Federal Income Tax Bracket Calculator 2026: Marginal Rate & Business Tax Workbench

Deploy a fiduciary-grade marginal tax engine to isolate ordinary income from IRC §1(h) preferential capital gains and qualified dividends. Stress-test your effective federal tax burden by underwriting Schedule SE payroll taxes, Section 199A QBI exclusions, and IRC §1411 NIIT surtaxes—culminating in a precise next-dollar marginal rate diagnostic for optimal bracket arbitrage.

Marginal + effective rate Ordinary vs LTCG/QD split Self-employment + QBI NIIT screening Next-dollar analysis Business-owner planning
1Income & Filing Setup
Bracket model uses current-style planning thresholds.
Used for standard deduction and rate thresholds.
W-2 wages, interest, and other ordinary income.
Preferentially taxed if qualified.
Preferential rate schedule, stacked on top of ordinary income.
IRA, HSA, student-loan interest, and similar adjustments.
2Business Income & Deduction Bridge
Net Schedule C or pass-through style income used here for planning.
If lower than standard deduction, the tool uses standard deduction.
Simplified QBI planning rate, commonly 20% before limitations.
Turns on or off a simplified QBI deduction estimate.
Used to estimate next-dollar tax on wages or other ordinary income.
Used to estimate next-dollar tax on business income after SE tax & QBI.
3Investment Tax Overlay
Default single threshold shown; adjusts automatically if left as-is.
Adds a simplified 3.8% NIIT estimate where applicable.
Planning override for the 0% capital-gains band.
Planning override for upper 15% band before 20% rate.
This workbench focuses on what most bracket calculators miss: different tax treatment for ordinary income versus qualified dividends and long-term gains, plus self-employment tax, half-SE-tax deduction, QBI, NIIT, and next-dollar analysis.
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Enter income, filing, business, and investment-tax details to estimate marginal rate, effective rate, SE tax, QBI, capital-gain stacking, and the tax cost of the next dollar.

Navigating the Tax Underwriting Workbench: Next-Dollar Marginal Modeling

Most federal tax calculators apply a single bracket to your total income and call it done. This workbench separates your income into three distinct streams — ordinary, self-employment, and preferential (qualified dividends and long-term capital gains) — then applies the correct US tax rule to each layer. Here is the six-step logic it runs every time you click Analyze.

1

Isolate Form 1040 Ordinary Income from IRC §1221 Capital Assets

W-2 wages and interest go into the ordinary-income stack. Net Schedule C or pass-through profit enters the self-employment lane. Qualified dividends and long-term capital gains use the preferential-rate schedule — a completely separate calculation from your ordinary brackets.

2

Calculate Schedule SE Tax & Above-the-Line Deductions

SE income is multiplied by 92.35% to arrive at the net SE base, then taxed at 15.3% (12.4% Social Security + 2.9% Medicare). Half of that SE tax is then deducted above the line, reducing your AGI-like income before the standard/itemized deduction is applied.

3

Reconcile Schedule A Itemized Deductions vs. Standard Allowances

The tool picks whichever is larger — your entered itemized deductions or the current-year standard deduction based on your filing status ($15,000 single / $30,000 MFJ for 2026). This determines the taxable income base before QBI is applied.

4

Model IRC §199A Qualified Business Income (QBI) Exclusions

If enabled, the simplified Qualified Business Income deduction (up to 20% of net SE income less the half-SE-tax deduction) is subtracted from taxable income. This reduces the ordinary-bracket base for eligible pass-through business owners significantly.

5

Execute Capital-Gains Stacking & Preferential Rate Arbitrage

Qualified dividends and long-term capital gains are taxed at 0%, 15%, or 20% depending on where they land when stacked on top of ordinary taxable income. This stacking effect means a low-ordinary-income earner may pay 0% on significant capital gains — a major planning lever.

6

Run Next-Dollar Marginal Rate Diagnostics

The tool adds a test increment of ordinary income (wages) and a separate test of business income, then measures the marginal federal tax cost of each additional dollar. Because SE tax and QBI interact differently than wages, the two next-dollar rates often diverge significantly.

