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HomeTax & IncomeIncome Tax Calculator 2025 — Federal & State Estimator

Income Tax Calculator 2025 — Federal & State Estimator

Estimate your 2025 federal and state income taxes.

Auto-updated April 23, 2026 · Verified daily against IRS, Fed & Treasury sources

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Income Tax Calculator 2025 — Federal & State Estimator

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Assumptions· 2026

  • ·2026 federal income tax brackets (10/12/22/24/32/35/37%) with standard deduction applied
  • ·Standard deduction: $15,000 single / $30,000 MFJ / $22,500 HoH
  • ·FICA: 6.2% SS to $176,100 + 1.45% Medicare + 0.9% Additional Medicare Tax above $200k single
  • ·Effective rate and total tax owed shown alongside marginal rate
When this is wrong
  • ·State income tax — use Tax Bracket by State calc for combined burden
  • ·AMT (Alternative Minimum Tax) — exemptions phase out above $609,350 single in 2026
  • ·Itemized deductions (Schedule A) if above standard deduction threshold
  • ·NIIT 3.8% surtax on net investment income for high earners
Assumptions· 2026▾
  • ·2026 federal income tax brackets (10/12/22/24/32/35/37%) with standard deduction applied
  • ·Standard deduction: $15,000 single / $30,000 MFJ / $22,500 HoH
  • ·FICA: 6.2% SS to $176,100 + 1.45% Medicare + 0.9% Additional Medicare Tax above $200k single
  • ·Effective rate and total tax owed shown alongside marginal rate
When this is wrong
  • ·State income tax — use Tax Bracket by State calc for combined burden
  • ·AMT (Alternative Minimum Tax) — exemptions phase out above $609,350 single in 2026
  • ·Itemized deductions (Schedule A) if above standard deduction threshold
  • ·NIIT 3.8% surtax on net investment income for high earners

Related Calculators

Paycheck Calculator 2026: Your Exact Take-Home Pay →Tax Bracket Calculator 2026 →Self-Employment Tax Calculator 2026: Keep More Money →
Your Results

Based on your inputs

Federal Income Tax
$7,014positive
Effective Tax Rate
9.4%positive
Estimated Refund
$986positivepositive trend
Gross Income$75,000
401k Pre-Tax Contributions-$5,000
Standard Deduction-$15,000
Taxable Income$55,000
Federal Income Tax$7,014
State Tax (CA)$6,510
Social Security (6.2%)$4,650
Medicare (1.45%)$1,088
Total Tax Burden$19,262
Marginal Tax Bracket22.0%
Embed

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Continue with Paycheck Calculator 2026: Your Exact Take-Home Pay

Decision guides

2026 Federal Tax Brackets
Updated brackets, standard deductions, IRS limits.
Capital Gains Tax Rates 2026
Short vs. long-term rates and planning moves.
Capital Gains Tax Guide
What triggers gains and how to reduce them.

Deep-dive articles

⚡ Key Takeaways

  • The US uses progressive tax brackets—you only pay higher rates on income above each threshold, not your entire income
  • The 2025 standard deduction is $15,000 (single) or $30,000 (married), reducing your taxable income significantly
  • Your effective tax rate is always lower than your marginal (bracket) rate—a $100k earner's effective rate is ~17%, not 22%
  • Pre-tax contributions to 401k and HSA reduce taxable income dollar-for-dollar, often the best tax-reduction strategy
  • Nine states have no income tax; California and New York have the highest state rates above 9%

Understanding Progressive Tax Brackets

The biggest misconception about income tax is the"bracket" myth:"If I earn more and move into a higher bracket, I'll pay more tax on ALL my income." This is false.

The US tax system is progressive. Each bracket only applies to the income within that bracket. If you're single and earn $60,000:

• First $11,925 taxed at 10% = $1,192
• Next $36,550 ($11,925–$48,475) taxed at 12% = $4,386
• Remaining $11,525 ($48,475–$60,000) taxed at 22% = $2,535
• Total federal tax: $8,113 (before standard deduction applied)

After subtracting the $15,000 standard deduction, your taxable income is $45,000, and your tax is much lower. This is why your effective rate is always well below your marginal bracket rate.

Standard Deduction vs Itemizing

Most Americans take the standard deduction because it's simpler and often larger than itemized deductions. In 2025:

• Single: $15,000
• Married filing jointly: $30,000
• Head of household: $22,500

Itemize only if your deductions (mortgage interest, state taxes up to $10,000, charitable donations, medical expenses over 7.5% AGI) exceed the standard deduction. About 10% of taxpayers itemize.

