Tax calculator

Income Tax Calculator

Estimate income tax for any country — quick estimates, unlimited custom progressive bands, a sourced US federal mode (2025/2026 with filing status, dependents, and withholding), a global custom tax system, refund or amount owed, and a two-scenario comparison. Band-by-band detail, plain-English interpretation, and a downloadable Excel workbook.

Transparent assumptions 6 modes Any country’s bands Sourced US 2025/2026 figures Multi-sheet Excel report

Educational estimate only — not tax, legal, or financial advice. Verify with your tax authority.

Progressive income tax taxes each slice of income at its own band rate. Taxable Income = Gross Income − Deductions; Tax = the sum of (amount in each band × band rate) − credits + surcharges. Your marginal rate is the top band you reach; your effective rate is total tax ÷ gross income — never higher, usually lower. Use the modes above the calculator for US federal, global custom bands, refunds, or a two-scenario comparison.

Quick Tax Estimate

$
$

Reduce taxable income before tax.

$

Subtracted from the tax itself.

Official bands · 2025 (filed 2026)

  • 10%$0 – $11,925
  • 12%$11,925 – $48,475
  • 22%$48,475 – $103,350
  • 24%$103,350 – $197,300
  • 32%$197,300 – $250,525
  • 35%$250,525 – $626,350
  • 37%$626,350 and above

Official United States figures for 2025 (filed 2026) — see Sources. Click Customise to edit.

Bands apply to taxable income (after the standard deduction). The $15,750 single standard deduction for 2025 is pre-filled in deductions.

Quick estimate · United States (Federal, single)

Estimated tax

$5,072

After-tax income

$54,929

$4,577 per month.

Taxable income

$44,250

After $15,750 of deductions.

Tax before credits

$5,072

Effective tax rate

8.45%

Final tax ÷ gross income.

Marginal tax rate

12.0%

Rate on your next unit of income.

What this means

  • Your taxable income is $44,250 after $15,750 of deductions.
  • Your estimated tax is $5,072, which is an effective rate of 8.45% of gross income.
  • Your marginal rate is 12%, but that rate only applies to the income inside the highest band you reached — income in the lower bands keeps its lower rates.
  • These bands are whatever you entered — verify the official rates and thresholds for your country and tax year before relying on the result.

Includes your inputs, tax breakdown, refund estimate, formulas, sources, and disclaimer.

Tax breakdown

Where your income goes and how each band contributes to the tax.

From gross income to take-home

After-tax income $54,929Estimated tax $5,072

$15,750 of deductions kept income out of the taxable base before tax was applied.

Tax before credits vs final tax

Tax before credits$5,072
Final estimated tax$5,072

Tax by income band

10% bracket (10%)$1,193 on $11,925
12% bracket (12%)$3,879 on $32,325
BandFromToRateTaxable in bandTaxCumulative
10% bracket$0$11,92510%$11,925$1,193$1,193
12% bracket$11,925$48,47512%$32,325$3,879$5,072
22% bracket$48,475$103,35022%$0$0$5,072
24% bracket$103,350$197,30024%$0$0$5,072
32% bracket$197,300$250,52532%$0$0$5,072
35% bracket$250,525$626,35035%$0$0$5,072
37% bracket$626,350No limit37%$0$0$5,072

Each band taxes only the income inside it — ← marks the marginal band. Bands with no income show 0.

Quick answers

What is the income tax formula?

Taxable Income = Gross Income − Deductions. Each band then taxes only the slice of income inside it: Tax in Band = Amount in Band × Band Rate, and Progressive Tax = the sum across bands. Credits subtract after that, so Final Tax = Tax After Credits + any surcharge or social contribution.

What is the difference between marginal and effective tax rate?

The marginal rate is the rate on your NEXT unit of income — the highest band you reach. The effective rate is total tax ÷ total income, the average across all bands. The effective rate is never higher than the marginal rate, and it is lower whenever any of your income sits in a cheaper band — which is the normal progressive case.

Should I chase a deduction or a credit to cut this estimate?

A deduction reduces taxable income before tax is computed, so it saves roughly the deduction × your marginal rate. A credit subtracts directly from the tax itself, so it is worth its full amount. A $1,000 credit beats a $1,000 deduction for every taxpayer.

