Many
tax
figures
are
annually
adjusted
for
inflation
and
typically
increase
each
year
(or
at
least
every
few
years).
For
2026,
some
additional
changes
are
going
into
effect
under
the
One
Big
Beautiful
Bill
Act,
signed
into
law
July
4,
2025.
Here’s
an
overview
of
some
important
limits
and
other
tax
figures
for
2026.
Keep
in
mind
that
exceptions
or
additional
rules
or
limits
may
apply.
Standard
deduction
-
Single
and
married
filing
separately:
$16,100
-
Head
of
household:
$24,150
-
Married
couples
filing
jointly:
$32,200
-
Additional
standard
deduction
for
those
age
65
or
older
and/or
blind:
$2,050
($1,650
per
spouse
if
married).
For
taxpayers
both
65
or
older
and
blind,
the
additional
deduction
is
doubled.
Itemized
deduction
limits
-
Casualty
loss
deduction:
only
for
eligible
losses
from
federally
or
(new
for
2026)
state-declared
disasters
-
Charitable
deduction
floor
(new
for
2026):
0.5%
of
adjusted
gross
income
(AGI)
-
Mortgage
interest
deduction:
interest
on
qualified
debt
up
to
$750,000
-
Medical
expense
deduction
floor:
7.5%
of
AGI
-
State
and
local
tax
deduction:
$40,400
-
Overall
limit
for
higher-income
taxpayers
(new
for
2026):
Generally,
the
tax
benefit
from
itemized
deductions
for
taxpayers
in
the
37%
bracket
will
be
as
if
they
were
in
the
35%
bracket
Retirement
plan
limits
-
Traditional
and
Roth
IRA
contributions:
$7,500
-
Traditional
and
Roth
IRA
catch-up
contributions
for
those
age
50
or
older: $1,100
-
401(k),
403(b)
and
457
plan
deferrals:
$24,500
-
401(k),
403(b)
and
457
plan
catch-up
contributions
for
those
age
50
or
older: $8,000
-
401(k),
403(b)
and
457
plan
additional
catch-up
contributions
for
those
age
60,
61,
62
or
63: $3,250
-
SIMPLE
deferrals:
$17,000
-
SIMPLE
catch-up
contributions
for
those
age
50
or
older:
$4,000
-
SIMPLE
additional
catch-up
contributions
for
those
age
60,
61,
62
or
63: $1,250
-
Contributions
to
defined
contribution
plans:
$72,000
-
Annual
benefit
limit
for
defined
benefit
plans:
$290,000
Other
tax-advantaged
savings
limits
-
Health
Savings
Account
(HSA)
contributions:
$4,400
for
individuals,
$8,750
for
family
coverage
-
Health
Flexible
Spending
Account
(FSA)
contributions:
$3,400
-
Child
and
dependent
care
FSA
contributions:
$7,500
-
Trump
account
contributions:
$5,000
Estate
planning
-
Gift
and
estate
tax
exemption:
$15
million
-
Generation-skipping
transfer
tax
exemption:
$15
million
-
Annual
gift
tax
exclusion:
$19,000
(unchanged
from
2025)
2026
tax
planning
These
are
only
some
of
the
figures
and
limits
that
could
affect
your
2026
taxes.
To
learn
more
and
begin
planning
for
the
new
year,
contact
us.
©
2025