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Are Americans overpaying taxes in 2026? Here’s how to fix it

by January 6, 2026
by January 6, 2026 0 comment

The IRS has quietly handed most American workers a modest tax break starting this month, but fewer are likely aware of it.

Inflation adjustments and changes from the One Big Beautiful Bill Act have lifted 2026 tax brackets and the standard deduction, meaning many taxpayers could keep slightly more of each paycheck.

But, here’s the catch: whether you actually benefit depends entirely on updating your tax withholding, and most people won’t do that until April.​

What changed for American taxpayers: Brackets rise, but rates stay put

The seven federal income tax rates, 10%, 12%, 22%, 24%, 32%, 35%, and 37%, remain unchanged.

What moved are the income thresholds where you enter each bracket.

Single filers now enter the 12% bracket at $12,400 instead of $11,925. Married couples filing jointly move into that bracket at $24,800 instead of $23,850.

The top 37% bracket for single filers begins at $640,600, up from $626,350.​

For most workers, the real story is the standard deduction.

Single filers get $16,100 in 2026, a $350 bump from 2025. Married couples filing jointly claim $32,200, also up $350 from 2025.

Heads of household get $24,150. That additional deduction means more of your income escapes taxation before the IRS calculates what you owe.​

The IRS is essentially using inflation adjustments, roughly 2.7% across all brackets, to prevent “bracket creep,” a phenomenon where wage growth pushes you into higher tax brackets even though your purchasing power hasn’t budged.

It’s a fairness mechanism that’s been automatic since 1985, but most people don’t notice it because the math happens silently at the agency level.​

The bigger legislative change came through the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, passed late last year.

That law made permanent the increased standard deduction and the permanent elimination of personal exemptions.

It also introduced new deductions for tips, overtime pay, and car-loan interest, provisions that now appear on the redesigned 2026 Form W-4.​

Practical impact: Check your withholding now

Here’s where Americans typically stumble.

The IRS can’t adjust your paychecks automatically. Your employer does that based on the Form W-4 you filed, probably years ago.

If you haven’t updated yours since 2020, your withholding likely reflects old brackets and old deductions.

That means you are probably having too much tax withheld each pay period.​

Worse, most people don’t realise this until they file taxes in April and get a refund. That refund is actually an interest-free loan you gave the federal government all year long.

To fix this now, take three quick steps.

First, review your most recent paystub and compare your year-to-date withholding against your actual tax liability. The IRS offers a free withholding estimator tool on its website.

Second, fill out a fresh Form W-4 if you want more take-home pay. The new 2026 version includes explicit lines for tips, overtime, new car-loan interest, and additional deductions for seniors 65 and older.

Third, submit it to your payroll department before the end of January so the changes take effect on your next paycheck.​

Many Americans may see slightly fatter paychecks in 2026, but that benefit evaporates if your employer is still withholding using a 2019 W-4.

The adjustment is real. The opportunity is now. Check your withholding this week, and talk to payroll or a tax professional if anything looks amiss.

Waiting until April to discover you’ve overpaid the IRS all year serves no one but the government’s cash flow.

The post Are Americans overpaying taxes in 2026? Here’s how to fix it appeared first on Invezz

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