Income Tax Calculator – US Federal Tax
Estimate your federal income tax based on US tax brackets for 2024. Use this free online financial calculator for instant, accurate results. No signup.
How the US Federal Income Tax System Works
The US uses a progressive tax system with marginal tax brackets — you pay different rates on different portions of your income. A common misconception is that moving into a higher bracket taxes ALL your income at that rate. In reality, only the income within each bracket is taxed at that rate.
2024 Federal Tax Brackets (Single filers):
| Taxable Income | Tax Rate | Tax Owed on This Portion |
|---|---|---|
| $0 – $11,600 | 10% | Up to $1,160 |
| $11,601 – $47,150 | 12% | Up to $4,266 |
| $47,151 – $100,525 | 22% | Up to $11,744 |
| $100,526 – $191,950 | 24% | Up to $21,942 |
| $191,951 – $243,725 | 32% | Up to $16,565 |
| $243,726 – $609,350 | 35% | Up to $127,897 |
| $609,351+ | 37% | 37% on amount above |
Example: $75,000 taxable income, single filer:
10%: $1,160 | 12%: $4,266 | 22%: $6,271 (on $75k-$47,151 = $27,849)
Total federal tax ≈ $11,697 = effective rate of 15.6%
Taxable Income: Deductions Reduce Your Tax
You don't pay taxes on your gross income — you pay on taxable income, which is gross income minus deductions. The two main options:
Standard Deduction (2024):
- Single: $14,600
- Married filing jointly: $29,200
- Head of household: $21,900
- Additional $1,550 if age 65+ or blind
Itemized Deductions: Use instead of standard if your itemizable expenses exceed the standard deduction. Common itemized deductions: mortgage interest, state and local taxes (SALT, capped at $10,000), charitable contributions, medical expenses exceeding 7.5% of AGI.
Over 90% of taxpayers now take the standard deduction after the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 doubled it.
Above-the-line deductions (reduce AGI regardless of standard/itemized choice): student loan interest (up to $2,500), IRA contributions (up to $7,000), HSA contributions, self-employed health insurance, and self-employment taxes (50% deductible).
Tax Credits are even more valuable than deductions — they reduce tax owed dollar-for-dollar, not just taxable income. Key credits: Child Tax Credit ($2,000/child), Earned Income Credit (up to $7,830 for 3+ children), Child/Dependent Care Credit, American Opportunity Credit ($2,500/year for college).
State Income Taxes
In addition to federal taxes, most states impose their own income taxes. This varies dramatically:
| State Tax Status | States |
|---|---|
| No income tax | Alaska, Florida, Nevada, New Hampshire, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Washington, Wyoming |
| Flat rate (all income taxed same %) | Colorado (4.4%), Illinois (4.95%), Michigan (4.25%), Pennsylvania (3.07%) |
| Low progressive rates | North Dakota, Indiana, Arizona (2.5%) |
| Moderate progressive rates | Georgia, Missouri, Virginia (2-5.75%) |
| High progressive rates | California (1-13.3%), Hawaii (1.4-11%), New Jersey (1.4-10.75%), New York (4-10.9%) |
California's 13.3% top marginal rate is the highest in the nation. A California high earner pays 37% federal + 13.3% state + Medicare surtax (3.8%) = over 54% marginal rate on top income. This drives high-income migration to no-tax states, especially for retirees and remote workers.
Most states also have FICA taxes: Social Security (6.2% on wages up to $168,600) and Medicare (1.45% on all wages; 2.45% above $200,000). Employers match these amounts.
Tax-Advantaged Ways to Reduce Your Tax Bill
Legal tax reduction strategies work by reducing taxable income or creating credits:
Retirement accounts (most impactful):
- 401(k) traditional: Up to $23,000/year pre-tax. Reduces current taxable income directly.
- IRA traditional: Up to $7,000/year, deductible if within income limits
- SEP IRA (self-employed): Up to 25% of net earnings, max $69,000
Health Savings Account (HSA): Triple tax advantage — pre-tax contributions, tax-free growth, tax-free withdrawals for medical expenses. $4,150 individual, $8,300 family (2024). Contributing the maximum saves roughly $1,000-$2,500 in taxes depending on your bracket.
Flexible Spending Accounts (FSA): Up to $3,200 for healthcare FSA; $5,000 for dependent care FSA. Pre-tax dollars for eligible expenses.
Capital gains management: Assets held over 1 year qualify for lower long-term capital gains rates (0%, 15%, or 20% vs. ordinary income rates). Tax-loss harvesting — selling losing investments to offset gains — reduces capital gains tax in brokerage accounts.
