Understanding how federal income tax brackets work is one of the most important financial literacy concepts — and one of the most misunderstood. The progressive tax system means that not all of your income is taxed at the same rate, and knowing how marginal rates apply can meaningfully change how you approach income, deductions, and retirement contributions.
What Is a Tax Bracket?
A tax bracket is a range of taxable income taxed at a specific rate. The United States uses a progressive system, which means higher income is taxed at higher rates — but only the income within each bracket is taxed at that bracket’s rate. You do not pay the top rate on all of your income.
This is the most common tax misconception: people fear moving into a higher tax bracket because they believe all of their income will be taxed at the higher rate. It does not work that way. Only the dollars within that new bracket face the higher rate.
2026 Federal Income Tax Brackets
These are the tax brackets for the 2026 tax year (taxes due April 2027). The IRS adjusts brackets for inflation annually.
Single Filers — 2026
| Tax Rate | Taxable Income Range |
|---|---|
| 10% | $0 to $11,925 |
| 12% | $11,926 to $48,475 |
| 22% | $48,476 to $103,350 |
| 24% | $103,351 to $197,300 |
| 32% | $197,301 to $250,525 |
| 35% | $250,526 to $626,350 |
| 37% | Over $626,350 |
Married Filing Jointly — 2026
| Tax Rate | Taxable Income Range |
|---|---|
| 10% | $0 to $23,850 |
| 12% | $23,851 to $96,950 |
| 22% | $96,951 to $206,700 |
| 24% | $206,701 to $394,600 |
| 32% | $394,601 to $501,050 |
| 35% | $501,051 to $751,600 |
| 37% | Over $751,600 |
Head of Household — 2026
| Tax Rate | Taxable Income Range |
|---|---|
| 10% | $0 to $17,000 |
| 12% | $17,001 to $64,850 |
| 22% | $64,851 to $103,350 |
| 24% | $103,351 to $197,300 |
| 32% | $197,301 to $250,500 |
| 35% | $250,501 to $626,350 |
| 37% | Over $626,350 |
How the Progressive System Works: A Worked Example
Say you are a single filer with $75,000 in taxable income in 2026. Here is how your federal tax is actually calculated:
| Bracket | Rate | Income in This Bracket | Tax |
|---|---|---|---|
| First bracket | 10% | $11,925 | $1,192.50 |
| Second bracket | 12% | $36,550 ($48,475 – $11,925) | $4,386.00 |
| Third bracket | 22% | $26,525 ($75,000 – $48,475) | $5,835.50 |
| Total Federal Tax | $11,414.00 |
Your marginal rate is 22% (the rate on your last dollar of income), but your effective rate — total tax divided by total income — is about 15.2%. This is an important distinction when people talk about their “tax rate.”
Marginal Rate vs Effective Rate
- Marginal rate: The rate you pay on your next dollar of income. This is the rate that matters when deciding whether to contribute more to a pre-tax retirement account, earn additional income, or realize investment gains.
- Effective rate: Your total tax liability divided by your total income. This is your average rate across all dollars earned.
When people say “I’m in the 22% tax bracket,” they mean their marginal rate is 22% — but their effective rate is lower because the first dollars they earned were taxed at 10% and 12%.
Standard Deduction for 2026
Your taxable income is your income minus deductions — not your gross income. The 2026 standard deductions are:
- Single: $15,000
- Married Filing Jointly: $30,000
- Head of Household: $22,500
- Additional deduction for age 65+/blind: $1,600 (single) or $1,300 (married)
A single filer earning $75,000 in gross income would subtract the $15,000 standard deduction to arrive at $60,000 in taxable income — not $75,000. This shifts you into a lower bracket than your gross income suggests.
How Pre-Tax Retirement Contributions Reduce Your Tax Bracket
One of the most powerful uses of knowing your marginal tax rate: contributing to a traditional 401(k) or IRA reduces your taxable income dollar-for-dollar. For a taxpayer in the 22% bracket, every $1,000 contributed to a traditional 401(k) saves $220 in federal income taxes. In the 24% bracket, that same $1,000 saves $240.
The 2026 401(k) contribution limit is $23,500 ($31,000 for those 50 and older). Maxing this out at a 22% marginal rate saves $5,170 in federal taxes alone — plus any state income tax savings.
Capital Gains Tax Rates for 2026
Long-term capital gains (assets held more than one year) are taxed at preferential rates — lower than ordinary income tax rates. For 2026:
- 0% rate: Single filers with taxable income up to $48,350; MFJ up to $96,700
- 15% rate: Single up to $533,400; MFJ up to $600,050
- 20% rate: Above those thresholds
This is why “tax-gain harvesting” — realizing long-term gains in low-income years — is a legitimate strategy. If your taxable income falls in the 0% capital gains bracket, you can realize gains with no federal capital gains tax.
Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT)
The AMT is a parallel tax system designed to ensure high-income taxpayers pay a minimum amount. In 2026, the AMT exemption is $88,100 for single filers and $137,000 for married filing jointly. Most middle-class taxpayers are not affected by the AMT, but it can affect high earners with large itemized deductions or exercised stock options.
Key Takeaways
- The progressive tax system taxes higher income at higher rates — but only income within each bracket at that rate
- Marginal rate is your rate on the next dollar earned; effective rate is your average across all income
- Pre-tax 401(k) and IRA contributions reduce your taxable income and can lower your bracket
- Long-term capital gains have lower tax rates than ordinary income — 0%, 15%, or 20%
- The 2026 standard deduction is $15,000 (single) or $30,000 (married filing jointly)
Understanding how tax brackets actually work eliminates the fear of earning more or crossing into a new bracket. Every dollar earned above a threshold is taxed at the new rate — but the dollars below remain taxed at lower rates. The system rewards earning more; it just takes a larger share as income rises.