Federal income tax brackets · Tax year 2026

2026 Federal Income Tax Brackets

All seven marginal rates — 10% to 37% — across every filing status, with the $16,100 single standard deduction, straight from the IRS Revenue Procedure for 2026.

7
Marginal brackets
22%
Top rate at $75k (single)
$640,600
37% rate begins (single)
$16,100
Standard deduction

The bottom line

A single filer with $75,000 of taxable income in 2026 owes about $11,212 in federal income tax — an effective rate of 14.9%, even though their top bracket is 22%.

22%
marginal (top) rate
14.9%
effective rate at $75k
7
rates, 10%–37%
$16,100
single standard deduction

Married Filing Jointly thresholds run roughly double — the top 37% band does not begin until $768,700 of taxable income.

The 2026 brackets at a glance (Single)

Seven marginal rates, drawn to scale by the income range each one covers.

10%
12%
22%
24%
32%
35%
37%
  • 10% $0 – $12k
  • 12% $12k – $50k
  • 22% $50k – $106k
  • 24% $106k – $202k
  • 32% $202k – $256k
  • 35% $256k – $641k
  • 37% $641k and above
Each band is a single-filer marginal bracket for tax year 2026; segment width tracks the income range it covers. Source: IRS Revenue Procedure for 2026.

Single

Tax Rate Taxable Income Range Max Tax in Bracket
10% $0 – $12,400 up to $1,240
12% $12,400 – $50,400 up to $4,560
22% $50,400 – $105,700 up to $12,166
24% $105,700 – $201,775 up to $23,058
32% $201,775 – $256,225 up to $17,424
35% $256,225 – $640,600 up to $134,531
37% $640,600 – and above

Standard deduction (Single): $16,100 | Additional 65+: +$2,000

Married Filing Jointly

Tax Rate Taxable Income Range Max Tax in Bracket
10% $0 – $24,800 up to $2,480
12% $24,800 – $100,800 up to $9,120
22% $100,800 – $211,400 up to $24,332
24% $211,400 – $403,550 up to $46,116
32% $403,550 – $512,450 up to $34,848
35% $512,450 – $768,700 up to $89,688
37% $768,700 – and above

Standard deduction (Married Filing Jointly): $32,200 | Additional 65+: +$1,600

Married Filing Separately

Tax Rate Taxable Income Range Max Tax in Bracket
10% $0 – $12,400 up to $1,240
12% $12,400 – $50,400 up to $4,560
22% $50,400 – $105,700 up to $12,166
24% $105,700 – $201,775 up to $23,058
32% $201,775 – $256,225 up to $17,424
35% $256,225 – $384,350 up to $44,844
37% $384,350 – and above

Standard deduction (Married Filing Separately): $16,100

Head of Household

Tax Rate Taxable Income Range Max Tax in Bracket
10% $0 – $17,700 up to $1,770
12% $17,700 – $67,450 up to $5,970
22% $67,450 – $105,700 up to $8,415
24% $105,700 – $201,750 up to $23,052
32% $201,750 – $256,200 up to $17,424
35% $256,200 – $640,600 up to $134,540
37% $640,600 – and above

Standard deduction (Head of Household): $24,150 | Additional 65+: +$2,000

Marginal vs. effective: the rate you face vs. the rate you pay

Drag across the chart to read both rates at any income. The red step is your marginal rate (your top bracket); the teal curve is your effective rate (total tax ÷ income) — always lower, because earlier dollars are taxed less.

Single filer, tax year 2026: marginal rate vs. the rate you actually pay
Marginal Effective
0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25% 30% 35% $0$50k$100k$150k$200k$250k$300k

The gap between the two lines is why earning into a higher bracket never costs you money — only the dollars inside that band are taxed at the higher rate. Source: IRS Revenue Procedure for 2026.

