Visualize how your income is taxed across 2024 US federal brackets with a clear chart.
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이 도구에 대해
The US Tax Bracket Visualizer makes the progressive tax system easy to understand. Enter your gross annual income and choose your filing status (Single, Married Filing Jointly, Married Filing Separately, or Head of Household) to see an interactive stacked bar chart showing exactly how much of your income falls into each federal bracket — 10%, 12%, 22%, 24%, 32%, 35%, and 37%. Below the chart, a detailed breakdown table lists the income taxed at each rate, the tax owed per bracket, and running totals. A summary panel shows your total federal income tax, effective (average) tax rate, marginal rate, FICA contributions (Social Security 6.2% and Medicare 1.45%), and an estimated state income tax using a flat 5% assumption. The take-home pay panel shows your estimated net income after all deductions. Uses 2024 IRS tax brackets and the 2024 standard deduction.
사용 방법
1Enter your gross annual income in dollars.
2Select your filing status from the dropdown.
3The stacked bar chart updates instantly showing income per bracket.
4Read the bracket breakdown table for tax owed at each rate.
5Check the summary panel for your effective rate, marginal rate, and FICA.
6Review the take-home pay estimate at the bottom of the page.
자주 묻는 질문
The marginal rate is the rate applied to the last dollar you earn — the bracket your top income falls into. The effective rate is your total tax divided by your total income — the average rate across all brackets. A common misconception is that earning more money puts all your income in a higher bracket; in reality only the income above each threshold is taxed at the higher rate.
Yes. The 2024 standard deduction ($14,600 for Single filers, $29,200 for Married Filing Jointly, $14,600 for Married Filing Separately, $21,900 for Head of Household) is subtracted from gross income before applying the brackets. If your income is below the standard deduction you owe no federal income tax.
FICA (Federal Insurance Contributions Act) taxes fund Social Security and Medicare. Social Security is 6.2% on wages up to $168,600 (the 2024 wage base). Medicare is 1.45% on all wages with an additional 0.9% surtax on wages above $200,000 (Single) or $250,000 (MFJ). These are separate from income tax and appear in the take-home breakdown.
The tool uses a flat 5% of gross income as a rough average state income tax placeholder. Actual state taxes vary enormously: some states (Florida, Texas, Nevada) have no income tax; others (California, New York) have progressive rates exceeding 13%. Use the figure as a ballpark only and consult your state's tax authority for an accurate calculation.
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