of 6.6%.

Roughly 90% of filers claim the standard deduction. Itemizing still wins if your mortgage interest, state and local taxes (capped at $10,000 under SALT), and charitable contributions exceed the standard deduction — but with 30-year mortgage rates around 6.0%–6.4%, anyone who locked in a lower rate during 2020–2021 is earning less mortgage interest deduction than they expected.

The Moves That Cut Your Tax Bill

Knowing your marginal bracket tells you exactly how much each deduction saves. A dollar of deduction in the 24% bracket saves 24 cents; in the 12% bracket, 12 cents. Target the highest-impact moves first.

Max out your 401(k). The 2026 limit is $24,500 ($32,500 if 50+, $35,750 if 60–63 under the SECURE 2.0 super catch-up). Every dollar reduces taxable income at your marginal rate. A 24%-bracket worker contributing $24,500 saves $5,880 in federal tax alone — before state savings.

IRA contributions hit $7,500. Up from $7,000 in 2025, with a catch-up of $1,100 for those 50+, totaling $8,600. A traditional IRA contribution is deductible at your marginal rate if you're not covered by an employer plan, or if your MAGI is below the phase-out threshold.

HSA contributions. If you have a high-deductible health plan, contribute $4,400 (individual) or $8,750 (family) to a Health Savings Account. The HSA is the only account with a triple tax advantage: deductible going in, tax-free growth, tax-free withdrawals for medical expenses.

Harvest investment losses. Tax-loss harvesting lets you sell underwater positions to offset capital gains and up to $3,000 of ordinary income per year. With tariff-driven volatility shaking bond and equity portfolios in Q2 2026, there's likely harvestable losses to capture.

Bunch deductions. If your itemized deductions hover near the standard deduction threshold, accelerate two years of charitable giving into one year to clear the $16,100 bar, then take the standard deduction the next year. Donor-advised funds make this simple.

Stack all three. A 24%-bracket worker contributing $24,500 to a 401(k), $7,500 to an IRA, and $4,400 to an HSA reduces taxable income by $36,400 — saving $8,736 in federal tax.

Roth Conversions: The Bracket Arbitrage

Between jobs, on sabbatical, or in early retirement? A Roth conversion lets you move traditional IRA or 401(k) money into a Roth, paying tax now at a lower rate to avoid tax later at a potentially higher one.

The math is straightforward. If your taxable income drops to $40,000 in a gap year, you're in the 12% bracket. You could convert $10,400 to fill the 12% bracket (reaching $50,400) at just 12 cents per dollar. Push further into the 22% bracket if you expect to face 24%+ rates in retirement. Every dollar converted below your future rate is arbitrage.

Two caveats: Roth conversions count as income for Medicare premium surcharges (IRMAA) and can affect estimated tax payment requirements. Plan conversions across multiple years to stay below bracket thresholds — the 22% bracket stretches to $105,700 for single filers, giving substantial room for strategic partial conversions.

The OBBBA's permanence makes this decision simpler. Before July 2025, you had to guess whether rates would revert to pre-TCJA levels. Now you know: the 22% bracket isn't going anywhere. That certainty lets you convert with confidence.

What the OBBBA Changed

Until July 2025, the biggest uncertainty in tax planning was whether the TCJA's individual provisions would sunset. That would have meant higher rates — the 12% bracket reverting to 15%, the 22% to 25%, the 37% to 39.6% — and a standard deduction cut roughly in half.

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act eliminated that cliff. Four changes matter most:

Wider brackets than projected. The OBBBA applied a 4% inflation adjustment to the 10% and 12% brackets — roughly double the 2.3% adjustment for higher brackets. The 12% bracket now stretches to $50,400 for single filers, sheltering more middle-income earnings at the lower rate.

Standard deduction boost. The jump from $15,000 to $16,100 for single filers (and $30,000 to $32,200 for MFJ) was the largest single-year increase since 2018. This alone saves a 22%-bracket single filer $242 compared to 2025.

$15 million estate exemption. The TCJA's doubled exemption is now permanent and inflation-indexed. Fewer than 0.1% of estates exceed $15 million — for most families, estate tax is no longer a planning concern.

Senior deduction. The new $6,000 deduction for taxpayers 65+ (phasing out above $75,000/$150,000) stacks with the existing additional standard deduction. A single filer 65+ earning $60,000 gets $16,100 + $2,050 + $6,000 = $24,150 in deductions — leaving just $35,850 in taxable income and a federal bill of $4,058.

Filing Deadlines and Estimated Taxes

New bracket thresholds mean your W-4 withholding may no longer match your actual liability. If you received a large refund or owed a balance for 2025, revisit your withholding now.

The IRS requires quarterly estimated tax payments from anyone who expects to owe $1,000+ and won't have at least 90% of the current year's tax withheld. The 2026 deadlines:

  • Q1: April 15, 2026
  • Q2: June 15, 2026
  • Q3: September 15, 2026
  • Q4: January 15, 2027

Safe harbor: you avoid penalties if you pay at least 100% of last year's tax liability (110% if AGI exceeds $150,000) or 90% of this year's liability, whichever is smaller.

Self-employed filers face both income tax and self-employment tax (15.3% on the first $176,100 of net earnings, 2.9% above that). The deduction for the employer-equivalent portion reduces your AGI, which affects bracket position and credit eligibility. A SEP IRA contribution — up to 25% of net self-employment income, max $70,000 — is the single best tax shelter available to the self-employed.

The filing deadline for 2026 returns is April 15, 2027. Extensions push filing to October 15, 2027, but any tax owed is still due by April 15.

One more thing: if your income puts you near the Alternative Minimum Tax threshold, check whether large deductions or incentive stock option exercises trigger AMT liability. The OBBBA's higher AMT exemption ($90,100 single, $140,550 joint) protects more filers, but high-income earners in high-tax states still need to run the numbers.

Conclusion

The 2026 tax code is settled law for the first time in years. No sunset cliff, no what-if scenarios — the OBBBA locked in the seven-rate structure permanently.

The single most impactful action for most filers: max out tax-advantaged accounts. A 24%-bracket worker contributing $24,500 to a 401(k), $7,500 to an IRA, and $4,400 to an HSA reduces taxable income by $36,400 — saving $8,736 in federal tax. Stack tax-loss harvesting, strategic Roth conversions, and deduction bunching on top, and the gap between your marginal and effective rate can span 10+ percentage points. Run your own scenario through our tax calculator and see exactly where you stand.

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Disclaimer: This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Consult qualified professionals before making investment decisions.

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