2025 tax brackets and the tax rate you really pay

April 21, 2025
Woman with Form 1040 and calculator_pexels-mikhail-nilov-6963017

Photo by Mikhail Nilov

We're a week past Tax Day. Have you started working on your 2025 return?

I don't mean your actual return, of course. I do mean thinking about what went well or went off the rails this past filing season. Now is the time to consider changes you can make so that the process is smoother next year.

Shameless plug alert: You can find some tax planning ideas in my earlier posts Tax Day is done. Now what? Plenty! and Create a tax strategy that utilizes different tax baskets.

Income tax brackets and rates: Another good place to start is to find out where you stand in the tax collection process. Specifically, check out your tax bracket for tax year 2025.

The seven tax rates range from 10 percent to 37 percent, and are applied to income amounts that the Internal Revenue Service  adjusts, usually every fall, for the coming tax year. Those tax brackets led off the ol' blog's 10-part tax inflation series last October. You can find links to all the inflation components in the directory at the end of that Part 1.

Since we're all still recovering from April 15's tasks (it’s not just me, right?), and to save you some time, the 2025 income tax brackets also are shown below.

2025 Individual Tax Rates and Income Brackets
To use when completing and filing your 2025 tax in 2026.

Tax Rate

Single

Head
of Household

Married
Filing Jointly
or Surviving Spouse

Married
Filing Separately

10%

Up to $11,925

Up to $17,000

Up to $23,850

Up to $11,925

12%

$11,926 to $48,475

$17,001 to $64,850

$23,851 to $96,950

$11,926 to $48,475

22%

$48,476 to $103,350

$64,851 to $103,350

$96,951 to $206,700

$48,476 to $103,350

24%

$103,351 to $197,300

$103,351 to $197,300

$206,701 to $394,600

$103,351 to $197,300

32%

$197,301 to $250,525

$197,301 to $250,500

$394,601 to $501,050

$197,301 to $250,525

35%

$250,526 to $626,350

$250,501 to $626,350

$501,051 to $751,600

$250,526 to $375,800

37%

$626,351 or more

$626,351 or more

$751,601 or more

$375,801 or more

      
“I’m in the 24% bracket,” or not: When people look at the tax bracket income ranges, they typically find the one into which their annual income falls and claim that as their tax bracket.

For example, your yearly salary as a single taxpayer is $110,000. Good for you! That gross amount of income is in the 24 percent income tax range of $103,351 to $197,300. This is known as your marginal tax bracket.

But the income bracket and its tax rate that really counts is your effective tax bracket. As the name indicates, it’s the lower tax rate you really, effectively pay.

Another way to look at it is that your effective tax rate is the average rate of tax on all the dollars you make, not just the last ones that kicked you into a higher tax bracket.

Progressive tax system math: Your real, effective tax rate is thanks to the progressive nature of the U.S. tax system.

The tax code currently has the seven tax rates in the table shown above. Your money is taxed at the applicable different rates as your income moves up the brackets, rather than being taxed at the rate of the final bracket where all that money taken as a whole falls.

If you truly paid a 24 percent tax on the $110,000 annual income amount cited earlier, you’d owe the U.S. Treasury $26,400. Yikes!

But your tax bill isn’t that big.

The progressive tax system works to your advantage by taxing your first chunk of earnings at the 10 percent rate bracket, with the next amount taxed at 12 percent, then the next falling into the 22 percent tax bracket, and the final earnings ending up in into the 24 percent tax bracket.

Here’s a breakout of the tax dollars and amount of tax on each:

10% tax on

$11,600 =

$1,160

12% tax on

$35,550 =

$4,266

22% tax on

$53,375 =

$11,743

24% tax on

$9,475 =

$2,274

That adds up to a total tax of $19,443 or $6,957 less than if your total income was taxed at your marginal tax rate of 24 percent. Plus, the smallest amount of your earnings — $9,475 — actually falls into the 24 percent bracket.

The final tax math comes to an effective tax rate is around 17.68 percent.

Deductions and credits, too: But wait. You tax bill gets smaller.

The rudimentary tax bill example above didn’t account for the standard deduction you can claim, which in 2025 (Part 2 of the year’s inflation series) is $15,000 for the single filing status. That will get you to a lower taxable income amount.

And don’t forget about the other adjustments (such as various above-the-line deductions), and tax credits (such as the Child Tax Credit, educational tax credits, and the Earned Income Tax Credit) for which you qualify.

These tax breaks will in the end help drop your effective rate even more.

So, yes, you do start with your marginal tax rate, which is the highest tax percentage that applies to your last dollar of income, and is not really the tax rate you ultimately pay.

But after factoring in the various tax rates of our progressive tax system that apply to portions of your income, along with the tax breaks you can claim to lower your tax bill, what you finally pay when you file your tax return is an amount that is your lower effective tax rate.

You also might find these items of interest:

 

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Tax Season 2026 Continues!

We made it. Tax Day 2025 is finally over. For most of us. When the filing season started on Jan. 26, millions who were expecting refunds filed immediately. Most of us got our returns to the Internal Revenue Service by April 15. But plenty of taxpayers also got extensions. They are looking at an Oct. 15 filing deadline.

Those procrastinating filers aren’t a problem. In fact, the IRS appreciates taxpayers who take time to fill out their 1040 forms correctly. It also is grateful that tax submissions are spread out a bit, especially now that the IRS is a leaner agency. Processing returns is easier when they arrive throughout the year instead of in massive bunches.

But enough about Uncle Sam’s tax collection issues. The focus now is on all y’all who filed for extensions, giving you another six months to complete your return. Since your new mid-October due date will be here before you know it, let’s get started now on meeting it.

The ol’ blog is here to help you finish up your extended Form 1040. You can start with January’s tax tips page, which has links to the rest of the year’s tips by-month collections. You also can peruse various tax categories for more tailored advice by clicking on the More Tax Posts drop-down menu at the top of this (and every) page.

And to make sure you don’t miss your new filing deadline, the count-down clock below will let you know just how much time you to file by Oct. 15. At the latest.e. (Note: I’m in the Central Time Zone, so adjust accordingly for where you live.)

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