Charitable giving strategies: Donating appreciated stock (instead of cash) avoids capital gains tax on the appreciation while still claiming a full fair market value deduction. Donor Advised Funds allow 'bunching' multiple years of donations into one year to exceed the standard deduction threshold.
Self-Employment and Business Taxes
Self-employed individuals face additional tax complexity but also more deduction opportunities:
Self-employment tax: 15.3% of net self-employment income (12.4% Social Security + 2.9% Medicare) — both employee and employer portions. This is on top of regular income tax. On $50,000 net self-employment income, SE tax = ~$7,065.
Mitigating SE tax:
- Deduct 50% of SE tax as an above-the-line deduction
- Deduct self-employed health insurance premiums
- Contribute to a Solo 401(k) or SEP IRA (dramatically reduces both income tax and SE tax)
- S-corp election can reduce SE tax on profitable businesses (paying yourself a 'reasonable salary' and taking remaining profit as S-corp distributions not subject to SE tax)
Business deductions for self-employed: home office (if used regularly and exclusively for business), vehicle mileage (67.5 cents/mile in 2024 or actual expenses), equipment and supplies, professional development, business portion of phone and internet, business meals (50% deductible), travel for business purposes.
Tax Filing: Key Deadlines and Requirements
US federal income tax basics:
- Tax year: January 1 – December 31
- Filing deadline: April 15 (October 15 with extension — but an extension to file is NOT an extension to pay)
- Estimated taxes: Self-employed and those with significant non-wage income must pay quarterly estimated taxes (due April 15, June 15, September 15, January 15) to avoid underpayment penalties
- W-2 employees: Tax is withheld from paychecks throughout the year. Adjust W-4 withholding to avoid large refunds (interest-free loan to the IRS) or large bills at filing
Filing status options (from lowest to highest tax):
Married Filing Jointly → Head of Household → Single → Married Filing Separately
Free filing options: IRS Free File (AGI under ~$79,000 for free software), IRS Free File Fillable Forms (all income levels, no guidance), VITA (Volunteer Income Tax Assistance) for simple returns, Cash App Taxes (always free), FreeTaxUSA (free federal, $14.99 state).
💡 Did you know?
- The first modern income tax was introduced in Britain in 1799 by Prime Minister William Pitt the Younger to fund the Napoleonic Wars.
- The US income tax was made permanent by the 16th Amendment, ratified in 1913 — the initial rate was just 1% on incomes over $3,000.
- Americans spend an estimated 6.5 billion hours per year complying with the tax code — roughly the equivalent of 3.25 million full-time jobs.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between marginal and effective tax rate?
Marginal rate is the rate you pay on the next dollar earned — your highest bracket rate. Effective rate is your total tax divided by total income. Someone in the 22% bracket with $75,000 income and $11,697 in federal tax has a 15.6% effective rate. Your effective rate is always lower than your marginal rate in a progressive system.
Should I take the standard or itemized deduction?
Take whichever is larger. The 2024 standard deduction is $14,600 (single) or $29,200 (married). If your itemizable expenses (mortgage interest, SALT up to $10k, charitable contributions, large medical expenses) total more, itemize. Track potential deductions throughout the year — you can only compare them at tax time.
How can I legally pay less in taxes?
The most impactful strategies: maximize pre-tax retirement contributions (401k, IRA, SEP IRA), contribute to HSA, realize long-term capital gains (held 1+ year) rather than short-term, do tax-loss harvesting in brokerage accounts, use tax-advantaged accounts for high-growth investments, and consider S-corp election if self-employed with high net income.
What happens if I don't file taxes?
Failure to file penalty is 5% of unpaid taxes per month (up to 25%). Failure to pay penalty is 0.5% per month. Combined, you can owe 25-47.5% in penalties alone, plus interest. If you're due a refund and don't file, you simply lose the refund after 3 years — no penalty. Always file even if you can't pay; set up an installment agreement with the IRS.
What is the FICA tax?
FICA (Federal Insurance Contributions Act) taxes fund Social Security and Medicare. Employees pay 6.2% Social Security (on wages up to $168,600 in 2024) and 1.45% Medicare (no income cap). Employers match these amounts. Self-employed individuals pay both sides (15.3% total) as self-employment tax, but can deduct 50% of it.
How do tax brackets work if I get a raise?
Only the portion of income in each bracket is taxed at that rate. If a raise pushes some income into a higher bracket, only that additional income is taxed at the higher rate — not your entire salary. This is a common misconception. A raise never results in less take-home pay due to taxes.
What are the most commonly missed tax deductions?
State sales tax deduction (instead of state income tax, useful in no-income-tax states), student loan interest, educator expenses ($300 for teachers), energy-efficient home improvements, job search expenses, gambling losses (up to winnings), investment losses (capital loss carryforward), and prior-year state tax paid in current year.