14 01 2019
Tax-Filing in 2019: What's My Tax Bracket?
Here's how to determine what tax bracket you fall into and its impact on taxes owed.
DETERMINING WHICH TAX bracket your income falls into is surprisingly complex. But performing this calculation can be instrumental in helping you find strategies to reduce your federal tax bill and double-check any calculations done by a tax-software program or tax preparer.
Taxpayers in 2019 should know that the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act generally reduced tax rates. But they should also note that the increased standard deduction and loss of personal exemptions, among other factors, will impact the calculations used to determine the tax bracket into which their income falls.
In general, there are seven tax brackets for ordinary income – 10 percent, 12 percent, 22 percent, 24 percent, 32 percent, 35 percent and 37 percent – with the bracket determined by filers' taxable income. The federal government uses a progressive tax system, which means that filers with higher incomes pay higher tax rates. It's also graduated in such a way so that taxpayers don't pay the same rate on every dollar earned, but instead pay higher rates on each dollar that exceeds a certain threshold.
To determine your tax bracket and its impact on your tax liability, follow these steps:
- Identify your filing status.
- Tally your income.
- Explore the income tax brackets for 2019.
- Understand the marginal rate vs. effective rate.
- Consider ways to lower your tax rate.
Read on for additional information about each of these tax-filing processes – and how to use them to reduce your bill or increase your tax refund this year.
Identify Your Filing Status
Before you know which tax bracket your income falls into, you have to know your tax-filing status. Common statuses include:
- Single
- Married filing jointly
- Married filing separately
- Head of household
The status you'll use will depend on whether you're single or married, have qualifying dependents and other aspects of your specific tax situation. Many married couples file taxes jointly, but some may choose to file separately to reduce their student loan payments or because they're in the process of divorcing.
Tally Your Income
Full disclosure: This step is difficult to do by hand, but it can be a worthwhile exercise.
First, calculate earnings from your work, investments, alimony, rental properties and other sources, then subtract any income that is considered an exclusion by the tax code, such as proceeds from a life insurance policy. That calculation will yield your gross income.
"Gross income is pretty much everything, and it's defined in the law as income from all sources unless there's an exception in the tax code," says Chris Raulston, a Memphis, Tennessee-based wealth strategist at Raymond James.
Next, you'll subtract certain tax adjustments, such as student loan interest and contributions to an individual retirement account, or IRA, to figure out your adjusted gross income.
Feeling tired? You're not done yet.
After determining adjusted gross income, you'll need to subtract tax deductions. That involves deciding whether to take the standard deduction ($12,000 for single filers; $24,000 for married filing jointly) or itemize, which you do by manually subtracting below-the-line deductions, such as charitable contributions and mortgage interest.
Finally, you'll have reached your taxable income and can start to determine your tax bracket using this number. To complicate things, certain investment income is taxed at a capital gains rate and not at the ordinary income rate. So, keep that in mind as you do this exercise.
Understand the Marginal Rate vs. Effective Rate
Say you're a single filer who earned $50,000 in 2018 in taxable income. You'll use the table to determine that you fall into the 22 percent tax bracket, which is known as your "marginal rate." But that doesn't mean you pay 22 percent of every taxable dollar to Uncle Sam. "Just because your income may fall into the 22 percent or 24 percent tax bracket, it doesn't mean all your income is taxed at 22 percent or 24 percent," says Mark Jaeger, the Cedar Rapids, Iowa-based director of tax development at tax software company TaxAct.
Instead, you're paying 22 percent on any amount you earn above $38,700. So, your effective tax rate will actually look like this:
10 percent x $9,525 = $952.50
12 percent x $29,175 ($38,700 - $9,525) = $3,501
22 percent x $11,300 ($50,000 - $38,700) = $2,486
Your total tax liability will be the total of those amounts, or $6,939.50, which is a nearly 14 percent effective rate.
Consider Ways to Lower Your Tax Rate
To lower their tax bill, filers may want to use strategies to place themselves in a lower tax bracket, especially if their taxable income falls right on the cutoff line between brackets.
Before the end of the tax year is the best time to consider moves such as delaying income or making contributions to certain accounts, such as health savings accounts and retirement funds, experts say. But there is one more move they can make after Jan. 1. "Now that we're in 2019, making those moves is starting to wind down," Jaeger says. "But you can still make that traditional IRA deduction through April 15." So if you're looking to reduce taxable income for the taxes paid in 2019, make this retirement plan contribution before filing your taxes.
Work with your tax preparer or financial advisor to identify additional ways to lower your tax bracket. A financial professional may suggest "bunching" deductions in 2019, for example, to qualify to make itemized deductions and lower your tax bill.
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