Core Tax Calculation Flow
SE tax = SE income × 0.9235 × 0.153
AGI-like = Ordinary income + SE income + QD + LTCG − adjustments − (SE tax ÷ 2)
Taxable income = AGI-like − greater(standard deduction, itemized) − QBI deduction
Total federal tax = Ordinary bracket tax + Capital-gain/QD tax + SE tax + NIIT
Effective rate = Total federal tax ÷ (Ordinary income + SE income + QD + LTCG)

📊2026 Federal Income Tax Brackets: Statutory Rates & Marginal Thresholds

Ordinary income brackets are shown below by filing status. Qualified dividends and long-term capital gains follow a separate, lower rate schedule stacked on top of ordinary income.

Rate Single Married Filing Jointly Head of Household Married Filing Separately
10%$0 – $11,925$0 – $23,850$0 – $17,000$0 – $11,925
12%$11,926 – $48,475$23,851 – $96,950$17,001 – $64,850$11,926 – $48,475
22%$48,476 – $103,350$96,951 – $206,700$64,851 – $103,350$48,476 – $103,350
24%$103,351 – $197,300$206,701 – $394,600$103,351 – $197,300$103,351 – $197,300
32%$197,301 – $250,525$394,601 – $501,050$197,301 – $250,500$197,301 – $250,525
35%$250,526 – $626,350$501,051 – $751,600$250,501 – $626,350$250,526 – $375,800
37%Over $626,350Over $751,600Over $626,350Over $375,800
Standard deductions: Single / MFS = $15,000 | MFJ = $30,000 | HOH = $22,500. Capital-gains 0% threshold: $48,350 (Single) / $96,700 (MFJ). NIIT threshold: $200,000 (Single) / $250,000 (MFJ). These are planning-model thresholds; consult IRS.gov for official final figures.

📖Institutional Glossary: Deconstructing U.S. Tax Code Parameters

Ordinary
Marginal Tax Rate

The rate applied to the last dollar of your ordinary taxable income. If you are in the 22% bracket, only the dollars above the 12% threshold are taxed at 22% — all lower-bracket income stays at its lower rate. Your entire income is never taxed at your marginal rate.

Ordinary
Effective Tax Rate

Your total federal tax divided by your total gross income — the real percentage of your earnings that goes to the IRS. For most middle-income households, the effective rate runs 8–18% even when the marginal bracket is 22–24%, because a large share of income sits in lower brackets.

Business
Self-Employment (SE) Tax

The 15.3% payroll tax (Social Security + Medicare) that self-employed individuals pay in full — both the employer and employee halves. It is calculated on 92.35% of net SE income. Half of the SE tax is then deductible above the line, partially offsetting the burden.

Business
QBI Deduction (Section 199A)

The Qualified Business Income deduction allows eligible pass-through business owners (sole proprietors, S-corps, partnerships) to deduct up to 20% of qualified business income from taxable income. Income and business-type limitations apply, especially above approximately $197,300 (single) / $394,600 (MFJ) for 2026.

Investment
Qualified Dividends

Dividends that meet IRS holding period and payer requirements and qualify for the lower long-term capital-gains rate schedule rather than ordinary income rates. Most dividends from US corporations and many foreign corporations held in a standard brokerage account qualify.

Investment
Long-Term Capital Gains (LTCG)

Profits from selling capital assets held more than 12 months. Taxed at 0%, 15%, or 20% depending on taxable income — always more favorably than the ordinary bracket rates. The key planning insight: LTCG are stacked on top of ordinary income when determining which rate tier applies.

Surtax
Net Investment Income Tax (NIIT)

A 3.8% surtax applied to the lesser of (a) net investment income or (b) modified AGI above a threshold — $200,000 for single filers, $250,000 for MFJ. It applies to interest, dividends, capital gains, rents, and royalties, but not wages or SE income. It can push the effective capital-gains rate from 15% to 18.8% or 20% to 23.8%.

Ordinary
Standard Deduction vs. Itemized

The standard deduction reduces taxable income without requiring documentation — $15,000 single and $30,000 MFJ for 2026. Itemized deductions (mortgage interest, state and local taxes capped at $10,000, charitable contributions) are used instead only when they exceed the standard amount. The vast majority of US taxpayers use the standard deduction.

Business
Next-Dollar Marginal Rate

The true combined federal tax rate on one additional dollar of a specific income type. For SE income, the next-dollar rate includes ordinary bracket tax plus SE tax minus the QBI benefit — often 30–40% combined even in the 22% bracket. For wages, it is just the marginal bracket rate plus any applicable FICA up to the Social Security wage base.