Can this calculator work for any country?

Yes — the Quick, Manual Bands, and Global Custom modes apply whatever band thresholds, rates, deductions, credits, surcharges, and social contributions you enter, in any currency. The calculator supplies the progressive math; you supply the official numbers from your tax authority. Only the US Federal mode ships with built-in (IRS-sourced) figures.

How to use this income tax calculator

  1. Pick a mode. Choose Quick Estimate, Manual Bands, US Federal, Global Custom, Refund / Owed, or Compare Two at the top of the calculator. Quick Estimate is the fastest start.
  2. Enter income and deductions. Type your gross income and any deductions. In the US mode, add filing status, ages, dependents, and each income type; in Global Custom, split income by category.
  3. Set the tax bands. Edit the band limits and rates to match your country and tax year — add or remove bands freely, and keep the top band unlimited. The US mode loads official IRS brackets for 2025 or 2026 automatically.
  4. Add credits, surcharges, and withholding. Credits subtract from the tax itself. Optional surcharge / cess and social contributions add on top. Withholding or tax already paid turns on the refund / amount-owed estimate.
  5. Read the results. See estimated tax, after-tax income (annual and monthly), taxable income, effective and marginal rates, the band-by-band table, income / deduction / credit summaries, and a plain-English interpretation.
  6. Download the workbook. Click “Download Income Tax XLSX” for a multi-sheet Excel report — inputs, results, income breakdown, deductions and credits, tax by band, refund or amount owed, formulas, sources, and the disclaimer. Band-mode workbooks recalculate live in Excel.

Income tax formulas

Taxable income

Taxable Income = Gross Income − Deductions

Never below 0. Deductions act BEFORE tax.

Tax in a band

Tax in Band = Amount in Band × Band Rate

Each band taxes only the slice inside it.

Progressive tax

Progressive Tax = Σ Tax in Each Band

The band table shows every term of the sum.

Tax after credits

Tax After Credits = Tax Before Credits − Credits

Non-refundable credits stop at zero.

Final estimated tax

Final Tax = Tax After Credits + Surcharges + Social Contributions

Cess-style surcharges are a % of the tax.

Effective tax rate

Effective Rate = Final Tax / Gross Income

The average rate across all your income.

Marginal tax rate

Marginal Rate = Rate of Highest Band Reached

The rate on your NEXT unit of income.

After-tax income

After-Tax Income = Gross Income − Final Tax

Monthly take-home = after-tax ÷ 12.

Estimated refund

Refund = Payments + Refundable Credits − Final Tax

When positive. Withholding counts as payments.

Estimated amount owed

Owed = Final Tax − Payments − Refundable Credits

When positive — only one side can be.

Understanding income tax

What this income tax calculator does

This is a progressive income tax estimator with six modes. Three of them — Quick Estimate, Manual Bands, and Global Custom — are fully band-driven: you enter the thresholds and rates from your own tax authority, and the calculator applies them slice by slice, handles deductions and credits in the right order, layers on surcharges or social contributions, and reports the total tax, effective and marginal rates, and take-home income. The US Federal mode goes further and ships with official IRS figures for tax years 2025 and 2026; the Refund mode tracks payments against a known liability; and Compare runs two situations side by side.

What it deliberately does not do is pretend to be filing software. It never claims exact filing accuracy, it does not know every country’s special rules, and where US rules get genuinely complicated (AMT, EITC, QBI, state returns) it asks for a manual figure or says so instead of inventing precision.

Progressive tax, explained

A progressive income tax splits income into bands (also called brackets or slabs) and taxes each band at its own rate. Only the income inside a band pays that band’s rate. If the first $10,000 is tax-free and the next band is 10%, then someone earning $12,000 pays nothing on the first $10,000 and 10% on the final $2,000 — $200, not $1,200.

This is the single most misunderstood fact in personal tax: moving into a higher band never raises the tax on income you already had in lower bands. A raise that “pushes you into a higher bracket” taxes only the raise at the higher rate. Earning more never reduces your pre-existing after-tax income in a band system.

Marginal tax rate vs effective tax rate

Your marginal rate is the rate of the highest band you reach — the tax on your next unit of income. Your effective rate is total tax divided by total income — the average across every band. The two answer different questions: the marginal rate tells you what an extra hour of overtime or an extra deduction is worth; the effective rate tells you what share of your income actually went to tax.

