What This Calculator Does
The Microapp Tax Bracket Calculator computes US federal income tax for any income, any of the four filing statuses, for tax years 2024 and 2025. Beyond the total tax owed, it shows the marginal rate, the effective rate, and a per-bracket breakdown — the math that explains why your "tax bracket" isn't your actual tax rate.
• 10% × $11,925 = $1,192.50
• 12% × ($48,475 − $11,925) = 12% × $36,550 = $4,386.00
• 22% × ($75,000 − $48,475) = 22% × $26,525 = $5,835.50
• Total federal tax: $11,414.00
• Marginal rate: 22% (the rate on the next dollar)
• Effective rate: 15.22% (total tax ÷ income)
• After-tax income: $63,586 (federal only — state and FICA not included).
Marginal vs Effective Rate — The Big Misconception
The single most common misconception about US income tax: "I'm in the 22% bracket so I pay 22% on my income." False. You pay 22% only on the dollars that fall WITHIN the 22% bracket — the dollars below get taxed at 10% and 12%.
This is what "marginal tax brackets" means. Each rate applies only to the income falling within its range. Your marginal rate is the rate on your next dollar — it's your "tax bracket" in casual speech. Your effective rate is the average — total tax divided by total income. The effective rate is always equal to or lower than the marginal rate.
Practical implication: if someone tells you "don't take a raise, you'll be pushed into a higher bracket and lose money," they're wrong. A raise of $1 that crosses a bracket boundary results in $0.78 of after-tax income in the new bracket (versus $0.88 just below it) — but you keep the rest of the dollar. Higher brackets never reduce take-home pay. The folk wisdom is just bad math.
2025 Federal Tax Brackets (filed in 2026)
| Rate | Single | Married Filing Jointly | Head of Household |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10% | $0 – $11,925 | $0 – $23,850 | $0 – $17,000 |
| 12% | $11,925 – $48,475 | $23,850 – $96,950 | $17,000 – $64,850 |
| 22% | $48,475 – $103,350 | $96,950 – $206,700 | $64,850 – $103,350 |
| 24% | $103,350 – $197,300 | $206,700 – $394,600 | $103,350 – $197,300 |
| 32% | $197,300 – $250,525 | $394,600 – $501,050 | $197,300 – $250,500 |
| 35% | $250,525 – $626,350 | $501,050 – $751,600 | $250,500 – $626,350 |
| 37% | $626,350+ | $751,600+ | $626,350+ |
Married Filing Separately uses the same bracket sizes as Single (exception: the 35% bracket extends to $375,800 instead of $626,350). Standard deduction for 2025: $15,000 single, $30,000 MFJ, $15,000 MFS, $22,500 HoH.
Taxable Income — What You Actually Enter
Enter your taxable income, not your gross income. Taxable income = Gross income − Above-the-line adjustments − Standard deduction (or itemized deductions). For most W-2 employees:
- Start with W-2 box 1 (already excludes pre-tax 401(k), HSA, FSA contributions).
- Add other income: interest, dividends, capital gains, side gigs (1099 income, gross — net of expenses).
- Subtract above-the-line adjustments: traditional IRA contributions, student loan interest (up to $2,500), HSA contributions if made outside payroll, self-employment tax deduction.
- Subtract the standard deduction OR itemized deductions, whichever is larger. For most filers post-2017 tax reform, standard deduction wins.
What's left is your taxable income. Apply the bracket math (or use this calculator) to get federal tax owed.
What Else You Owe (NOT in This Calculator)
FICA (Social Security + Medicare): 7.65% of wages, withheld by employers. Self-employed pay both halves (15.3%) but get to deduct half. Social Security portion (6.2%) is capped at the annual wage base ($168,600 in 2024, $176,100 in 2025). Medicare portion (1.45%) is uncapped.
Additional Medicare tax: 0.9% on wages above $200,000 (single) or $250,000 (MFJ). Self-employed apply the same thresholds to net SE earnings.
Net Investment Income Tax: 3.8% on investment income (interest, dividends, capital gains, rental income) when MAGI exceeds $200k single / $250k MFJ.