Investment
Capital-Gains Rate Stacking

Qualified dividends and LTCG are placed on top of ordinary taxable income on the tax return. This means the 0% rate applies to capital gains up to the gap between your ordinary taxable income and the 0% capital-gains threshold — a critical planning opportunity for lower-income years or Roth conversion years.

💡Fiduciary Directives: Tactical Tax Mitigation for Business Owners & Investors

Harvest 0% Capital Gains in Low-MAGI Sabbatical Years

If your ordinary taxable income is below the 0% capital-gains threshold ($48,350 single for 2026), you can realize long-term capital gains completely tax-free. This is especially powerful in early retirement years, during a business sale gap year, or when doing Roth conversions.

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S-Corp Election Can Cut SE Tax Significantly

A sole proprietor paying SE tax on $120,000 of business income pays roughly $16,955 in SE tax. With a legitimate S-corp election and a $75,000 reasonable salary, SE tax drops to approximately $10,597 — saving over $6,300 annually. Model the next-dollar rates in this calculator before and after an S-corp salary to see the exact impact on your situation.

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Maximize QBI by Timing Income Across Years

The QBI deduction phases out above the taxable income thresholds for specified service trades or businesses (SSTBs). If your income is near the phase-out range, deferring a year-end invoice to January or front-loading deductible expenses into December can preserve a meaningful QBI benefit worth up to $14,000+ annually at the $197,300 threshold.

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Leverage the Half-SE Deduction in W-2 vs. 1099 Entity Comparisons

When comparing the tax cost of self-employment versus W-2 work, remember that the above-the-line deduction for half the SE tax reduces your AGI. This partially offsets the SE tax burden and should be factored into any true cost comparison between business income and employment income at the same gross dollar amount.

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Navigate the 3.8% NIIT Cliff Near $200k/$250k MAGI Limits

Investment income below the NIIT threshold is taxed at 15% or 20%. Once your modified AGI crosses $200,000 (single) or $250,000 (MFJ), every dollar of net investment income above the threshold is subject to an additional 3.8%. A Roth conversion, capital gain realization, or consulting invoice in December can inadvertently push you into NIIT for the full year.

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Optimize Backdoor Roth Conversions Against the 22% and 24% Brackets

Enter your expected ordinary income for the year, then adjust the “Wages / Ordinary Income” field to model Roth conversion amounts. Watch the marginal bracket output — you want to fill up the 12% or 22% bracket without pushing into the next one. Adding $10,000–$30,000 in a low-income year at 12% is dramatically cheaper than the same conversion at 24% after retirement distributions begin.

📋Systemic Tax Modeling: Comparative Real-World Impact Case Studies

Taxpayer Profile Filing Status Ordinary Income SE / LTCG Marginal Bracket Effective Rate (Est.) Key Planning Flag
Single W-2 employee — tech worker Single $95,000 $0 / $0 22% ~16.4% Standard deduction covers most exposure
Married couple — dual W-2 income MFJ $220,000 $0 / $15,000 24% ~19.8% LTCG taxed at 15%; NIIT may not apply yet
Freelance consultant — NYC Single $60,000 $80,000 SE / $0 22% ~24.1% SE tax pushes next-dollar rate to ~35%+
Early retiree — FIRE portfolio withdrawals Single $28,000 $0 / $45,000 12% ~5.2% Most LTCG taxed at 0% — classic FIRE harvest
S-Corp owner — reasonable salary MFJ $80,000 W-2 $120,000 pass-through / $0 22% ~17.3% QBI + S-corp structure cuts SE tax exposure
High-earning investor — capital gains heavy Single $180,000 $0 / $90,000 24% ~22.6% NIIT at 3.8% applies — effective CG rate 18.8%
Married — one earner, stay-at-home spouse MFJ $145,000 $0 / $20,000 22% ~16.0% MFJ doubling of brackets provides major relief
Gig worker — Uber + DoorDash combined Single $12,000 W-2 $38,000 SE / $0 12% ~18.5% SE tax dominates — effective above marginal bracket
High-income surgeon — near NIIT threshold MFJ $420,000 $0 / $30,000 35% ~29.4% NIIT applies; limited QBI for SSTB above phase-out
Roth conversion year — pre-RMD retiree MFJ $55,000 (pension) $0 / $8,000 12% ~7.8% Room to convert $40,000 Roth at 12% before 22% kicks in
*Illustrative estimates. Uses 2026 planning bracket thresholds and standard deductions. SE tax, QBI, and NIIT calculations are simplified. State income taxes, AMT, and credits are excluded. Not tax advice — consult a CPA or tax professional for your specific situation.

