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Home›Investing & Wealth›Retirement & Taxes›Tax & Retirement

What Is a Tax Bracket?

Erajah Scypion
Erajah ScypionFounder, Scypion Finance
4 sources4 min readUpdated June 14, 2026
◆ Key Takeaways
  • Tax brackets are income ranges taxed at the same rate; U.S. has seven federal brackets (10%, 12%, 22%, 24%, 32%, 35%, 37%)
  • You don't pay one rate on all income; first dollars are taxed at 10%, next at 12%, etc. (marginal rates apply to different tiers)
  • Common misconception: Moving into higher bracket doesn't increase taxes on all income, just income above the threshold
  • Brackets adjust for inflation annually; 2024 brackets are wider than 2023 (thresholds increased due to inflation)
  • Understanding brackets helps evaluate raises, bonuses, and tax-planning decisions
On this page
  • 2024 Federal Tax Brackets (Single Filer)
  • How Brackets Work (Marginal Tax System)
  • Bracket Creep
  • Bracket Thresholds Adjust for Inflation
  • State Tax Brackets
  • Married vs. Single Brackets
  • Common Misconception
  • Bracket Optimization
  • FICA Brackets (Payroll Taxes)
  • Effective Rate vs. Marginal Rate in Brackets
  • Planning Within Brackets
  • Bracket Thresholds and Filing Status
  • The Bottom Line

A tax bracket is a range of income that is taxed at a specific rate. The U.S. uses progressive taxation with seven federal brackets.

2024 Federal Tax Brackets (Single Filer)

  • 10%: $0-$11,600
  • 12%: $11,601-$47,150
  • 22%: $47,151-$100,525
  • 24%: $100,526-$191,950
  • 32%: $191,951-$243,725
  • 35%: $243,726-$609,350
  • 37%: $609,351+

How Brackets Work (Marginal Tax System)

You don't pay one rate on all income.

Example: $50,000 income

  • First $11,600: Taxed at 10% = $1,160
  • Next $35,550 ($11,601-$47,150): Taxed at 12% = $4,266
  • Remaining $2,850 ($47,151-$50,000): Taxed at 22% = $627
  • Total tax: $6,053
  • Effective rate: 12.1%

You're "in the 22% bracket" but your average rate is 12.1%.

Bracket Creep

Income growth pushes you into higher brackets:

Scenario: Getting a $5,000 raise

Year 1: $50,000 income, in 22% bracket

Year 2: $55,000 income

  • Extra $5,000 is taxed at 22% (the next bracket)
  • Additional taxes: $5,000 × 22% = $1,100
  • Net raise: $3,900

Your marginal rate (22%) determines the after-tax value of the raise, not your average rate (12.1%).

Bracket Thresholds Adjust for Inflation

Federal brackets adjust annually for inflation:

2023 brackets (adjusted for inflation) 2024 brackets (adjusted for inflation)

Example: 12% bracket

  • 2023: $11,001-$44,725
  • 2024: $11,601-$47,150
  • Increase: ~5% (inflation adjustment)

Without inflation adjustment, bracket creep would be severe (wage inflation pushes you into higher brackets even if purchasing power unchanged).

State Tax Brackets

States have their own brackets:

Texas: No income tax (0%) California: Seven brackets, 1-13.3% New York: Ten brackets, 4-10.9% Florida: No income tax (0%)

Total marginal rate example:

  • California resident, 24% federal + 9.3% state = 33.3% marginal rate
  • Texas resident, 24% federal + 0% state = 24% marginal rate

State brackets are independent of federal brackets, creating cumulative marginal rates.

Married vs. Single Brackets

Married couples get wider brackets:

2024 single:

  • 22% bracket: $47,151-$100,525

2024 married filing jointly:

  • 22% bracket: $94,301-$201,050

Married brackets are roughly double single brackets, reducing marriage penalty (though not eliminating it).