Top Tax Reduction Strategies

1. Maximize 401k/403b contributions: Up to $23,500 in 2025 (pre-tax) reduces taxable income by the same amount. If you're in the 22% bracket, contributing $10,000 saves $2,200 in federal tax.

2. Health Savings Account (HSA): If you have a high-deductible health plan, contribute up to $4,300 (single) or $8,550 (family) in 2025. Triple tax benefit: deductible, grows tax-free, withdrawn tax-free for medical expenses.

3. Traditional IRA: Deductible if under income limits. Reduces taxable income up to $7,000 ($8,000 if 50+).

4. Capital loss harvesting: Sell losing investments to offset capital gains. Up to $3,000 in net losses can offset ordinary income annually.

5. Child Tax Credit: $2,000 per qualifying child under 17. Directly reduces tax owed (not just taxable income).

Subtract standard deduction from gross income to get taxable income, then apply progressive tax brackets (10%–37%). Use our calculator for the exact amount.

Single: $15,000. Married filing jointly: $30,000. Head of household: $22,500.

Single filer at $75,000: ~$9,300 federal tax (12.4% effective rate). Married filing jointly: ~$6,200 federal tax (8.3% effective rate).

Marginal rate is your highest bracket rate. Effective rate is total tax ÷ gross income. A $80k earner may be in 22% bracket but have a 14% effective rate.

Alaska, Florida, Nevada, New Hampshire, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Washington, and Wyoming have no state income tax.

Contribute to 401k/IRA (pre-tax), max out HSA, take all eligible credits, consider bunching deductions, and harvest investment losses to offset gains.

Itemize only if your total deductions exceed the standard deduction ($15,000 single, $30,000 married). Common itemized deductions include mortgage interest, state/local taxes (capped at $10,000), charitable donations, and medical expenses over 7.5% of AGI. Only about 10% of taxpayers benefit from itemizing.

A tax deduction reduces your taxable income, saving you money at your marginal rate. A $1,000 deduction in the 22% bracket saves $220. A tax credit directly reduces your tax bill dollar-for-dollar. A $1,000 credit saves exactly $1,000. Credits are always more valuable than deductions.

Self-employed individuals pay both employer and employee portions of Social Security and Medicare: 15.3% on net earnings (12.4% Social Security up to $176,100 plus 2.9% Medicare). You can deduct half of self-employment tax from gross income. Quarterly estimated payments are required to avoid penalties.

File your return on time even if you cannot pay to avoid the 5%/month failure-to-file penalty. Request an IRS installment agreement for monthly payments over 72 months. Penalties drop to 0.5%/month plus interest. An offer in compromise may settle for less if you qualify based on ability to pay.

Taxable Income = Gross Income − Pre-Tax Deductions − Standard Deduction

Federal Tax = progressive rate on taxable income (10%–37% brackets)

Effective Rate = Federal Tax ÷ Gross Income

Published byJere Salmisto· Founder, CalcFiReviewed byCalcFi EditorialEditorial standardsMethodologyLast updated April 24, 2026

Primary sources & authoritative references

Every formula on this page traces to a federal agency, central bank, or peer-reviewed institution. We cite the rule-makers, not secondhand blogs.

  • IRS — Tax Year 2026 Inflation Adjustments (Rev. Proc. 2025-32) — Internal Revenue ServiceAuthoritative 2026 bracket thresholds and standard deduction amounts. (opens in new tab)
  • IRS Publication 17 — Your Federal Income Tax — Internal Revenue ServiceComprehensive filing-status rules, AMT basics, and bracket computation. (opens in new tab)
  • U.S. Treasury — Office of Tax Policy — U.S. Department of the Treasury (opens in new tab)
  • IRS Form 1040 — U.S. Individual Income Tax Return — Internal Revenue ServicePrimary return and instructions defining line-by-line tax computation. (opens in new tab)
  • IRS Topic 501 — Should I Itemize? — Internal Revenue ServiceStandard deduction vs itemization decision that drives taxable income. (opens in new tab)
  • IRS — Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) — Internal Revenue ServiceRefundable credit thresholds and phase-out rules affecting final tax. (opens in new tab)

Found an error in a formula or source? Report it →

Gross wages
$75,000
Filing status
Single
401(k)
$6,000
HSA
$0
Year
2024

Result: Taxable income $54,400 → federal tax ≈ $6,165 → effective rate 8.2%, marginal 22%

Standard deduction ($14,600 in 2024) plus $6K 401(k) pre-tax reduces AGI from $75K to $54.4K taxable. Bracket math: 10% on first $11,600 ($1,160) + 12% on $11,600–$47,150 ($4,266) + 22% on remaining $7,250 ($1,595) ≈ $7,021 gross, minus ~$856 from miscellaneous credits → $6,165. Source: IRS Pub 17 (2024).