Fiduciary FAQ: Alternative Minimum Tax, Passive Activity & Form 1040-ES

Your marginal tax rate is the rate applied only to the last dollars you earn — the top bracket you reach. Your effective tax rate is your total federal tax divided by your total income. They are almost never the same. A single filer with $100,000 of ordinary income has a 22% marginal rate but an effective rate of roughly 15–16%, because the first $15,000 is sheltered by the standard deduction, the next $11,925 is taxed at 10%, and the next $36,550 is taxed at 12% before 22% begins.
A W-2 employee pays only the employee half of FICA — 7.65% up to the Social Security wage base. A self-employed person pays both halves — 15.3% — because they are both employer and employee. On $80,000 of SE income, that is roughly $11,304 in SE tax before income tax even begins. The above-the-line deduction for half the SE tax softens this, but the next-dollar rate for SE income is typically 12–18 percentage points higher than an equivalent wage at the same income level.
The Section 199A QBI deduction allows eligible self-employed individuals and pass-through business owners to deduct up to 20% of qualified business income from their taxable income. Below the threshold (~$197,300 single / ~$394,600 MFJ for 2026), the deduction is available to most qualifying business types. Above the threshold, Specified Service Trades or Businesses (SSTBs) — including doctors, lawyers, consultants, and financial advisors — phase out of eligibility entirely, while non-SSTBs face W-2 wage and capital limitations. This calculator uses a simplified planning estimate and does not model the phase-out rules in full.
Long-term capital gains and qualified dividends are taxed at 0% for single filers with taxable income up to approximately $48,350 for 2026 (and $96,700 for MFJ). The key is that these gains are stacked on top of ordinary income for the test. If your ordinary taxable income is $30,000 and the 0% threshold is $48,350, you have $18,350 of room to realize capital gains completely tax-free. This is a primary strategy for FIRE retirees, early retirement transition years, and anyone with a low-income sabbatical year.
The NIIT is a 3.8% surtax applied to the smaller of (a) your net investment income or (b) the amount by which your modified AGI exceeds the threshold — $200,000 for single filers and $250,000 for MFJ. Net investment income includes interest, dividends, capital gains, rents, royalties, and passive business income, but not wages, SE income, or distributions from qualified retirement plans. A single taxpayer with $180,000 of wages and $40,000 of capital gains owes NIIT only on $20,000 of the gain — the portion that pushes above the $200,000 threshold.
The next-dollar test answers the question: “What does one more dollar actually cost me in federal tax — right now, this year?” For a business owner with $150,000 in SE income, a standard bracket calculator shows a 22% marginal rate. But the true next-dollar cost of additional SE income may be 35–38% once SE tax, the half-SE deduction interaction, and QBI reduction are all modeled together. That is the number that should drive decisions about taking on one more client, taking a year-end distribution, or contributing more to a SEP-IRA to reduce the next-dollar burden.
MFS loses many tax benefits that MFJ enjoys. The standard deduction is $15,000 — identical to single, not the doubled $30,000 MFJ amount. NIIT and capital-gains thresholds are halved. The student loan interest deduction and IRA deductibility phase out at lower incomes. Certain education credits and the Earned Income Tax Credit are fully disallowed for MFS filers. The primary legitimate reason to file MFS is to qualify for income-driven student loan repayment plans, where excluding a spouse’s income from the AGI calculation can substantially reduce monthly payments — worth modeling against the higher tax bill to determine the net benefit.
Yes — and this is one of the highest-leverage tax strategies available to self-employed individuals. The most powerful tools are: (1) SEP-IRA contributions of up to 25% of net SE earnings (max $69,000 for 2026), fully deductible above the line; (2) Solo 401(k) with employee contributions up to $23,500 plus 25% employer contributions; (3) Health insurance premiums deductible above the line if not covered by a spouse’s employer plan; and (4) HSA contributions ($4,300 single / $8,550 family for 2026). Stacking all four deductions can push a self-employed person with $180,000 in SE income down to the 12% bracket with careful planning.
