See current federal tax brackets and rates based on your income and filing status. To figure out your tax bracket, first look at the rates for the filing status you plan to use Single, married filing jointly, married filing separately, or head of household. Federal income tax in 2025 still uses seven brackets 10%, 12%, 22%, 24%, 32%, 35%, and 37% For married couples filing jointly, all income thresholds have increased from 2024 levels
This means more of your income may fall into lower brackets before higher rates kick in. Key updates at a glance official 2025 numbers confirmed Married couples filing jointly see an $800 increase to $30,000, while single filers get a $400 bump to $15,000 Income thresholds have shifted upward by approximately 2.8%. For the 2025 tax year, the standard deduction for those married filing jointly is $31,500 If not covered by a plan, single, hoh and married filing jointly/separately (both spouses not covered by a plan) tax filers are able to take a full deduction on their ira contribution without magi limitations.
10%, 12%, 22%, 24%, 32%, 35% and 37% Inflation adjustments shifted most bracket thresholds roughly 2.8% from 2024 and the top 37% bracket starts above about $626,350 for single filers and $751,600 for married filing jointly in 2025 (multiple sources reporting these. Single, head of household, and married filing jointly Rounded to the nearest dollar Taxable income = adjusted gross income minus deductions. For the 2025 tax year, the irs raised the income thresholds across all brackets to account for inflation, meaning more income will be taxed at lower rates
These new figures apply to tax returns filed in 2026 and directly impact millions of married couples across the country.
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