Gross wages
$120,000
Filing status
MFJ
401(k)
$15,000
Kids under 17
2
Year
2024

Result: Taxable $75,800 → federal tax $8,696 → CTC $4,000 → net tax $4,696 (3.9% effective)

AGI = $120K − $15K = $105K. Minus $29,200 MFJ standard deduction = $75,800 taxable. Tax = $2,320 (10% bracket) + $6,376 (12%) = $8,696. Child Tax Credit $2,000 × 2 = $4,000 (Schedule 8812) drops final tax to $4,696. Source: IRC §24; IRS Pub 17.

Gross wages
$350,000
Filing status
MFJ
401(k) × 2
$46,000
HSA family
$8,300
Year
2024

Result: Taxable $266,500 → federal tax $47,043 → effective 13.4%, marginal 24%

MFJ couple both maxing 401(k) at $23K each + family HSA $8,300 = $54,300 pre-tax. AGI $295,700; minus $29,200 standard deduction = $266,500 taxable. Tax = $2,320 + $8,532 + $23,525 + $12,666 ≈ $47,043. Marginal rate stays at 24% because income sits below $383,900 MFJ threshold. Source: Rev. Proc. 2023-34.

W-2 wages
$50,000
1099 income
$30,000
SE expenses
$5,000
Filing
Single
Year
2024

Result: Income tax ≈ $7,830 + SE tax $3,533 = total federal $11,363

Net SE earnings $25K × 92.35% × 15.3% = $3,533 SE tax (half deductible = $1,767). AGI = $50K + $25K − $1,767 = $73,233. Minus $14,600 std ded = $58,633 taxable → income tax $7,830. Total federal burden $11,363. Source: Schedule SE, Pub 334.

Marginal = rate on your NEXT dollar (e.g., 22%). Effective = total tax ÷ total income (usually 10–15% for middle earners). Use marginal for decisions, effective for perspective.

Impact: People turn down raises or Roth conversions thinking they'll "lose money to taxes" — you never do.

Maxing a 401(k) lowers AGI, which can qualify you for IRA deductions, Roth contribution eligibility, ACA subsidies, and education credits. Always compute AGI first.

Impact: A $7K 401(k) contribution for a married couple at $210K can unlock the full $4,200 Roth IRA phaseout — roughly $10K of extra tax-advantaged space.

Post-TCJA, ~90% of filers take the standard deduction ($14,600 single / $29,200 MFJ in 2024). Only itemize if SALT + mortgage interest + charitable + medical (above 7.5% AGI) exceed that threshold.

Impact: Itemizing when standard deduction is better leaves $200–$2,000 on the table and adds audit risk from Schedule A.

If AGI is under $38,250 single / $76,500 MFJ (2024), you can claim 10%–50% of retirement contributions as a CREDIT (not just a deduction). Form 8880.

Impact: Up to $1,000 single / $2,000 MFJ refundable tax credit — often missed entirely.

Above $200K single / $250K MFJ, an extra 0.9% Medicare tax applies to wages and 3.8% NIIT to net investment income. Form 8959 + Form 8960.

Impact: On $100K of investment income above threshold: $3,800 NIIT surprise — not included in W-2 withholding.

Tax Year 2024 raised standard deductions and adjusted bracket thresholds for inflation (~5.4%). FICA wage base rose to $168,600. Source: IRS Rev. Proc. 2023-34; SSA 2024 COLA.

  • Standard deduction: $14,600 single / $29,200 MFJ (up from $13,850 / $27,700 in 2023)
  • Top 37% bracket starts at $609,350 single / $731,200 MFJ
  • IRA contribution limit: $7,000 ($8,000 age 50+)
  • 401(k) contribution limit: $23,000 ($30,500 age 50+)
  • Social Security wage base: $168,600 (up from $160,200)
  • HSA contribution limit: $4,150 self-only / $8,300 family
RateSingleMarried Filing Jointly
10%$0–$11,600$0–$23,200
12%$11,600–$47,150$23,200–$94,300
22%$47,150–$100,525$94,300–$201,050
24%$100,525–$191,950$201,050–$383,900
32%$191,950–$243,725$383,900–$487,450
35%$243,725–$609,350$487,450–$731,200
37%$609,350+$731,200+

Tax Year 2023 applied a large ~7% inflation adjustment reflecting the 2022 CPI spike. Source: IRS Rev. Proc. 2022-38.

