🇺🇸 🇨🇦 US & Canada

Marginal vs effective tax rate, explained simply

Last reviewed: 2026 · Reading time ~5 min

Your marginal rate is the tax on your next dollar. Your effective rate is the tax on your whole income. They're almost never the same — and confusing them leads to genuinely bad money decisions.

A stack of buckets

Both the US and Canada use a progressive system. Picture your income poured into a stack of buckets. The first bucket is taxed at the lowest rate; only the overflow into the next bucket is taxed at the next rate, and so on. No single dollar is ever taxed more than once, and reaching a higher bracket only affects the dollars in that bracket.

Marginal rate

Your marginal rate is the rate on the top bucket your income reaches. If a US single filer's last dollars fall in the 22% bracket, their marginal rate is 22%. This is the number that matters for decisions at the margin: "If I earn $1,000 more, how much do I keep?" or "If I deduct $1,000, how much do I save?"

Effective rate

Your effective rate is total tax divided by total income — the true average. Because most of your income was taxed in the lower buckets, this is always lower than your marginal rate. A US single filer earning $80,000 might have a 22% marginal rate but an effective rate closer to 12%.

The raise myth. "I don't want a raise, it'll push me into a higher bracket and I'll take home less." This is mathematically impossible. Only the dollars above the threshold are taxed at the higher rate — every dollar below stays exactly where it was.

Which number to use when

QuestionUse this rate
Should I make this deductible contribution?Marginal
Is a side gig worth it after tax?Marginal
What share of my pay goes to tax overall?Effective
Comparing total tax burden between yearsEffective

See both for your income

Our income tax calculators show your marginal and effective rates side by side, with the full bracket-by-bracket breakdown.

Try it yourself. Put real numbers into the Income Tax Calculator to see how this applies to you.

This article is general information, not financial, tax, or medical advice. See our disclaimer.