Every year, the IRS adjusts tax brackets, deductions, and credits for inflation. But 2026 brings some significant changes beyond the usual inflation adjustments. If you're wondering what's different this year and how it affects your bottom line, this guide covers everything that changed.
Table of Contents
- Inflation Adjustments: The Annual Updates
- Tax Bracket Changes for 2026
- Standard Deduction Increases
- Retirement Account Contribution Limits
- Tax Credit Updates
- Deduction Changes and Limits
- Estate and Gift Tax Updates
- Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) Adjustments
- What Didn't Change (But People Think It Did)
- How These Changes Affect You
- Action Items for 2026
Inflation Adjustments: The Annual Updates
The IRS uses the Chained Consumer Price Index (C-CPI-U) to adjust most tax parameters for inflation each year. For 2026, the inflation adjustment is 5.4%, which is higher than recent years due to persistent inflation.
Why This Matters
When tax brackets and deductions increase with inflation, you can earn more money before moving into a higher tax bracket. This is called "bracket creep" protection—without these adjustments, inflation would push everyone into higher brackets even if their real purchasing power didn't increase.
Tax Bracket Changes for 2026
All seven tax brackets increased by approximately 5.4%. Here's the complete breakdown:
2026 Federal Income Tax Brackets
Single Filers:
| Taxable Income | Tax Rate | 2025 Amount | 2026 Amount | Increase | |----------------|----------|-------------|-------------|----------| | $0 - $11,600 | 10% | $11,000 | $11,600 | +$600 | | $11,601 - $47,150 | 12% | $44,725 | $47,150 | +$2,425 | | $47,151 - $100,525 | 22% | $95,375 | $100,525 | +$5,150 | | $100,526 - $191,950 | 24% | $182,050 | $191,950 | +$9,900 | | $191,951 - $243,725 | 32% | $231,250 | $243,725 | +$12,475 | | $243,726 - $609,350 | 35% | $578,125 | $609,350 | +$31,225 | | $609,351+ | 37% | $578,126+ | $609,351+ | +$31,225 |
Married Filing Jointly:
| Taxable Income | Tax Rate | 2025 Amount | 2026 Amount | Increase | |----------------|----------|-------------|-------------|----------| | $0 - $23,200 | 10% | $22,000 | $23,200 | +$1,200 | | $23,201 - $94,300 | 12% | $89,450 | $94,300 | +$4,850 | | $94,301 - $201,050 | 22% | $190,750 | $201,050 | +$10,300 | | $201,051 - $383,900 | 24% | $364,200 | $383,900 | +$19,700 | | $383,901 - $487,450 | 32% | $462,500 | $487,450 | +$24,950 | | $487,451 - $731,200 | 35% | $693,750 | $731,200 | +$37,450 | | $731,201+ | 37% | $693,751+ | $731,201+ | +$37,450 |
Head of Household:
| Taxable Income | Tax Rate | 2025 Amount | 2026 Amount | Increase | |----------------|----------|-------------|-------------|----------| | $0 - $16,550 | 10% | $15,700 | $16,550 | +$850 | | $16,551 - $63,100 | 12% | $59,850 | $63,100 | +$3,250 | | $63,101 - $100,500 | 22% | $95,350 | $100,500 | +$5,150 | | $100,501 - $191,950 | 24% | $182,050 | $191,950 | +$9,900 | | $191,951 - $243,700 | 32% | $231,250 | $243,700 | +$12,450 | | $243,701 - $609,350 | 35% | $578,100 | $609,350 | +$31,250 | | $609,351+ | 37% | $578,101+ | $609,351+ | +$31,250 |
What This Means for You
If you earned the same amount in 2025 and 2026, you'll pay slightly less tax in 2026 because more of your income falls into lower brackets. For example:
Example: Single filer with $60,000 taxable income
- 2025: $8,023 in taxes
- 2026: $7,953 in taxes
- Savings: $70
While $70 might not seem like much, it adds up across millions of taxpayers and represents real purchasing power protection.
Standard Deduction Increases
The standard deduction is the amount you can subtract from your income before calculating taxes. Most taxpayers take this instead of itemizing.
