The 2026 Tax Brackets Are Set: What Changed, and What It Means for Take-Home Pay

The IRS has released the 2026 federal tax brackets. Learn the new income thresholds, standard deduction, tax rates, and what they mean for taxpayers.

The 2026 Tax Brackets Are Set: What Changed, and What It Means for Take-Home Pay

All seven federal rates stay the same for 2026, the standard deduction rises to $16,100 for single filers and $32,200 for joint filers, and the One Big Beautiful Bill Act locks the structure in permanently. Here is the full bracket table.

The IRS has published the federal income tax brackets for tax year 2026, and the headline is what did not change. All seven statutory rates, 10, 12, 22, 24, 32, 35, and 37 percent, are the same as 2025. Only the income thresholds moved, nudged up for inflation so a raise that merely keeps pace with prices does not push a household into a higher band, a problem known as bracket creep. The figures come from IRS Revenue Procedure 2025-32.

The standard deduction, the flat amount most filers subtract before any rate applies, rises to $16,100 for single filers, $32,200 for married couples filing jointly, and $24,150 for heads of household. That is roughly $350 more for a single filer and $700 more for a couple than in 2025. About nine in ten filers take the standard deduction rather than itemizing.

Here are the full 2026 brackets, by filing status, applied to taxable income (income after the standard or itemized deduction):

Rate

Single

Married filing jointly

Head of household

10%

$0 to $12,400

$0 to $24,800

$0 to $17,700

12%

$12,400 to $50,400

$24,800 to $100,800

$17,700 to $67,450

22%

$50,400 to $105,700

$100,800 to $211,400

$67,450 to $105,700

24%

$105,700 to $201,775

$211,400 to $403,550

$105,700 to $201,775

32%

$201,775 to $256,225

$403,550 to $512,450

$201,775 to $256,200

35%

$256,225 to $640,600

$512,450 to $768,700

$256,200 to $640,600

37%

above $640,600

above $768,700

above $640,600

The single most common misunderstanding about brackets is the fear that crossing into a higher one taxes all of your income at the higher rate. It does not. Each rate applies only to the slice of income inside its band. A single filer with $100,000 of taxable income in 2026 pays 10 percent on the first $12,400, 12 percent on the next $38,000, and 22 percent only on the rest, for a total of about $16,712. The top dollar is taxed at 22 percent, but the effective rate, total tax divided by income, is closer to 16.7 percent. The distinction matters: the marginal rate drives planning decisions like whether an extra retirement contribution or a Roth conversion makes sense, while the effective rate is what actually leaves the paycheck. Anyone can run their own figure through a 2026 federal income tax calculator to see the tax owed at an exact income.

The larger 2026 story is a reversion that did not happen. The individual provisions of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act were scheduled to expire at the end of 2025, which would have pushed several rates back up, the 22 percent band to 25 and the 24 to 28, and roughly halved the standard deduction. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act, signed in July 2025, made the rate structure and the larger standard deduction permanent, so there is no scheduled sunset for 2026 or beyond. The same law raised the cap on the state and local tax deduction to $40,000 from $10,000 for most households, phasing down above $500,000 of income for single filers and $1,000,000 for joint filers, which tips many homeowners in high-tax states back toward itemizing.

Investors get a separate schedule. Assets held longer than a year are taxed at preferential long-term capital gains rates of 0, 15, or 20 percent. For 2026 the zero-rate band runs up to $49,450 of taxable income for single filers and $98,900 for couples, and the 20 percent rate starts above $545,500 single and $613,700 joint. Assets held a year or less are taxed as ordinary income at the bracket rates above, and high earners may owe an additional 3.8 percent net investment income tax.

For most people the practical takeaways are short. Check your withholding if your pay changed during the year, so the result at filing time is not a surprise. Contribute to tax-advantaged accounts while the brackets are known: the 2026 401(k) elective deferral limit is $24,500, with an $8,000 catch-up at age 50 and $11,250 between ages 60 and 63, and the IRA limit is $7,500. And with the SALT cap now at $40,000, many more joint filers will clear the $32,200 standard deduction by itemizing, so it is worth running both.

The rates are unlikely to move again soon, but the thresholds will. The IRS reindexes them every autumn, so the 2027 figures should arrive around October 2026. The full 2026 tax brackets table, including the head-of-household and married-filing-separately schedules and a year-end planning checklist, stays updated as the IRS publishes.

"Brackets are the one piece of tax math almost everyone gets slightly wrong, usually in the scary direction," said Teja Pagidimarri, an engineer who builds tax tools at 3tej.com. "You do not lose money by earning a dollar into the next bracket. Seeing the marginal-versus-effective split on your own number is the fastest way to stop worrying about a raise and start planning around it."

Teja Pagidimarri is the founder and editor-in-chief of 3tej.com, an independent personal-finance publisher whose 2026 figures are verified against IRS Revenue Procedure 2025-32.