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Marginal Tax Rate: What It Is and How To Determine It, With Examples

Marginal Tax Rate Marginal Tax Rate

Investopedia / Candra Huff

What Is the Marginal Tax Rate?

Your marginal tax rate is the tax rate that you pay on your highest dollar of taxable income. The federal marginal tax rate for individuals in the United States increases as their income rises. As income grows, the highest dollar earned will fall into a higher tax bracket. This means that your marginal tax rate will likely be higher than your effective tax rate, which is the average rate you pay on all your income.

This method of taxation is known as progressive taxation. It aims to tax individuals based on their earnings so that low-income earners are taxed at a lower rate than higher-income earners.

Key Takeaways

  • The marginal tax rate is the tax rate paid on the highest dollar of income.
  • Under the progressive income tax method used for federal income tax in the U.S., the marginal tax rate increases as income increases.
  • Marginal tax rates are separated into seven tax brackets by income levels.
  • Individuals aren't taxed solely at the rate of the tax bracket they fall into (unless they fall into the lowest tax bracket).
  • Taxes are calculated at various rates as taxable income rises through the tax brackets.

Understanding the Marginal Tax Rate

Taxpayers are divided into tax brackets or ranges, under a marginal tax rate. The brackets determine the rate applied to increments of the filer's taxable income.

As income increases, the last dollar of taxable income will be taxed at a higher rate than the first dollar earned (which is taxed at the rate for the lowest tax bracket). The last dollar earned will be taxed at the rate of the highest bracket that a taxpayer reaches and all the money in between is taxed at the rate for the range into which it falls.

Laws can change and affect marginal tax rates. The existing marginal tax rates went into effect in the U.S. on Jan. 1, 2018, due to the passage of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA). The TCJA kept the seven-bracket structure but adjustments were made to the tax rate percentages and the income levels.

The rates under the TCJA are 10%, 12%, 22%, 24%, 32%, 35%, and 37%. Prior to the change, the rates were 10%, 15%, 25%, 28%, 33%, 35%, and 39.6%. The TCJA rate cuts are set to expire in 2026, at which point the rates will return to the pre-TCJA level if the act is not extended.

Marginal vs. Flat Tax

Another type of tax rate is the flat tax rate, which several states implement for state income tax. Under this system of taxation, people aren’t taxed on a scale as they are with the marginal tax rate. They're taxed at a flat rate across the board. Everyone is charged the same rate, regardless of their income level.

Most systems that use a flat tax rate don't allow for deductions. Flat tax systems are seen in countries with a rising economy. Those who support this system of taxation describe it as fair because it taxes all people and businesses at the same rate. Those who oppose it believe that it results in high-income taxpayers paying less than they should for an equitable society.

Marginal Tax Rate Example

The table below shows the rates and income levels for three types of taxpayers filing for tax year 2024: single, married filing jointly, and heads of household.

IRS Tax Brackets for Tax Year 2024
Rate For Singles With Taxable Income Over For Married Filing Jointly With Taxable Income Over For Heads of Household With Taxable Income Over
10% $0  $0  $0  
12% $11,600 $23,200 $16,550
22% $47,150 $94,300 $63,100
24% $100,525 $201,050 $100,500
32% $191,950 $383,900 $191,950
35% $243,725 $487,450 $243,700
37% $609,350 $731,200 $609,350

Individuals who make smaller amounts of income fall into the lower marginal tax rate brackets, while higher-earning individuals reach higher marginal tax brackets.

But the tax rate for the marginal tax bracket into which an individual falls isn't the sole rate that determines the tax on their entire income. For instance, if you fall into the 24% tax bracket based on your total taxable income, that total income isn't taxed at 24%. The portion of it that falls in the 10%, 12%, and 22% brackets is taxed at those rates. Only the portion above those brackets would be taxed at 24%.

That's because, as mentioned, income taxes are assessed progressively, with each bracket having a range of income values that are taxed at that particular rate. 

Let's work through an example. A single taxpayer who earned $150,000 in taxable income would owe the following income tax for tax year 2024:

  • 10% Bracket: ($11,600 - $0) x 10% = $1,160
  • 12% Bracket: ($47,150 - $11,600) x 12% = $4,266
  • 22% Bracket: ($100,525 - $47,150) x 22% = $11,742 
  • 24% Bracket: ($150,000 - $100,525) x 24% = $11,874
  • 32% Bracket: Not applicable
  • 35% Bracket: Not applicable
  • 37% Bracket: Not applicable

The entire tax liability for this individual would be $29,042 ($1,160 + $4,266 + $11,742 + $11,874). This would work out to an average or effective tax rate of 19.36% ($29,042 divided by total income of $150,000).

The tax rates of the brackets remain constant regardless of a person's filing status. However, the dollar range to which each bracket applies changes depending on whether the filer is a single person, a married joint filer, or a head-of-household filer.

In addition, the dollar range of each marginal tax bracket typically increases annually to account for inflation as well due to a provision in the tax code referred to as indexing.

What Is the Effective Tax Rate?

The effective tax rate is the overall percentage of income that an individual or a corporation pays in taxes. The effective tax rate for individuals is the average rate at which their earned income (such as wages) and unearned income (such as stock dividends) is taxed. The effective tax rate for a corporation is the average rate at which its pre-tax profits are taxed.

What Is the Difference Between Effective and Marginal Tax Rates?

The effective tax rate is a more accurate representation of a person's or corporation's overall tax liability than their marginal tax rate, and it's typically lower. The marginal tax rate refers to the highest tax bracket into which their income falls. In a progressive income tax system like the one in the United States, income is taxed at differing rates that rise as income increases to certain thresholds. Two individuals or companies with income in the same upper marginal tax bracket may end up with very different effective tax rates depending on how much of their income was in the top bracket.

What Is a Flat Tax?

A flat tax, also known as a regressive tax, applies the same tax rate to every taxpayer regardless of income bracket. No deductions or exemptions are allowed. Most flat tax systems or proposals do not tax income from dividends, distributions, capital gains, or other investments.

The Bottom Line

The U.S. has a marginal tax rate system with different tax brackets (with ever-increasing tax rates) kicking in at different levels of income. You're taxed at a certain rate for certain amounts of income that progressively get larger.

That is, you won't pay 37%, the top tax rate, on all of $1,000,000 if you make that amount. You would instead pay the marginal rates on income within each tax bracket up to $609,350 of income (for single filers). Only the last $390,650 would be subject to the 37% rate.

CorrectionNov. 8, 2023: This article has been corrected to reflect that the marginal tax rate is higher than the effective or average tax rate and to update federal tax brackets.

Article Sources
Investopedia requires writers to use primary sources to support their work. These include white papers, government data, original reporting, and interviews with industry experts. We also reference original research from other reputable publishers where appropriate. You can learn more about the standards we follow in producing accurate, unbiased content in our editorial policy.
  1. Congress.gov “H.R.1 - An Act To Provide for Reconciliation Pursuant to Titles II and V of the Concurrent Resolution on the Budget for Fiscal Year 2018.”

  2. Congressional Research Service. “The 2017 Tax Revision (P.L. 115-97): Comparison to 2017 Tax Law.” Page CRS-8.

  3. Tax Foundation. "State Individual Income Tax Rates and Brackets, 2024.”

  4. Internal Revenue Service. “Internal Revenue Bulletin: 2023-48.”

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