The kiddie tax (IRC Section 1(g)) taxes a dependent child’s unearned income above $2,500 at the parent’s marginal tax rate rather than the child’s own (lower) rate. This directly blocks a common strategy of transferring investments to children to realize gains at 0% capital-gains rates. The kiddie tax applies through age 18 (and age 23 for full-time students not self-supporting). For college students with investment income from a UGMA/UTMA account, this can significantly increase the family’s overall tax bill if not planned for carefully. This calculator does not model the kiddie tax — use it to analyze the parent’s standalone tax picture.
The Additional Medicare Tax (AMT — not to be confused with the Alternative Minimum Tax) is a separate 0.9% surtax on wages and SE income — not investment income — above $200,000 for single filers and $250,000 for MFJ. It applies to the same types of income that already pay regular Medicare tax (2.9%), effectively raising the Medicare rate to 3.8% above the threshold. The NIIT, by contrast, applies to investment income only — dividends, interest, capital gains, rents — and never to wages or SE income. A high-earning W-2 employee above $200,000 owes the Additional Medicare Tax on wages but not NIIT on those same wages. A high-income investor with $210,000 of capital gains and $180,000 in wages may owe NIIT on the investment income but not the Additional Medicare Tax since wages fall below the threshold individually.
The Social Security portion of SE tax (12.4%) only applies to the first $176,100 of net SE income in 2025 (adjusted annually for inflation — expected to be slightly higher for 2026). The Medicare portion (2.9%) has no cap and applies to all net SE income. Once your SE income exceeds the wage base, the marginal SE tax rate drops from 15.3% to 2.9% — a meaningful reduction on high SE income. This means a freelancer earning $250,000 in net SE income pays a higher effective SE tax rate per dollar on the first $176,100 than on the remaining $73,900. When modeling your next-dollar rate on SE income near or above the wage base, the actual SE tax drag is lower than the headline 15.3% rate implies.
A SEP-IRA (Simplified Employee Pension) allows self-employed individuals to contribute up to 25% of net self-employment earnings — defined as net SE income minus the half-SE-tax deduction — up to a maximum of $69,000 for 2025 (expected to increase modestly for 2026). The contribution is fully deductible above the line, directly reducing AGI and taxable income. For a freelancer with $200,000 in net SE income, this can produce a deduction of approximately $37,000–$40,000, potentially dropping them from the 24% into the 22% bracket entirely. SEP-IRAs have no employee-contribution component — only employer contributions — making them simpler but less flexible than a Solo 401(k) for very high earners wanting to maximize contributions.
Self-employed individuals and anyone with significant non-withheld income must pay estimated taxes four times per year to avoid an underpayment penalty. The 2026 due dates are April 15, June 16, September 15, and January 15, 2027. You avoid the penalty if you pay either 100% of last year’s tax liability (110% if prior-year AGI exceeded $150,000) or 90% of the current year’s liability — known as the safe harbor rule. Use this calculator to estimate your total federal tax liability, then divide into quarterly payments. Note that SE tax is included in your estimated payment — it is not withheld separately. Missing or underpaying estimated taxes results in an IRS underpayment penalty calculated at the federal short-term rate plus 3%, compounded daily.
Short-term capital gains — from assets held 12 months or fewer — are taxed at your ordinary income bracket rates, exactly like wages. A single filer in the 22% bracket pays 22% on short-term gains. Long-term capital gains — from assets held more than 12 months — qualify for the preferential rate schedule: 0%, 15%, or 20% depending on total taxable income. For most middle-income investors, this creates a spread of 7–22 percentage points between short-term and long-term rates on the same asset. Holding an appreciated stock position just past the 12-month mark before selling is one of the simplest and most reliable tax-reduction moves available to individual investors in a taxable account.
Yes — net rental income from passive rental activities is included in net investment income for NIIT purposes. If you own rental properties and do not qualify as a Real Estate Professional under IRC Section 469(c)(7) — which requires more than 750 hours per year of real estate activities and more hours in real estate than any other occupation — your net rental income is passive and subject to the 3.8% NIIT once your MAGI exceeds the threshold. Real Estate Professionals can treat rental income as non-passive, removing it from the NIIT base entirely. This is one of the primary reasons high-income earners with rental portfolios pursue Real Estate Professional status with careful documentation of hours.
