
Our free standard deduction calculator helps you find your exact 2026 standard deduction based on your filing status, age, and vision status â and compares it to itemizing to recommend the option that saves you more in taxes. The standard deduction is a flat dollar amount that reduces your taxable income before federal tax is calculated. For 2026 the base standard deduction is $16,250 for single filers, $32,500 for married filing jointly, and $24,300 for head of household â with additional amounts for taxpayers age 65 or older and those who are blind. About 90% of taxpayers take the standard deduction, but if your itemized deductions are higher, you can save significant money by itemizing instead.
Free Standard Deduction Calculator
Enter your filing status and personal information to see your exact 2026 standard deduction and compare it to itemizing.
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How This Free Standard Deduction Calculator Works
This free standard deduction calculator uses official 2026 IRS standard deduction amounts and add-on rules to determine your exact deduction. Here is how to use it:
Step 1 â Select Filing Status and Income
Choose your 2026 filing status. The five options are single, married filing jointly, married filing separately, head of household, and qualifying surviving spouse. Each status has a different base standard deduction. Enter your annual gross income to see your taxable income after the deduction is applied and your estimated tax savings.
Step 2 â Check Eligibility for Add-Ons
If you (or your spouse if married filing jointly) are age 65 or older by the end of the tax year, you receive an additional standard deduction. The add-on is $2,000 for single/HOH filers or $1,600 each for MFJ. The same add-on amounts apply for blindness â and you can claim both age and blindness add-ons if both apply, doubling the bonus. Check all boxes that apply to you.
Step 3 â Enter Itemized Deductions for Comparison
Enter your potential itemized deductions including mortgage interest, state and local taxes (SALT â capped at $10,000), charitable contributions, qualifying medical expenses (above 7.5% of AGI), and other itemized items. The calculator compares your total itemized deductions against your standard deduction and recommends whichever option saves you more money.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the standard deduction for 2026?
The 2026 standard deduction amounts are: $16,250 for single filers, $32,500 for married filing jointly, $16,250 for married filing separately, $24,300 for head of household, and $32,500 for qualifying surviving spouse. Taxpayers age 65 or older or who are blind receive additional standard deduction amounts on top of the base.
What is the additional standard deduction for age 65?
If you are 65 or older by the end of the tax year, you receive an additional standard deduction. For 2026 the additional amount is $2,000 for single or head of household filers and $1,600 for married filers (per qualifying spouse). The same additional amount applies if you are legally blind. You can claim both â so a single filer who is 65 and blind gets an extra $4,000 added to the base $16,250 standard deduction for a total of $20,250.
Should I take the standard deduction or itemize?
Take whichever is larger. For about 90% of taxpayers, the standard deduction is larger because it has been significantly increased in recent years. You should consider itemizing if you have: a large mortgage with significant interest, high state and local taxes (though capped at $10,000), substantial charitable contributions, or large unreimbursed medical expenses exceeding 7.5% of AGI. This free standard deduction calculator compares both options and recommends the better choice automatically.
Can I take the standard deduction if I am married filing separately?
Yes, but with a major restriction â if you are married filing separately, both spouses must use the same method. If your spouse itemizes, you must also itemize (even if your itemized deductions are zero). If your spouse takes the standard deduction, you can take it too. This rule prevents one spouse from itemizing high deductions while the other claims the standard deduction.
What is the SALT cap?
The SALT cap is the $10,000 limit on state and local taxes you can deduct as an itemized deduction. This includes state income tax, property tax, and (for some states) sales tax â combined and capped at $10,000 per return. The SALT cap was introduced by the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act and significantly reduced the value of itemizing for taxpayers in high-tax states like California, New York, and New Jersey. The cap is the same regardless of filing status, which means MFJ filers effectively have a lower per-person SALT deduction than single filers.
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Understanding the Standard Deduction
Why the Standard Deduction Matters
The standard deduction is one of the most important provisions in the federal tax code because it directly determines how much of your income is taxable. By reducing your gross income before tax brackets are applied, the standard deduction effectively creates a tax-free zone â the first $16,250 (single) or $32,500 (MFJ) of income is not taxed at all. This is why a married couple earning $50,000 pays virtually no federal income tax: nearly two-thirds of their income falls below the standard deduction. The standard deduction was nearly doubled by the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, which is the primary reason most taxpayers no longer benefit from itemizing. The IRS publishes annual standard deduction amounts in IRS Publication 501, which also covers dependents, filing status rules, and additional standard deduction amounts for age and blindness.
When to Choose Itemizing Over the Standard Deduction
While the standard deduction works for about 90% of taxpayers, itemizing still makes sense in specific situations. Homeowners with large mortgages typically generate substantial mortgage interest deductions in the early years of their loan when most payments go to interest. Residents of high-tax states may approach the $10,000 SALT cap quickly through state income tax and property tax combined. Taxpayers who make significant charitable contributions â especially in a single year through bunching strategies â can push itemized deductions above the standard amount. And taxpayers with major medical events that produce expenses above 7.5% of AGI can deduct those costs only by itemizing. The IRS provides comprehensive guidance on itemized deductions in Schedule A instructions, which lists every type of expense that may qualify as an itemized deduction.
