If two people each make $500k (nowhere close to the average/median, but it illustrates the point). They would pay the 39.6% rate on anything over $400k if single, or 2 * 100k * .396 = $79.2k. If married filing jointly, they would pay 39.6% on anything over $450k, or 550k * .396 = $217.8k. If filing separately, they would pay the same $217.8k (2 * 275k * 39.6%).
Even looking at something like each making $150k, the marginal tax rate for singles is 28% and the rate for a married couple is 33%.
martingordon|13 years ago
If two people each make $500k (nowhere close to the average/median, but it illustrates the point). They would pay the 39.6% rate on anything over $400k if single, or 2 * 100k * .396 = $79.2k. If married filing jointly, they would pay 39.6% on anything over $450k, or 550k * .396 = $217.8k. If filing separately, they would pay the same $217.8k (2 * 275k * 39.6%).
Even looking at something like each making $150k, the marginal tax rate for singles is 28% and the rate for a married couple is 33%.
unknown|13 years ago
[deleted]
jcampbell1|13 years ago
2) Married filing separately is not even remotely the same as filing as a single.
unknown|13 years ago
[deleted]