How Federal Tax Brackets Actually Work
Last updated: February 2026 | Covers tax year 2025
Bracket Math in Plain English
The U.S. federal tax system has seven marginal brackets for individual filers: 10%, 12%, 22%, 24%, 32%, 35%, and 37%. Each bracket applies only to income earned within its range, not to total income — so moving into a higher bracket never reduces take-home pay. A Single filer with $85,000 of taxable income in 2025 pays $13,614 in federal tax, producing an effective rate of 16.0% even though the top marginal rate applied is 22%. The gap between marginal and effective rate is always wider for higher earners because more of their income sits in lower brackets relative to the top one.
This guide walks through bracket-by-bracket calculations for Single, Married Filing Jointly, and Head of Household filers, explains why bracket thresholds adjust for inflation each year under IRS Revenue Procedures, and clarifies why the standard deduction effectively shields the first chunk of income from any tax at all. Use it alongside our calculator to model scenario changes — raises, side income, filing-status transitions — without guessing at bracket math.
Source: IRS Rev IRS Rev Proc. bracket tables (tax year 2025) · Scope: federal income tax only · Inflation-adjusted annually
The most common misconception about taxes: "If I earn more, I'll move into a higher bracket and lose money." This is wrong. Here's why.
Marginal vs. Flat Tax
The U.S. federal income tax uses a marginal rate system, not a flat tax. This means different portions of your income are taxed at different rates. Only the income within each bracket's range is taxed at that bracket's rate.
Think of it like filling buckets. Your first dollars go into the 10% bucket, then the 12% bucket, then the 22% bucket, and so on. Each bucket has a fixed size. When one fills up, income spills into the next.
Example: $85,000 Income (Single, 2025)
Let's say you're a Single filer with $85,000 in taxable income for 2025. Here's how your tax is actually calculated:
Your marginal rate is 22% — that's the rate on your last dollar of income. But your effective rate is only 16.0%. That's what you actually pay as a percentage of total income.
Why Earning More Never Hurts You
Because only the income above each bracket threshold is taxed at the higher rate, earning $1 more will never result in taking home less money. If you cross from the 22% bracket into the 24% bracket, only the dollars above that threshold are taxed at 24%. Everything below is unchanged.
Taxable Income vs. Gross Income
Tax brackets apply to taxable income, not gross income. Taxable income = gross income minus deductions (standard or itemized). For 2025, the standard deduction is $15,750 for Single filers.
So if you earn $100,000 gross and take the standard deduction, your taxable income is $100,000 - $15,750 = $84,250. That's the number the brackets apply to.
Key Takeaways
Brackets
7 federal rates
10% to 37%
Example Tax
$13,614
on $85K single
Effective Rate
16.0%
actual % paid
Marginal Rate
22 %
top bracket hit
- Tax brackets are marginal — each rate only applies to income within that range
- Your effective rate (total tax / total income) is always lower than your marginal rate
- Earning more money never results in a net loss — the higher rate only applies to the additional income
- Brackets apply to taxable income (after deductions), not gross income
- Bracket thresholds are adjusted annually for inflation
Try it yourself: Use our free tax calculator to see exactly how the brackets apply to your income, or view the complete 2025 bracket tables.
Source: IRS Revenue Procedure 2024-40 (tax year 2025). This guide is for informational purposes only and does not constitute tax advice.
Compiled by the " research team.