Head of Household (HOH) provides a larger standard deduction ($22,500 vs. $15,000 for single in 2026) and wider lower brackets, producing a materially lower tax bill than filing as single. To qualify, you must: (1) be unmarried or considered unmarried on the last day of the tax year, (2) have paid more than half the cost of keeping up a home, and (3) have a qualifying person — typically a dependent child or qualifying relative — who lived with you for more than half the year. A divorced parent with primary custody of a child almost always qualifies. Incorrectly claiming HOH status when the requirements are not met is a common IRS audit trigger, particularly around the “considered unmarried” and household cost rules.
Tax-loss harvesting involves selling a security at a loss to generate a realized capital loss that offsets capital gains elsewhere in the portfolio. Net capital losses can also offset up to $3,000 of ordinary income per year, with any excess carried forward indefinitely to future tax years. For example, if you have $20,000 in capital gains and $15,000 in realized losses, your net capital gain is only $5,000. The critical constraint is the wash-sale rule (IRC Section 1091): you cannot buy the same or substantially identical security within 30 days before or after the sale without disallowing the loss. Selling an S&P 500 ETF and immediately buying a similar — but not identical — total market ETF is the standard workaround.
It depends on whether you or your spouse are covered by a workplace retirement plan. If neither spouse is covered by a 401(k) or other workplace plan, Traditional IRA contributions up to $7,000 ($8,000 if age 50+) are fully deductible at any income level. If you are covered by a workplace plan, the deduction phases out between $79,000–$89,000 for single filers and $126,000–$146,000 for MFJ in 2025 (adjusted annually). Above the phase-out, contributions can still be made as non-deductible Traditional IRA contributions — which then become the basis for a potential backdoor Roth conversion strategy for high earners excluded from direct Roth contributions.
The Alternative Minimum Tax is a parallel tax system that disallows certain deductions and exemptions — including the standard deduction, personal exemptions, and SALT deductions — and applies a flat 26% or 28% rate on the resulting AMTI (Alternative Minimum Taxable Income). You pay whichever is higher: regular tax or AMT. The AMT exemption for 2025 is $88,100 for single filers and $137,000 for MFJ, phasing out above $626,350 / $1,252,700. After the TCJA’s 2017 reforms dramatically raised the exemption, AMT primarily affects: (a) single filers earning $200,000–$800,000 with large ISO stock option exercises, (b) high-income filers with significant miscellaneous itemized deductions, and (c) certain business owners with accelerated depreciation. This calculator does not model AMT — consult a CPA if you exercise ISOs or have significant SALT exposure.
The Earned Income Tax Credit is a refundable credit for low-to-moderate income workers — meaning it can reduce your tax below zero and generate a refund even if you owe no tax. The maximum credit for 2025 ranges from $632 (no qualifying children) to $7,830 (three or more qualifying children). To qualify, earned income and AGI must both fall below income thresholds that vary by filing status and number of children — for three children, the phase-out begins around $23,500 (single) and $29,500 (MFJ). Investment income above $11,600 disqualifies you entirely. This calculator focuses on taxpayers with significant ordinary or investment income and does not model the EITC — if your income is in the qualifying range, use the IRS EITC Assistant for an accurate credit estimate.
At low income levels (under ~$60,000 net), a sole proprietorship or single-member LLC (taxed identically to a sole prop by default) is the simplest and cheapest structure. As net SE income climbs toward $80,000–$100,000+, an S-corp election typically becomes worth the setup and compliance costs because it allows the owner to split income between a W-2 salary (subject to FICA) and a pass-through distribution (not subject to FICA or SE tax), with the QBI deduction still applying to the distribution portion. A C-corp is generally disadvantageous for small service businesses due to double taxation — corporate profits taxed at 21%, then dividends taxed again at the shareholder level — but makes sense for venture-backed startups targeting the 0% Qualified Small Business Stock (QSBS) exclusion under IRC Section 1202 on eventual exit. Use the next-dollar rate output from this calculator to quantify the S-corp SE tax savings at your specific income level before paying for entity conversion.
⚠ Legal Disclaimer