State income tax: Varies wildly. California, New York, New Jersey, Hawaii, Minnesota top out at 11-13% marginal. Texas, Florida, Tennessee, Washington, Nevada, Wyoming, South Dakota, Alaska, New Hampshire have no state income tax.
Local income tax: NYC, Philadelphia, San Francisco, Cleveland, and others impose their own income taxes on top of state.
For a typical $100k W-2 earner in California: federal income tax ($14k) + FICA ($7.65k) + California state income tax (~$5k) = ~$26.6k, or about 26% effective. The federal-only number from this calculator is part of the picture, not the whole picture.
Tax Credits and Deductions Not Modeled
This calculator computes raw bracket math on taxable income. It doesn't apply:
- Child Tax Credit ($2,000/child under 17, partially refundable)
- Earned Income Tax Credit (refundable, up to $7,830 in 2024 for families with 3+ kids)
- American Opportunity Credit / Lifetime Learning Credit (education)
- Saver's Credit (low/middle income retirement contributions)
- Premium Tax Credit (ACA marketplace subsidies)
- Foreign Tax Credit, Adoption Credit, Energy Credits, etc.
Credits reduce tax owed dollar-for-dollar (more valuable than deductions, which reduce taxable income). For real filing, software handles credit eligibility automatically based on the questions you answer.
The Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT)
The AMT is a parallel tax system that requires high earners with many deductions to pay a minimum amount. Most taxpayers don't trigger AMT post-2017 reform (the exemption was raised significantly). When it does trigger, AMT is owed if AMT-calculated tax exceeds regular-bracket-calculated tax. This calculator does NOT model AMT — if your situation involves large state tax deductions, ISOs, or significant capital gains, you may owe AMT not shown here.
How Brackets Change Year-Over-Year
Bracket thresholds increase annually based on inflation (Chained CPI-U). Typical year-over-year increase is 2-5%. The IRS publishes updated brackets in October of the prior year via a Revenue Procedure. Source documents:
- Tax year 2025: IRS Rev. Proc. 2024-40 (October 2024)
- Tax year 2024: IRS Rev. Proc. 2023-34 (October 2023)
- Tax year 2026 (when published): Will be IRS Rev. Proc. 2025-XX (October 2025)
If you're reading this in 2026 or later, the 2024-2025 brackets here are still accurate for the years they apply to — but you'd want a more recent calculator for the current year.
Common Mistakes
Confusing marginal and effective rates. See the section above. This is the #1 misunderstanding.
Forgetting that 'tax bracket' means TAXABLE income, not gross. If you make $100k gross with a $15k standard deduction, you're in the 22% bracket on $85,000 of taxable income — not the 24% bracket someone might think looking at gross.
Adding deductions that are already excluded. 401(k) contributions made through payroll are already excluded from W-2 box 1. Don't subtract them again. Same with HSA contributions through payroll.
Treating tax credits as deductions. A $2,000 Child Tax Credit reduces your TAX by $2,000. A $2,000 deduction reduces your TAXABLE INCOME by $2,000 — saving only $440 in tax at the 22% bracket. Credits are 4-5× more valuable than deductions of the same nominal size.
Filing status mistakes. Many separated-but-not-divorced filers default to Single when they qualify for Head of Household (which has wider brackets and a larger standard deduction). HoH eligibility: unmarried, paid >50% of household costs, qualifying child or dependent lived with you >50% of year. Get this right; it can save thousands.
Educational Tool — Not Tax Advice
This calculator implements the standard federal income tax bracket math from official IRS sources. It does NOT compute state tax, FICA, self-employment tax, AMT, NIIT, additional Medicare, the QBI deduction, or any tax credits. For real tax filing, use licensed tax software (TurboTax, H&R Block, FreeTaxUSA) or a Certified Public Accountant. For complex situations (business income, multiple states, large investment portfolio, AMT exposure), professional advice pays for itself.
Related Tools
For raw percentage math (tax-rate comparisons, growth calculations), use the Percentage Calculator. The Budget Planner uses after-tax income for the 50/30/20 split — once you know your federal tax from this calculator, plug after-tax into the budget planner. The Freelance Rate Calculator includes an effective tax rate input — use the effective rate from this tool as a starting estimate (then adjust for state and SE tax).