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2026 Federal Income Tax Brackets & Rates

Complete 2026 tax brackets for all filing statuses, standard deductions, and a built-in calculator to find your marginal and effective rates.

2026 Tax Brackets — Single Filers

These rates apply to taxable income — your gross income after subtracting deductions and adjustments. Each bracket rate only applies to income within that bracket, not your total income.

Tax Rate Taxable Income Tax Owed
10% $0 – $12,100 10% of taxable income
12% $12,101 – $49,150 $1,210 + 12% of amount over $12,100
22% $49,151 – $105,225 $5,656 + 22% of amount over $49,150
24% $105,226 – $200,700 $17,994 + 24% of amount over $105,225
32% $200,701 – $375,000 $40,906 + 32% of amount over $200,700
35% $375,001 – $530,000 $96,722 + 35% of amount over $375,000
37% Over $530,000 $151,972 + 37% of amount over $530,000

2026 Tax Brackets — Married Filing Jointly

MFJ brackets are approximately double the single-filer thresholds, providing the so-called “marriage bonus” for couples where one spouse earns significantly more.

Tax Rate Taxable Income Tax Owed
10% $0 – $24,200 10% of taxable income
12% $24,201 – $98,300 $2,420 + 12% over $24,200
22% $98,301 – $210,450 $11,312 + 22% over $98,300
24% $210,451 – $401,400 $35,985 + 24% over $210,450
32% $401,401 – $600,000 $81,813 + 32% over $401,400
35% $600,001 – $750,000 $145,325 + 35% over $600,000
37% Over $750,000 $197,825 + 37% over $750,000

2026 Tax Brackets — Head of Household

Head of household status provides broader brackets than single filers, benefiting single parents and others who qualify.

Tax Rate Taxable Income Tax Owed
10% $0 – $17,300 10% of taxable income
12% $17,301 – $65,300 $1,730 + 12% over $17,300
22% $65,301 – $105,225 $7,490 + 22% over $65,300
24% $105,226 – $200,700 $16,284 + 24% over $105,225
32% $200,701 – $375,000 $39,198 + 32% over $200,700
35% $375,001 – $530,000 $95,002 + 35% over $375,000
37% Over $530,000 $149,252 + 37% over $530,000

2026 Standard Deductions

The standard deduction reduces your taxable income before you apply the brackets above. For most self-employed individuals, the standard deduction is higher than their itemized deductions.

Filing Status Standard Deduction
Single $16,100
Married Filing Jointly $32,200
Head of Household $23,850
Married Filing Separately $16,100

Tip for self-employed filers: Before the standard deduction reduces your taxable income, you also subtract “above the line” adjustments including 50% of SE tax, self-employed health insurance premiums, and retirement plan contributions. These reduce your AGI regardless of whether you itemize or take the standard deduction.

Marginal vs. Effective Tax Rate

A common source of confusion is the difference between your marginal tax rate (the rate on your last dollar of income) and your effective tax rate (the average rate you actually pay across all income).

🎯 Marginal Rate

The rate that applies to your last dollar of taxable income. This is your “tax bracket.” It determines the tax cost of earning additional income, taking deductions, or making retirement contributions.

📈 Effective Rate

Your total federal income tax divided by your taxable income. This is how much you actually pay on average. Almost always lower than your marginal rate because lower brackets fill first.

Example: $80,000 Taxable Income (Single Filer)

BracketIncome in BracketTax
10%$12,100 × 10%$1,210
12%$37,050 × 12%$4,446
22%$30,850 × 22%$6,787
Total Federal Income Tax$12,443

Marginal rate: 22%  |  Effective rate: 15.6% ($12,443 ÷ $80,000)  —  significantly lower than the bracket suggests.

How Self-Employment Income Affects Your Tax Bracket

Self-employment income is added to all other income sources to determine your total taxable income. Several deductions specific to self-employed individuals can meaningfully reduce your bracket:

  • 50% SE tax deduction: Reduces AGI by half of your SE tax liability
  • Self-employed health insurance deduction: Premiums for health, dental, and vision coverage are fully deductible above-the-line
  • Retirement plan contributions: SEP-IRA (up to $70,000), Solo 401(k), SIMPLE IRA contributions reduce taxable income
  • QBI deduction (Section 199A): Up to 20% of qualified business income, reducing taxable income further

Full Example: $70,000 Self-Employment Income, Single Filer

ItemAmount
Gross SE income (Schedule C)$70,000
SE tax (approx.)$9,890
50% SE tax deduction−$4,945
Standard deduction (2026)−$16,100
QBI deduction (20% × $70,000)−$14,000
Estimated taxable income~$34,955
Marginal bracket12%
Estimated federal income tax~$3,955
Total tax (SE + income)~$13,845

* Simplified example. Assumes no other income, no retirement contributions, qualifies for full QBI deduction.

Simple Tax Bracket Calculator

Find Your 2026 Bracket

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After all deductions

Frequently Asked Questions

Your tax bracket is determined by your taxable income — your gross income minus deductions and adjustments — and your filing status. Use the bracket calculator above or the tables on this page to find your bracket. Remember: being in the 22% bracket does not mean all your income is taxed at 22%. Only income within each bracket is taxed at that rate; income in lower brackets is taxed at lower rates.

Yes. The IRS adjusts tax bracket thresholds annually for inflation. The bracket rates (10%, 12%, 22%, 24%, 32%, 35%, 37%) remain the same, but the income ranges for each bracket shift upward. For 2026, all bracket thresholds increased from 2025 levels by approximately 2.7%, meaning slightly more of your income falls into lower brackets compared to 2025. The 2026 standard deduction also increased.

Your effective tax rate = Total federal income tax ÷ Taxable income. For example, if you owe $12,000 on $80,000 of taxable income, your effective rate is 15%. You can also use the calculator above. Your effective rate is useful for comparing your overall tax burden across years or against other tax scenarios — it is more meaningful than your marginal bracket for understanding your total income tax liability.

Several items reduce your taxable income as a self-employed individual:
  • Business expenses (Schedule C deductions) reduce gross SE income before income or SE tax is calculated
  • 50% of SE tax is deducted above the line from AGI
  • Self-employed health insurance premiums are fully deductible above the line
  • Retirement contributions (SEP-IRA, Solo 401(k)) reduce AGI
  • Standard deduction or itemized deductions reduce AGI to arrive at taxable income
  • QBI deduction (Section 199A) provides up to 20% additional deduction on qualified business income

It depends on the type of capital gain. Short-term capital gains (assets held 1 year or less) are taxed as ordinary income and do count toward your income tax bracket. Long-term capital gains (assets held more than 1 year) are taxed at preferential rates (0%, 15%, or 20%) and are generally calculated on top of your ordinary income — meaning they can push you into a higher long-term capital gains rate bracket without affecting your income tax bracket. See our capital gains tax rate page for full details.