2026 Standard Deduction Amounts
| Filing Status | 2025 Amount | 2026 Amount | Increase | |---------------|-------------|-------------|----------| | Single | $14,600 | $15,400 | +$800 | | Married Filing Jointly | $29,200 | $30,800 | +$1,600 | | Married Filing Separately | $14,600 | $15,400 | +$800 | | Head of Household | $21,900 | $23,100 | +$1,200 |
Additional Standard Deduction for Age 65+ or Blind
- Single or Head of Household: +$1,550 (up from $1,500)
- Married Filing Jointly or Separately: +$1,250 (up from $1,200)
Example: Married couple, both 65+, filing jointly
- Base standard deduction: $30,800
- Additional for age (both): +$2,500
- Total: $33,300
Impact of Standard Deduction Increase
A higher standard deduction means:
- More people will take the standard deduction (fewer will itemize)
- Lower taxable income for most taxpayers
- Less tax owed overall
Real Example: Single filer with $50,000 gross income
- 2025: $50,000 - $14,600 = $35,400 taxable → $4,023 tax
- 2026: $50,000 - $15,400 = $34,600 taxable → $3,952 tax
- Savings: $71
Retirement Account Contribution Limits
Retirement account limits increased significantly for 2026, giving you more opportunities to save tax-free.
401(k), 403(b), and Most 457 Plans
- 2025 Limit: $23,000
- 2026 Limit: $24,000
- Catch-up (Age 50+): $7,500 (unchanged)
Total possible contribution for 50+: $31,500
Traditional and Roth IRAs
- 2025 Limit: $7,000
- 2026 Limit: $7,500
- Catch-up (Age 50+): $1,000 (unchanged, but total is now $8,500)
SIMPLE IRAs
- 2025 Limit: $16,000
- 2026 Limit: $17,000
- Catch-up (Age 50+): $3,500 (unchanged)
SEP-IRAs
- 2025 Limit: $69,000 (25% of compensation)
- 2026 Limit: $72,000 (25% of compensation)
Why This Matters
Higher contribution limits mean:
- More pre-tax savings (reduces current year taxable income)
- More tax-free growth
- Better retirement security
- Lower tax bills now if you max out contributions
Example: Single filer earning $100,000, maxing out 401(k)
- 2025: $100,000 - $23,000 = $77,000 AGI
- 2026: $100,000 - $24,000 = $76,000 AGI
- Tax savings: ~$220 (at 22% bracket)
Tax Credit Updates
Child Tax Credit
- Amount: $2,000 per child (unchanged)
- Refundable portion: Up to $1,600 (up from $1,500)
- Phase-out begins: $200,000 AGI (single) / $400,000 (married) - unchanged
What Changed: The refundable portion increased, meaning low-income families can get more money back even if they don't owe taxes.
Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC)
EITC amounts increased for inflation:
| Filing Status | Children | 2025 Max Credit | 2026 Max Credit | |---------------|----------|-----------------|-----------------| | Single/Head of Household | 0 | $632 | $666 | | Single/Head of Household | 1 | $4,213 | $4,443 | | Single/Head of Household | 2 | $6,960 | $7,340 | | Single/Head of Household | 3+ | $7,830 | $8,256 | | Married Filing Jointly | 0 | $632 | $666 | | Married Filing Jointly | 1 | $4,213 | $4,443 | | Married Filing Jointly | 2 | $6,960 | $7,340 | | Married Filing Jointly | 3+ | $7,830 | $8,256 |
Income limits also increased to account for inflation.
American Opportunity Tax Credit (AOTC)
- Amount: $2,500 (unchanged)
- Phase-out begins: $80,000 AGI (single) / $160,000 (married) - unchanged
- 100% refundable: Up to $1,000 (unchanged)
Lifetime Learning Credit
- Amount: $2,000 (unchanged)
- Phase-out begins: $80,000 AGI (single) / $160,000 (married) - unchanged
- Not refundable (unchanged)
Deduction Changes and Limits
State and Local Tax (SALT) Deduction Cap
- 2025: $10,000
- 2026: $10,000 (unchanged)
This remains a hot-button issue, especially for high-tax states like California, New York, and New Jersey.
