Debunking Tax Brackets, Marginal vs Effective Tax Rates Explained
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In this episode of The Divorce the IRS Podcast, Jimmy Miller tackles one of the most damaging tax myths in America, the belief that earning more money can actually make you worse off. After more than two decades of working with clients, Jimmy has seen how deeply misunderstood our tax system really is, and how that confusion leads people to avoid raises, overtime, and smart income opportunities out of fear of higher taxes.
Jimmy explains how the U.S. uses a progressive tax system, where different portions of your income are taxed at different rates. Only the last dollars you earn are taxed at the higher bracket, not all of your income, yet many people wrongly believe that crossing into a new bracket raises the tax rate on everything they make. That misunderstanding has cost families years of lost income and missed opportunity.
From there, Jimmy introduces the two ways taxes must be measured, marginal tax rates and effective tax rates. The marginal rate is what you pay on your last dollar earned, while the effective rate shows what you truly pay on average across all of your income. Using a simple real world example, he shows how someone who ends up in the 22 percent tax bracket may only be paying around 12 percent in actual taxes.
By understanding these two measurements, you gain a much clearer picture of what the IRS is really taking from you. This foundation is critical for building a tax free retirement and avoiding strategies that look good on paper but fail in real life. This episode sets the stage for deeper tax planning by giving you the clarity needed to make smarter income and investment decisions.
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