Because lower bands carry lower rates (often 0%), the effective rate sits below the marginal rate whenever any income falls in a cheaper band — the two only match in a pure flat tax. In the calculator’s default example, $60,000 of income reaches the 20% band but pays an effective 11.67% — and the band table shows exactly where the gap comes from.

Taxable income vs gross income

Gross income is everything you earned. Taxable income is what is left after the amounts the tax system lets you remove — standard or itemized deductions, retirement contributions, allowances, and similar. The bands apply to taxable income, not gross income, which is why two people with the same salary can owe very different tax.

This calculator keeps the two visibly separate: results report both, the waterfall shows the path from gross to taxable to after-tax, and the effective rate is measured against gross income so it reflects your real burden.

Deductions vs credits

Deductions act before tax: they shrink taxable income, so each unit saves you roughly your marginal rate. With a 20% marginal rate, a 5,000 deduction saves about 1,000. Credits act after tax: they subtract from the tax bill itself, so each unit is worth its full amount — a 5,000 credit saves 5,000 (down to zero tax for non-refundable credits).

The distinction matters for planning. A credit always beats a deduction of the same size, and deductions are worth more to people in higher bands. Refundable credits go one step further: they can be paid out even when they exceed the tax, which is why the refund modes track them separately.

Standard vs itemized deduction (US)

US filers choose between a flat standard deduction — $16,100 single / $32,200 married filing jointly for 2026 — and itemizing specific expenses: state and local taxes (capped), mortgage interest, charitable donations, and others. You take whichever is larger; since 2018 the overwhelming majority of filers take the standard deduction.

The US mode compares both automatically. Enter your itemizable expenses and it applies the SALT cap (the OBBBA cap of $40,000 for 2025, indexed to $40,400 for 2026, with its high-income phase-down), then tells you which side wins and by how much. Filers 65 and older also get an extra standard-deduction amount and, through 2028, the separate $6,000 senior deduction with its own income phase-out.

Tax withholding vs final tax

Withholding is money your employer sends to the tax authority during the year on your behalf. It is a prepayment based on estimates — not your final tax. The final tax is computed on your return from actual income, deductions, and credits; only then does anyone know whether you over- or under-paid.

That is the whole story behind refunds: a refund means your prepayments exceeded the final tax, and an amount due means they fell short. Neither is a bonus or a penalty by itself — though a very large gap in either direction usually means your withholding settings deserve a review.

Refund vs amount owed

The arithmetic is symmetric: payments plus refundable credits, minus final tax. Positive → estimated refund; negative → estimated amount owed. Non-refundable credits act earlier — they reduce the tax itself, but never below zero.

The Refund / Amount Owed mode tracks the full chain and, if you owe, can spread the gap into a monthly set-aside until your filing date. Remember the estimate inherits every assumption of the tax figure you started from.

Filing status, explained (US)

US federal tax has five filing statuses — Single, Married Filing Jointly, Married Filing Separately, Head of Household, and Qualifying Surviving Spouse — and each carries its own bracket thresholds and standard deduction. Married couples filing jointly get bands roughly twice as wide as singles; Head of Household sits in between and requires a qualifying dependent; Qualifying Surviving Spouse keeps joint-return treatment for two years after a spouse’s death.

Married Filing Separately is the trap-laden one: thresholds are generally half of joint, several credits are restricted, and Social Security benefits can become taxable from the first dollar. The calculator applies the main MFS figures and warns about the rest. Which status you may use depends on legal facts, not preference — when in doubt, that is a question for the IRS rules or a professional, not a calculator.

Dependents and credits, at a high level (US)

For 2025 and 2026 the child tax credit is worth up to $2,200 per qualifying child under 17, with up to $1,700 of it refundable, and $500 for each other dependent. The combined credit phases out above $200,000 of income ($400,000 filing jointly) at $50 per $1,000 over the line.

The calculator estimates all of that — including the refundable portion, which depends on earned income — and lets you override it with a manual figure when your situation is more complicated. Care expenses feed a deliberately conservative 20% credit estimate; education, saver’s, and foreign tax credits are manual entries because their real rules need information this tool does not collect.

