Tax Brackets Explained Simply: Why a Raise Never Hurts
One of the biggest myths in personal finance: "I don't want a raise because it'll put me in a higher tax bracket." This is wrong, and understanding why will make you a better financial decision maker.
How Brackets Actually Work
Tax brackets are like a staircase. Only the income on each "step" is taxed at that rate. Find your exact bracket with our Tax Bracket Calculator.
Example: $85,000 Single Filer
First $11,925 at 10% = $1,193. Next $36,550 at 12% = $4,386. Remaining $36,525 at 22% = $8,036. Total: $13,615. Your effective rate is 16%, not 22%. A $5,000 raise only adds $1,100 in tax (22%), giving you $3,900 more.
See the Impact on Your Paycheck
Use our Paycheck Calculator to see how a raise changes your take-home pay. Check your Income Tax for the full picture. Then invest the difference with our Compound Interest Calculator.
FC
FinCalcs Editorial Team
Reviewed by certified financial planners. Updated March 2026.
Reviewed by certified financial planners. Updated March 2026.
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