Tax Bracket Calculator
Estimate income tax across tax brackets.
Preset bracket rates are illustrative and simplified — they may not reflect deductions, allowances or the latest figures. Verify current rates for your jurisdiction before relying on any result.
Estimated total tax
$11,553.00
Effective tax rate
15.4%
Marginal rate
22%
After-tax income
$63,447.00
| Income band | Rate | Taxed in band | Tax |
|---|---|---|---|
| $0.00 – $11,600.00 | 10% | $11,600.00 | $1,160.00 |
| $11,600.00 – $47,150.00 | 12% | $35,550.00 | $4,266.00 |
| $47,150.00 – $100,525.00 | 22% | $27,850.00 | $6,127.00 |
| $100,525.00 – $191,950.00 | 24% | $0.00 | $0.00 |
| $191,950.00 – $243,725.00 | 32% | $0.00 | $0.00 |
| $243,725.00 – $609,350.00 | 35% | $0.00 | $0.00 |
| $609,350.00+ | 37% | $0.00 | $0.00 |
Each band's rate applies only to income within that band — this is how progressive taxation works.
How to use Tax Bracket Calculator
What this calculator does
This calculator estimates progressive income tax by working through a set of tax brackets one band at a time. You enter a taxable income figure, choose a bracket table, and the tool shows the total tax, the effective tax rate, the marginal rate, the after-tax income, and a row-by-row breakdown of how much tax each bracket contributes. It ships with a few clearly labelled preset tables and a Custom mode where you can build any bracket schedule yourself. Every result updates live as you type, and all of the arithmetic runs locally in your browser.
The preset rates are illustrative and simplified — they exist to demonstrate the method, not to give an authoritative figure. Verify current rates for your jurisdiction before relying on a number.
Why you might need it
Progressive tax systems are widely misunderstood. A common worry is that “moving into a higher bracket” taxes all of your income at the higher rate. It does not — only the income inside each band is taxed at that band’s rate. A bracket calculator makes that visible: you can see exactly how a raise is taxed, compare a single-filer table with a joint-filer table, or estimate the rough tax on a side income. It is also useful for quick what-if planning, such as seeing how the effective rate changes as income rises, or for teaching how marginal taxation works.
How to use it
- Pick a bracket table from the dropdown. Each preset is labelled with its year and jurisdiction, or choose Custom to edit your own.
- Choose the currency for display. Selecting a preset sets a sensible default currency, which you can change.
- Enter your taxable income — the amount after allowances or deductions.
- In Custom mode, edit the bracket rows: each has an income threshold where the band starts and a rate that applies within it. Add or remove rows as needed.
- Read the results: total tax, effective rate, marginal rate and after-tax income, plus the per-bracket table. Copy the headline figure if you need it.
How it’s calculated
Progressive tax is computed band by band. Each bracket has a lower threshold and a rate. For a given income, the tool finds how much of that income falls inside each band — the portion between the band’s threshold and either the next band’s threshold or the income itself, whichever is lower. That portion is multiplied by the band’s rate, and the results are summed to give the total tax.
The effective tax rate is total tax divided by total income, expressed as a percentage. The marginal rate is the rate of the highest band your income reaches. After-tax income is simply income minus total tax. This is the standard marginal-bracket method used by most progressive income tax systems.
Common pitfalls
The biggest misconception is treating the marginal rate as the rate on all income — it is not, which is why the effective rate is always lower. Another pitfall is entering gross income instead of taxable income; allowances, the standard deduction and exemptions should be subtracted first. Remember too that real tax bills include credits, surcharges, payroll or social contributions, and state or local taxes that a single federal bracket table does not capture. The presets here are deliberately simplified.
Tips
Use Custom mode to model an allowance by setting the first band to 0% up to the allowance amount. Compare two scenarios — for example a single versus joint table — by switching the dropdown and noting how the effective rate shifts. If you are estimating the tax on extra income, look at the marginal rate, since that is the rate the next unit of income is taxed at. For an authoritative figure, always check the current published brackets and rules for your country, state or filing status.
Frequently asked questions
Why do the preset bracket rates differ from what I owe?
What is the difference between the effective and marginal rate?
Can I model my own country's tax brackets?
Does this account for tax-free allowances or the standard deduction?
Is my income information sent anywhere?
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