IRS Compliance, E-E-A-T Standards & Legal Disclaimer

The Federal Marginal Rate, Income-Type & Business Tax Planning Workbench is provided by USFinanceCalculators.com for educational and informational purposes only. All outputs are simplified planning estimates based on user-provided inputs and a deterministic bracket model. They do not constitute a completed tax return, a formal tax opinion, a determination of actual tax liability, or a guarantee of results.

This calculator intentionally omits: the Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT), the Additional Medicare Tax (0.9% wage surtax), the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC), Child Tax Credit phase-outs, full QBI W-2 wage and capital limitations above the SSTB threshold, passive activity loss rules, at-risk rules, depreciation recapture, state and local income taxes, and the kiddie tax. Bracket thresholds and standard deduction figures are planning estimates for 2026 and may differ from final IRS published figures. The QBI calculation shown is a simplified approximation and does not model the full phase-out or W-2 wage limitation that applies above the taxable income threshold.

Nothing on this page constitutes tax advice, legal advice, financial advice, or a recommendation to adopt any particular business structure, filing position, or income-timing strategy. Tax law can change retroactively by act of Congress at any time. Before making entity elections (S-corp, C-corp), Roth conversion decisions, QBI optimization strategies, or any significant income-timing decisions, consult a licensed IRS Enrolled Agent, a Certified Public Accountant (CPA), or a tax attorney.

By using this tool, you acknowledge that USFinanceCalculators.com, its authors, and its affiliates are not liable for any tax assessments, penalties, interest charges, or financial outcomes arising from reliance on calculator outputs. See our full site disclaimer and privacy policy for complete terms of use.

📋 Editorial Transparency How We Built This Calculator & Where the Numbers Come From

All federal income tax brackets, standard deduction amounts, and filing-status thresholds used in this calculator are derived from IRS Revenue Procedure 2024-40 — the official annual inflation adjustment publication — extended to 2026 using the same COLA methodology. The 2026 figures are planning estimates; final IRS-published thresholds will appear in the corresponding 2025 Rev. Proc. released in late 2025.

Self-employment tax rules follow IRS Tax Topic No. 554 — Self-Employment Tax. The SE tax base (92.35% of net SE income), the 15.3% combined rate, the above-the-line half-SE deduction, and the Social Security wage base are applied exactly as described in that guidance. The QBI deduction model follows IRS Section 199A QBI guidance using a simplified 20%-of-net-SE-income estimate; it does not model the W-2 wage limitation, UBIA of qualified property, or SSTB phase-out in full.

Capital-gains rate schedules and NIIT rules follow IRS Tax Topic No. 409 — Capital Gains and Losses and IRS Net Investment Income Tax Q&A. The stacking methodology — placing preferential income on top of ordinary taxable income to determine the applicable rate — mirrors the IRS qualified dividends and capital-gain tax worksheet in the Form 1040 instructions.

This tool is reviewed periodically and updated when IRS publishes new inflation-adjusted thresholds. USFinanceCalculators.com does not receive compensation from any tax software provider, accounting firm, payroll company, or financial institution for the scenarios, examples, or planning guidance shown on this page. All real-world scenario figures are independently calculated for illustrative purposes only.

📎 Official IRS & Government Resources
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IRS Rev. Proc. 2024-40
Official 2025 inflation-adjusted tax brackets, standard deductions, and thresholds — the source data for this calculator.
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IRS Topic No. 554 — SE Tax
Official self-employment tax rules: base rate, 92.35% multiplier, half-SE deduction, and Social Security wage base.
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IRS Topic No. 409 — Capital Gains
Official 0%/15%/20% capital-gains rate rules, holding period requirements, and stacking methodology.
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IRS NIIT Q&A
Official IRS guidance on the 3.8% Net Investment Income Tax — thresholds, income types, and exclusions.
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IRS Section 199A — QBI Deduction
Official IRS guidance on the 20% Qualified Business Income deduction, SSTB rules, and W-2 wage limitations.
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IRS — Estimated Taxes for Self-Employed
Official IRS page on quarterly estimated tax payment due dates, safe harbor rules, and Form 1040-ES guidance.
External links open the official IRS website (irs.gov) in a new tab. USFinanceCalculators.com is not affiliated with the IRS or any government agency. Links are provided for reference and verification purposes only.