Ordinary income vs dividends vs capital gains (US)

Not all income is taxed alike. Wages, interest, business profit, rents, and short-term capital gains are ordinary income and go through the brackets. Qualified dividends and long-term capital gains (assets held over a year) get preferential 0/15/20% rates, applied by “stacking” them on top of ordinary income against their own breakpoints — for 2026, the 0% rate runs to $49,450 of taxable income for singles.

Self-employment profit carries an extra layer: 15.3% self-employment tax for Social Security and Medicare (half of it deductible), on top of income tax. The US mode handles the stacking, the SE tax, and the netting of capital losses (limited to $3,000 a year against other income) so you can see each piece separately.

Why the tax year matters

Band thresholds, standard deductions, credit amounts, and caps change every year — usually for inflation, sometimes by legislation. The 2025 US figures were changed twice: first by the normal inflation adjustment, then retroactively by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which raised the standard deduction and child tax credit mid-year. Using last year’s numbers silently produces wrong answers.

That is why the US mode pins every figure to a specific, sourced tax year (2025 or 2026) and why the manual modes ask you to label the year you entered. When a new year’s official figures are released, verify before reusing old bands.

State and local taxes change the result

A federal-only estimate is not your whole tax picture. Most US states (and some cities) levy their own income taxes, with rates from zero to over 10% and rules that differ from federal. Other countries have regional or municipal layers too.

This calculator treats state/local tax honestly as a manual estimate — a flat percentage or amount you supply — and keeps it visibly separate from the sourced federal figures. For a precise state calculation you need a state-specific tool or the state authority’s own tables.

Why global tax systems need custom bands

Every country implements progressive taxation differently: India has slabs plus a cess and two regimes, the UK has bands plus a personal allowance that tapers away, Germany uses a formula rather than flat bands. No single calculator can truthfully hard-code them all and stay current.

The Global Custom mode solves this the honest way: it gives you unlimited bands, income categories, deductions, credits, surcharges (as a % of tax, % of income, or fixed amount), and social contributions — and you fill in the official values. The progressive-band arithmetic is handled for you; the official numbers are yours to verify.

What this calculator does not include

US mode: no alternative minimum tax (AMT), earned income tax credit (EITC), qualified business income (QBI) deduction, net investment income tax (NIIT), itemized-deduction special limits beyond SALT, credit phase-ins beyond those listed, or state returns — those need manual amounts or a fuller tool. Manual modes: nothing beyond what you enter; rounding rules, regime choices, and special-rate income types are up to you.

It also never stores or transmits your figures — every calculation, and the Excel export, runs entirely in your browser.

When to use a tax professional

Use a professional (or official tax software) when the answer actually matters to a filing or a major decision: self-employment with significant deductions, equity compensation, rental property, foreign income or residency changes, marriage or divorce in the tax year, large capital gains, or any notice from a tax authority.

A calculator like this one is for understanding and planning — seeing how a raise, a deduction, or a different filing status moves the numbers. It is a map, not the territory; the authoritative answer always comes from the official return.

Worked examples

1. A simple progressive band calculation

Income $60,000, no deductions. Bands: 0% to $10,000, 10% to $40,000, 20% to $85,000, 30% above. Band by band: $10,000 × 0% = $0; $30,000 × 10% = $3,000; $20,000 × 20% = $4,000; nothing reaches the 30% band. Total tax $7,000, after-tax income $53,000. The marginal rate is 20% but the effective rate is 7,000 ÷ 60,000 = 11.67% — multiplying the whole income by 20% (a common mistake) would wrongly give $12,000.

2. Deduction vs credit — same number, very different value

Income $100,000 with a $20,000 deduction and a $5,000 credit, same bands. Taxable income falls to $80,000, so band tax = $3,000 + $40,000 × 20% = $11,000. The credit then subtracts directly: final tax $6,000. Compare the parts: without the deduction the band tax would be $16,500, so the $20,000 deduction saved $5,500 — more than the post-deduction 20% marginal rate suggests, because $15,000 of it acted in the 30% band. The $5,000 credit saved the full $5,000. A credit is always worth its face value; a deduction is worth its face value × the rates of the bands it pulls income out of.

