Your Business and Individual Tax Rates for 2023

  • Tax strategies
  • 1/5/2023
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The IRS announced the 2023 tax rates, which went into effect on January 1. Look up the key individual and businesses federal tax rates and limits for 2023 in the tables below.

Reference this information as you prepare for and make decisions throughout the year.

Filing Rates
Individual Tax Rate   Filing Status 
Married Filing Jointly (MFJ)   Single  Married Filing Separately   Head of Household  
10%   Up to $22,000  Up to $11,000 
Up to $11,000 
Up to $15,700 
12%  $22,001 – $89,450 
$11,001 – $44,725 
$11,001 – $44,725 
$15,701 – $59,850 
22%  $89,451 – $190,750 
$44,726 – $95,375 
$44,726 – $95,375 
$59,851 – $95,350 
24%  $190,751– $364,200 
$95,376 – $182,100 
$95,376 – $182,100 
$95,351 – $182,100 
32%  $364,201 – $462,500   $182,101– $231,250 
$182,101 – $231,250 
$182,101 – $231,250 
35%  $462,501 – $693,750 
$231,251– $578,125 
$231,251 – $346,875 
$231,251– $578,100 
37%  More than $693,750  More than $578,125 
More than $346,875 
More than $578,100 
Standard Deduction
Standard deduction — single and married filing separately 
$13,850 
Additional deduction age 65 or older — single 
$1,850 
Standard deduction — married filing jointly 
$27,700 
Additional deduction age 65 or older — married filing jointly and married filing separately 
$1,500 
Standard deduction — head of household
$20,800 
Additional deduction age 65 or older — head of household 
$1,850 
Note: the personal exemption was suspended by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 for the tax years 2018 to 2025. 
Retirement Plans
Maximum annual benefit for defined benefit plan  Up to $265,000 
Defined contribution annual addition  $66,000 
Defined contribution compensation limit  $330,000 
401(k) maximum exclusion  $22,500 
401(k) catch-up contribution (for individuals 50 or older)  $7,500 
SIMPLE contribution limit  $15,500 
SIMPLE catch-up contribution (for individuals 50 or older)  $3,500 
IRA contribution limitation (in general)  $6,500 
IRA catch-up contribution (for individuals 50 or older)  $1,000 
Payroll Taxes
Social Security (self-employed) combined rate (OASDI + Medicare)  (6.2% + 1.45%) x 2 = 15.3% 
Social Security (employee) rate (OASDI + Medicare)  (6.2% + 1.45%) = 7.65% 
OASDI contribution base  $160,200 
Medicare contribution base  Unlimited 
Additional Medicare Payroll Tax on earnings more than $200,000 (single) and $250,000 (combined, married filing jointly)  0.9% 
FUTA wage base  $7,000 
FUTA rate  6% 
Social Security
Maximum earned income while receiving Social Security benefits  under full retirement age  $21,240 
in the year you reach full retirement age  $21,240 
full retirement age (once reached)  No limit 
Education Phase-Outs
American Opportunity Credit (formerly Hope Credit)  MFJ: $160,000 – $180,000 
Other filers: $80,000 – $90,000 
Lifetime Learning Credit  MFJ: $160,000 – $180,000 
Other Filers: $80,000 – $90,000 
Student loan interest deduction  MFJ: $155,000 – $185,000 
Single: $75,000 – $90,000 
Health Savings Accounts
HSA contribution limit (single insurance coverage)  $3,850 
HSA contribution limit (family insurance coverage)  $7,750  
HSA catch-up contribution (age 55 or older)  $1,000 
179 Limitation, Gift & Estate Tax Exclusions, and Kiddie Tax
Section 179 limitation  $1,160,000 
Annual gift tax exclusion  $17,000 
Estate tax exclusion amount  $12,920,000 
Kiddie tax base amount   $1,250 
Travel
High cost per diem travel rate within continental United States (high/low method)  $297 
Low cost per diem travel rate within continental United States (high/low method)  $204 
Mileage Rates
Business  $.65.5 per mile 
Medical/Moving  $.22 per mile 
Charitable  $.14 per mile 

View the tax rates from previous years:

How we can help

As your needs evolve, contact your advisor at each step to see how these rates might apply to your business, estate, or personal situation.

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