Mortgage Interest Deduction
- Limit: Interest on up to $750,000 of mortgage debt (unchanged)
- Grandfathered loans: Up to $1,000,000 (for loans before Dec 15, 2017)
Medical Expense Deduction
- Threshold: 7.5% of AGI (unchanged)
- Only expenses above this threshold are deductible
Charitable Contribution Deduction
- Cash contributions: Up to 60% of AGI (unchanged)
- Non-cash contributions: Up to 30% of AGI (unchanged)
- Carryforward: 5 years for excess contributions (unchanged)
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Estate and Gift Tax Updates
Estate Tax Exemption
- 2025: $13,610,000 per person
- 2026: $14,320,000 per person
- Married couples: Can combine exemptions = $28,640,000
Important: This exemption is scheduled to decrease significantly in 2026 if Congress doesn't extend current law. The exemption was temporarily doubled by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act and is set to revert to ~$7 million per person in 2026.
Annual Gift Tax Exclusion
- 2025: $18,000 per recipient
- 2026: $19,000 per recipient
You can give up to $19,000 per person per year without using any of your lifetime estate/gift tax exemption.
Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) Adjustments
The AMT exemption amounts increased:
| Filing Status | 2025 Exemption | 2026 Exemption | |---------------|----------------|----------------| | Single | $85,700 | $90,400 | | Married Filing Jointly | $133,300 | $140,600 |
Phase-out thresholds also increased proportionally.
What Didn't Change (But People Think It Did)
Tax Rates
- All seven tax rates remain the same: 10%, 12%, 22%, 24%, 32%, 35%, 37%
- No new tax brackets were added
- No rates were increased or decreased
Capital Gains Tax Rates
- Long-term capital gains rates: 0%, 15%, 20% (unchanged)
- Short-term capital gains: Taxed as ordinary income (unchanged)
- Net Investment Income Tax (NIIT): 3.8% on investment income above thresholds (unchanged)
Social Security Tax
- Rate: 6.2% for employees, 6.2% for employers (unchanged)
- Wage base: $168,600 (up from $160,200)
- Self-employment rate: 12.4% on first $168,600 of net earnings
Medicare Tax
- Rate: 1.45% for employees and employers (unchanged)
- Additional Medicare Tax: 0.9% on income above $200,000 (single) / $250,000 (married) - unchanged
How These Changes Affect You
If You're a W-2 Employee
- Slightly lower taxes due to bracket and deduction increases
- Consider increasing 401(k) contributions to the new $24,000 limit
- Review your W-4 to ensure proper withholding
If You're Self-Employed
- Higher retirement contribution limits ($72,000 for SEP-IRA)
- Higher standard deduction reduces taxable income
- Quarterly estimated tax payments may need adjustment
If You're Retired
- Higher standard deduction (especially with age 65+ bonus)
- IRA contribution limits increased if you have earned income
- Social Security wage base increased (affects those still working)
If You Have Children
- Slightly higher EITC if you qualify
- Child Tax Credit refundable portion increased
- No change to the $2,000 per child credit amount
If You're High Income
- Higher bracket thresholds mean you can earn more before hitting higher rates
- Estate tax exemption increased (but watch for potential 2026 sunset)
- SALT deduction cap remains at $10,000
Action Items for 2026
1. Update Your Withholding
Use the IRS Tax Withholding Estimator to ensure you're not over- or under-withholding.
2. Maximize Retirement Contributions
- Increase 401(k) contributions to $24,000 (or $31,500 if 50+)
- Consider maxing out IRA at $7,500 ($8,500 if 50+)
- If self-employed, explore SEP-IRA ($72,000 limit)
3. Review Your Tax Strategy
- Determine if you'll itemize or take standard deduction
- Plan charitable contributions
- Consider tax-loss harvesting for investments
- Review estate planning (especially given potential exemption changes)
4. Stay Organized
- Keep receipts for deductions
- Track charitable contributions
- Document business expenses
- Maintain records of home improvements (for future sale)
5. Consider Professional Help
If your situation is complex (self-employment, investments, estate planning), consider hiring a tax professional to ensure you're taking advantage of all changes.
Bottom Line
2026 brings mostly inflation adjustments rather than major structural changes. The key updates are:
✅ Higher tax brackets (more income before higher rates kick in) ✅ Higher standard deduction (less taxable income) ✅ Higher retirement contribution limits (more tax-advantaged savings) ✅ Slightly higher credits (especially EITC and refundable Child Tax Credit)
The net effect: Most taxpayers will pay slightly less in taxes for 2026, assuming their income stays the same. However, if your income increased with inflation, you may see similar or slightly higher tax bills.
Most Important: Don't assume everything stayed the same. Review these changes and adjust your tax planning accordingly. Small adjustments now can save significant money come tax time.