3. Withholding and the refund estimate

Suppose the estimated tax is $12,000 and your employer withheld $15,000 during the year. Payments exceed the tax by 15,000 − 12,000 = $3,000 estimated refund. With only $9,000 withheld instead, the gap flips: 12,000 − 9,000 = $3,000 estimated amount owed. The refund is not a windfall — it is your own money returned after over-withholding, and the amount owed is not a penalty — it is the unpaid remainder of the same tax.

4. US federal estimate with filing status and dependents (2026)

Married filing jointly, wages $100,000 + $40,000 (spouse), two children under 17, federal withholding $12,000, standard deduction. Taxable income = 140,000 − 32,200 = $107,800. Bracket tax: $2,480 + $9,120 + 22% × $7,000 = $13,140. The child tax credit removes 2 × $2,200 = $4,400 (no phase-out at this income), leaving $8,740 of federal tax — an effective rate of about 6.2% of gross income even though the marginal bracket is 22%. Withholding of $12,000 exceeds the tax, so the estimated refund is about $3,260.

5. Comparing a raise: $80,000 vs $100,000

Same demo bands, no deductions. Scenario A: $80,000 → tax $11,000 (effective 13.75%, marginal 20%). Scenario B: $100,000 → tax $16,500 (effective 16.5%, marginal 30%). The $20,000 raise costs $5,500 in extra tax, so you keep $14,500 — about 73% of it. Note what did NOT happen: the first $80,000 is taxed identically in both scenarios. Only the raise itself reaches the 30% band, which is why a raise can never reduce your existing take-home pay in a band system.

All examples are educational estimates using the stated assumptions — real tax outcomes depend on official rules for your jurisdiction and year.

Assumptions & limitations

Assumptions

  • Band-system modes apply exactly the bands, deductions, credits, surcharges, and social contributions you enter — nothing else.
  • Credits are treated as non-refundable (they floor the tax at zero) except where explicitly labelled refundable.
  • Surcharges apply to tax after credits (% of tax), to gross income (% of income), or as a fixed amount, per your selection.
  • US mode uses official IRS figures for the selected year and simplified IRS worksheets for Social Security taxability, SE tax, capital-loss netting, preferential-rate stacking, and the CTC/ACTC.
  • The US effective rate is measured against gross income as entered; MAGI is approximated by AGI for phase-outs.

Limitations

  • Not a filing tool: no AMT, EITC, QBI, NIIT, state returns, or every credit phase-in — manual overrides cover what the model omits.
  • OBBBA’s temporary “no tax on tips” and overtime deductions (2025–2028) are not auto-applied — the calculator warns when tips are entered, and you can approximate an eligible deduction under “Other adjustments”.
  • Manual and global modes cannot validate that your entered bands match your country’s law — verify against official sources.
  • Special-rate income outside the US mode (e.g. separate capital-gains regimes) must be handled with your own bands or excluded.
  • Tax law changes; figures for future years are planning estimates until official values are final.

This is an estimate, not a filed computation. For net pay across pay periods use the salary & take-home pay calculator; for consumption taxes see the VAT/GST calculator.

Frequently asked questions

What is income tax?

Income tax is a government levy on the money you earn — wages, business profit, interest, and other income. Most countries use a progressive design: income is split into bands and each band is taxed at its own rate, so higher slices of income pay higher rates while lower slices keep their lower rates.

How is progressive income tax calculated?

Taxable income is run through the bands in order. Each band taxes only the income that falls inside it: Tax in Band = Amount in Band × Band Rate. The total tax is the sum across bands, credits subtract after that, and surcharges or social contributions add on top. This calculator shows the entire band-by-band table so you can follow every step.

What is taxable income?

Taxable income is the amount the bands actually apply to: gross income minus the deductions your system allows (standard deduction, retirement contributions, allowances, and similar). It is the single most important intermediate number in a tax estimate — get it right and the rest is arithmetic.

What is the difference between gross income and taxable income?

Gross income is everything you earned before any tax rules. Taxable income is gross income minus deductions — the base the tax rates apply to. The gap between them is why two people with identical salaries can owe different amounts of tax.

What is the difference between a deduction and a credit?

A deduction reduces taxable income, so it saves roughly its amount × your marginal rate — a 1,000 deduction at a 20% marginal rate saves about 200. A credit reduces the tax itself, so 1,000 of credit saves the full 1,000. Refundable credits can even be paid out beyond the tax; non-refundable ones stop at zero.