Worked example: $75,000 taxable income (Single, 2026)

10% on $12,400 $1,240
12% on $38,000 $4,560
22% on $24,600 $5,412
Total federal income tax $11,212

Effective rate: 14.9% | Marginal rate: 22%

Run this with your own income →

Frequently asked questions

What are the 2026 federal income tax brackets?

For 2026, there are 7 marginal tax rates: 10%, 12%, 22%, 24%, 32%, 35%, and 37%. The specific income ranges depend on your filing status (Single, Married Filing Jointly, Married Filing Separately, or Head of Household).

What is the standard deduction for 2026?

The 2026 standard deduction is $16,100 for Single filers, $32,200 for Married Filing Jointly, $16,100 for Married Filing Separately, and $24,150 for Head of Household.

How do I calculate my 2026 tax?

Apply each tax rate only to the income within that bracket. For example, a Single filer with $75,000 of taxable income in 2026 would owe approximately $11,212 in federal income tax (before credits), for an effective rate of 14.9%.

What is the difference between marginal and effective tax rate in 2026?

Your marginal rate is the rate on your last dollar of income (your highest bracket). Your effective rate is your total tax divided by total income — it is always lower because earlier dollars are taxed at lower rates. For $75,000 of taxable income in 2026, the marginal rate is 22% but the effective rate is only 14.9%.

Did tax brackets change from 2025 to 2026?

The 7 tax rates (10%–37%) have stayed the same since 2018. However, the income thresholds are adjusted annually for inflation, so slightly more income falls into lower brackets each year. This means someone earning the same salary pays slightly less in federal tax in 2026 than in 2025.

How does filing status affect my 2026 tax bracket?

Filing status significantly changes where each bracket starts. Married Filing Jointly thresholds are roughly double those for Single filers, creating a "marriage bonus." Head of Household thresholds are wider than Single but narrower than MFJ. Choosing the correct status can save thousands of dollars.

Compare bracket changes by year

Tax bracket thresholds are adjusted annually for inflation. Select a year to see how the bands have shifted since 2020.

What the 2026 brackets actually mean for your return

For tax year 2026, federal income tax is imposed across 7 marginal brackets, running from 10% at the bottom to 37% at the top. The Single structure places the top 37% rate on income above $640,600, while Married Filing Jointly households do not reach that same top rate until combined taxable income exceeds $768,700 — roughly double the single threshold for most rungs. Thresholds are indexed to inflation under the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act framework, so the 2026 bands differ from earlier years even though the seven rate percentages themselves have not changed since 2018.

A worked example makes the progressivity visible. A Single filer with $75,000 of taxable income in 2026 owes approximately $11,212 in federal income tax before credits. That produces an effective tax rate of 14.9% even though the taxpayer's marginal rate — the rate applied to the last dollar earned — is 22%. The gap exists because earlier dollars are taxed at 10%, 12%, and 22% before any income reaches the 22% band.

Reading this table correctly matters for planning. A raise that pushes taxable income from one bracket into the next does not retroactively tax earlier earnings at the higher rate — only the dollars above the new threshold are taxed at the higher percentage. Pre-tax contributions to a 401(k), traditional IRA, or HSA reduce the taxable income figure against which these 2026 brackets are applied, so the value of a deduction equals the contribution multiplied by your marginal rate, not your effective rate. This page presents IRS-published figures and worked arithmetic for illustration; it is data reporting, not tax advice.

What to do with this

Your marginal rate sets the value of your next deduction; your effective rate sets your bill.

Figures use IRS-published 2026 thresholds and assume the standard deduction with no additional credits. State tax, AMT, and refundable-credit phase-outs are not modelled.

Tax guides

Sources: IRS Revenue Procedures — annual inflation-adjusted bracket thresholds (Rev. Proc. 2019-44 through 2025-32). irs.gov/irb; IRS Publication 505 — withholding and estimated tax. p505; BLS Chained CPI (C-CPI-U) — the inflation-indexing basis. bls.gov/cpi.

Full methodology — how this data is sourced, computed, and verified. Informational only; not tax advice.