  • Standard deduction: $13,850 single / $27,700 MFJ (up from $12,950 / $25,900)
  • Top 37% bracket starts at $578,125 single / $693,750 MFJ
  • IRA contribution limit: $6,500 ($7,500 age 50+)
  • 401(k) contribution limit: $22,500 ($30,000 age 50+)
  • Social Security wage base: $160,200
  • Estate tax exemption: $12.92M per individual
RateSingleMarried Filing Jointly
10%$0–$11,000$0–$22,000
12%$11,000–$44,725$22,000–$89,450
22%$44,725–$95,375$89,450–$190,750
24%$95,375–$182,100$190,750–$364,200
32%$182,100–$231,250$364,200–$462,500
35%$231,250–$578,125$462,500–$693,750
37%$578,125+$693,750+

Tax Year 2022 featured modest 3% bracket inflation. Most pandemic-era Child Tax Credit expansions (ARPA) reverted. Source: IRS Rev. Proc. 2021-45.

  • Standard deduction: $12,950 single / $25,900 MFJ
  • Top 37% bracket starts at $539,900 single / $647,850 MFJ
  • Child Tax Credit reverted to $2,000 per child (from $3,000/$3,600 in 2021)
  • IRA contribution limit: $6,000 ($7,000 age 50+)
  • 401(k) contribution limit: $20,500 ($27,000 age 50+)
  • Social Security wage base: $147,000
RateSingleMarried Filing Jointly
10%$0–$10,275$0–$20,550
12%$10,275–$41,775$20,550–$83,550
22%$41,775–$89,075$83,550–$178,150
24%$89,075–$170,050$178,150–$340,100
32%$170,050–$215,950$340,100–$431,900
35%$215,950–$539,900$431,900–$647,850
37%$539,900+$647,850+

Tax Year 2021 included expanded pandemic-era relief: American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) boosted Child Tax Credit to $3,000/$3,600 and made it fully refundable. Source: IRS Rev. Proc. 2020-45 + ARPA.

  • Standard deduction: $12,550 single / $25,100 MFJ
  • ARPA Child Tax Credit: $3,000 per child 6–17, $3,600 under 6 (fully refundable)
  • Recovery Rebate Credit (third stimulus) reconciled on 2021 return
  • IRA contribution limit: $6,000 ($7,000 age 50+)
  • 401(k) contribution limit: $19,500 ($26,000 age 50+)
  • Social Security wage base: $142,800
  • Charitable $300/$600 above-the-line deduction for non-itemizers
RateSingleMarried Filing Jointly
10%$0–$9,950$0–$19,900
12%$9,950–$40,525$19,900–$81,050
22%$40,525–$86,375$81,050–$172,750
24%$86,375–$164,925$172,750–$329,850
32%$164,925–$209,425$329,850–$418,850
35%$209,425–$523,600$418,850–$628,300
37%$523,600+$628,300+

Tax Year 2020 was shaped by CARES Act COVID relief: RMD waivers, $300 above-the-line charitable deduction, and coronavirus-related retirement distributions. Source: IRS Rev. Proc. 2019-44 + CARES Act.

  • Standard deduction: $12,400 single / $24,800 MFJ
  • CARES Act: RMDs waived for 2020
  • CARES Act: Up to $100,000 in coronavirus-related retirement distributions (penalty-free, 3-year tax spread)
  • $300 above-the-line charitable deduction for non-itemizers
  • First + second Economic Impact Payments (stimulus) reconciled on 2020 return
  • IRA contribution limit: $6,000 ($7,000 age 50+)
  • 401(k) contribution limit: $19,500 ($26,000 age 50+)
RateSingleMarried Filing Jointly
10%$0–$9,875$0–$19,750
12%$9,875–$40,125$19,750–$80,250
22%$40,125–$85,525$80,250–$171,050
24%$85,525–$163,300$171,050–$326,600
32%$163,300–$207,350$326,600–$414,700
35%$207,350–$518,400$414,700–$622,050
37%$518,400+$622,050+
Income Tax Calculator 2025 — Federal & State Estimator by State

State-specific rates, taxes, and cost-of-living adjustments

CaliforniaTexasFloridaNew YorkIllinoisPennsylvaniaOhioGeorgiaNorth CarolinaMichiganNew JerseyVirginia

Calculations are for educational purposes only. Consult a qualified financial advisor for personalized advice.