What is a marginal tax rate?

The marginal rate is the rate of the highest band your taxable income reaches — the tax on your next unit of income. It is the right rate for evaluating a raise, extra freelance work, or one more deduction, because all of those happen “at the margin”.

What is an effective tax rate?

The effective rate is your total tax divided by your gross income — the average rate across everything you earned. It is the honest single number for “how much of my income went to tax”, and it is never higher than your marginal rate — lower whenever any of your income sits in a cheaper band.

Why is my effective rate lower than my tax bracket?

Because your bracket (marginal rate) only applies to the top slice of your income. Everything below it was taxed in cheaper bands — often starting at 0%. Averaging the cheap lower bands with the expensive top slice produces a number below the top rate whenever any income sits in those cheaper bands. The band table on this page shows the exact composition.

How do I estimate my refund or amount owed?

Add up your withholding, estimated payments, and refundable credits, then subtract your estimated total tax (after non-refundable credits). A positive result is an estimated refund; a negative one is an estimated amount owed. The Refund / Amount Owed mode does this directly, and the US and band modes do it automatically when you enter withholding.

Does this calculator include state or local tax?

Not automatically. The US mode accepts an optional flat-rate or fixed-amount state/local estimate and keeps it clearly separate from the sourced federal result; the manual modes let you model local layers as a surcharge. Real state and local rules differ enough that a precise figure needs a dedicated state calculation.

Can I use this calculator outside the United States?

Yes — that is the point of the Quick, Manual Bands, and Global Custom modes. Enter the official band thresholds, rates, deductions, credits, surcharge (e.g. a cess as a % of tax), and social contributions for your country and year, in your currency, and the calculator applies them faithfully. It never guesses another country’s law.

What filing status should I choose?

Filing status is a legal classification, not a preference: it depends on your marital status at year-end, dependents, and household circumstances. The calculator lets you model any status to see the arithmetic difference, but which one you are entitled to use is a question for the IRS rules or a tax professional — especially around Head of Household and Married Filing Separately.

Does this include capital gains or dividend taxes?

The US mode does: short-term gains are taxed as ordinary income, while qualified dividends and long-term gains are stacked on top at the official 0/15/20% breakpoints, with capital-loss netting and the annual loss limit. Outside the US mode, capital income is only included if you put it in a band — many countries tax it under separate regimes this tool does not model.

Is this calculator exact enough for filing taxes?

No, and it does not claim to be. It is an educational estimator: the US mode covers the main rules with sourced figures but omits AMT, EITC, QBI, NIIT, and state returns; the manual modes depend entirely on the values you enter. File with official tax software, the authority’s own tools, or a professional.

Why should I verify tax brackets every year?

Because they change every year — through inflation indexing and sometimes mid-year legislation. The 2025 US standard deduction and child tax credit were changed retroactively by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act months after the year began. A band table copied from last year can be quietly wrong; always check the current official release before relying on a result.

Related calculators

Tools that build on the same income and tax math:

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Sources & methodology

Band modes apply your entered bands progressively (each slice at its own rate), subtract credits after the band tax, then add surcharges and social contributions. The US mode pins every built-in figure — brackets, standard deductions, capital-gains breakpoints, child tax credit, SALT cap, SE-tax parameters — to the official IRS / SSA releases below for tax years 2025 and 2026, and uses simplified IRS worksheets for Social Security taxability and the refundable child credit. Global custom mode intentionally cites no rate tables: you must enter official bands from your own tax authority. Sources verified June 2026; links open in a new tab.

Tax disclaimer

This calculator is for educational estimates only. It is not tax, legal, financial, accounting, or professional advice. Tax rules vary by country, state, filing status, income type, deductions, credits, residency, and tax year. Verify all figures with official tax authority sources or a qualified tax professional before filing or making tax decisions.

Built and maintained by Calculator Matters, an independent calculator project. US figures verified against the IRS releases above; band math reviewed against standard progressive-tax formulas · Last reviewed 14 June 2026 · How we calculate · Found an error? [email protected]

Last reviewed: 14 June 2026. Formula and assumptions reviewed for accuracy. First published 10 June 2026.

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