Common Misconception

False: "If I earn more money, I'll go into a higher bracket and pay more taxes on everything."

True: You only pay higher tax rates on income above the bracket threshold.

Example: Moving from $95,000 to $105,000 income

  • First $100,525: Taxed at same rate (22%)
  • Amount above $100,525: Taxed at 24%
  • You don't pay 24% on the entire $105,000
  • Only the $4,475 above the threshold

This prevents people from irrationally refusing raises due to bracket fears.

Bracket Optimization

Tax planning focuses on managing bracket position:

High-income year? Maximize deductions to reduce taxable income and stay in lower brackets

Low-income year? Consider Roth conversions (you're in low bracket temporarily)

Approaching high bracket? Defer income (bonus timing) or accelerate deductions

FICA Brackets (Payroll Taxes)

Social Security has its own bracket:

Social Security tax: 6.2% on wages up to $168,600 (2024)

Once you earn above $168,600, no more Social Security tax on additional wages. Self-employed pay 12.4%.

Example: Someone earning $200,000

  • Pays Social Security on $168,600
  • Exempt on $31,400 above threshold

Effective Rate vs. Marginal Rate in Brackets

$50,000 income:

  • Marginal bracket: 22%
  • Effective rate: 12.1%
  • Deduction value: 22% (saves at marginal rate)
  • Raise value: 78% after tax (keeps 1 - 22%)

Marginal rate is most important for financial decisions, even though it's higher than effective rate.

Planning Within Brackets

Example: Deciding to take consulting income

Consulting gig offers: $10,000

You're single, $95,000 income currently

  • Marginal bracket: 22%
  • After-tax: $10,000 × (1 - 0.22) = $7,800

Consulting gig offers: $10,000 (different scenario)

But you've already maxed out 401k, have other deductions

  • Additional deductions: $2,000
  • Taxable income increase: $8,000
  • Taxes: $8,000 × 22% = $1,760
  • After-tax: $8,240

Different tax situations create different effective costs.

Bracket Thresholds and Filing Status

Single, head of household, married filing jointly have different brackets

Example: 22% bracket starts at

  • Single: $47,151
  • Head of household: $63,101
  • Married filing jointly: $94,301

Filing status dramatically affects bracket position.

The Bottom Line

Tax brackets are income ranges taxed at progressive rates. You don't pay one rate on all income; different portions are taxed at different rates.

Understanding your marginal bracket is critical for financial decisions: It determines the after-tax value of raises, deductions, and income. Your effective rate (lower) and marginal rate (higher) serve different purposes in tax planning.

◆ Sources

  1. Tax Bracket Explained — Investopedia
  2. IRS Tax Brackets
  3. Retirement Planning — Social Security
  4. Financial Guidance — Fidelity
On this page
  • 2024 Federal Tax Brackets (Single Filer)
  • How Brackets Work (Marginal Tax System)
  • Bracket Creep
  • Bracket Thresholds Adjust for Inflation
  • State Tax Brackets
  • Married vs. Single Brackets
  • Common Misconception
  • Bracket Optimization
  • FICA Brackets (Payroll Taxes)
  • Effective Rate vs. Marginal Rate in Brackets
  • Planning Within Brackets
  • Bracket Thresholds and Filing Status
  • The Bottom Line
◆ Related reading
  • Tax Planning vs. Tax Preparation: Year-Round Strategy vs. Last-Minute Filing
  • Business Structures: LLC vs. S-Corp vs. Sole Proprietor—Tax and Liability Implications
  • What Is an HSA?
  • What Is a 401(k)? How It Works, Employer Match, and Common Mistakes
All Tax & Retirement →
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Erajah Scypion
Erajah Scypion
Founder, Scypion Finance

I got interested in economics the hard way — by not understanding what was happening around me. I'd read an explanation, nod along, and walk away knowing no more than when I started. After enough of that, I stopped looking for the resource I wanted and started writing it.

View full profile →

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