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Tax FilingMarch 10, 2026Updated: July 7, 202618 min read

Standard Deduction 2026: Amounts by Filing Status and What Self-Employed Filers Need to Know

Standard Deduction 2026: Amounts by Filing Status and What Self-Employed Filers Need to Know

The 2026 federal standard deduction is $16,100 for single filers, set by IRS Revenue Procedure 2025-32. Married couples filing jointly get $32,200, heads of household $24,150, and married filing separately $16,100. Taxpayers who are 65 or older or blind add $2,050 (single or HOH) or $1,650 (married) per qualifying condition, and seniors get a separate $6,000 OBBBA deduction through 2028.

Key takeaways:

  • 2026 standard deduction (Revenue Procedure 2025-32): $16,100 single and MFS, $32,200 MFJ, $24,150 head of household
  • Age 65+ or blind adds $2,050 (single/HOH) or $1,650 (married) per qualifying condition
  • Seniors 65+ may also claim the new $6,000 OBBBA senior deduction (2025–2028), phasing out above $75,000 MAGI single / $150,000 MFJ
  • Self-employed filers claim Schedule C business deductions and the standard deduction; the two stack
  • The standard deduction reduces income tax only; it never touches the 15.3% self-employment tax

2026 Standard Deduction Amounts:

Filing StatusStandard Deduction
Single$16,100
Married Filing Jointly$32,200
Head of Household$24,150
Married Filing Separately$16,100

Legal basis: IRC §63 (standard deduction defined), IRS Revenue Procedure 2025-32 (2026 inflation adjustments)


Standard deduction breakdown by filing status


How the Standard Deduction Works

The Basic Concept

The standard deduction is a fixed dollar amount that reduces your adjusted gross income (AGI) to arrive at taxable income. It exists so that taxpayers don't have to track and document every personal expense that might qualify as an itemized deduction.

Here is where it fits in the tax calculation:

StepCalculation
1Gross income
2Minus above-the-line adjustments (1/2 SE tax, SEP IRA, HSA, etc.) = AGI
3Minus standard deduction OR itemized deductions
4Minus QBI deduction (Section 199A)
5= Taxable income, to which tax rates apply

For most taxpayers, the standard deduction produces a better result than itemizing. According to IRS data, roughly 90% of tax returns use the standard deduction.

2026 Amounts in Detail

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), signed into law on July 4, 2025, boosted the standard deduction on top of the annual inflation adjustment. Here are the final 2026 numbers, published by the IRS in Revenue Procedure 2025-32:

Single filers: $16,100. Up from $15,750 in 2025 (as raised by the OBBBA). This means the first $16,100 of your adjusted gross income is not subject to federal income tax.

Married Filing Jointly: $32,200. Up from $31,500 in 2025. This applies when both spouses file a joint return.

Head of Household: $24,150. Up from $23,625 in 2025. You qualify for this status if you're unmarried and pay more than half the cost of maintaining a home for a qualifying person.

Married Filing Separately: $16,100. Same as single. But there's an important restriction: if your spouse itemizes deductions, you must also itemize. You cannot take the standard deduction.

Additional Standard Deduction for Age 65+ and Blind

If you are 65 or older, blind, or both, you get an additional standard deduction on top of the base amount. Each qualifying condition adds to the total:

Single or Head of Household — $2,050 per qualifying condition:

SituationTotal Standard Deduction
Single, age 65+$16,100 + $2,050 = $18,150
Single, blind$16,100 + $2,050 = $18,150
Single, age 65+ AND blind$16,100 + $2,050 + $2,050 = $20,200

Married Filing Jointly — $1,650 per qualifying condition, per spouse:

SituationTotal Standard Deduction
One spouse 65+$32,200 + $1,650 = $33,850
Both spouses 65+$32,200 + $1,650 + $1,650 = $35,500
One spouse 65+ and blind$32,200 + $1,650 + $1,650 = $35,500
Both spouses 65+ and blind$32,200 + ($1,650 × 4) = $38,800

Legal citation: IRC §63(c)(3) defines the additional standard deduction amounts. You're considered 65 on the day before your 65th birthday, so if your birthday is January 1, 2027, you qualify for the 2026 additional deduction.

The New $6,000 Senior Deduction (2025–2028)

On top of the standard deduction and the additional amount for age, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act created a $6,000 deduction for individuals age 65 and older, effective for tax years 2025 through 2028. A married couple where both spouses qualify can claim $12,000. The deduction phases out at a 6% rate once modified adjusted gross income exceeds $75,000 (single) or $150,000 (married filing jointly), and it is available whether you take the standard deduction or itemize.

Worked example: A 67-year-old single freelancer with $60,000 MAGI in 2026 deducts $16,100 (standard) + $2,050 (age 65+) + $6,000 (senior deduction) = $24,150 before the QBI deduction even enters the picture.

Source: IRS: One, Big, Beautiful Bill Act tax deductions


Who CANNOT Take the Standard Deduction

Not everyone is eligible. IRC §63(c)(6) and related provisions restrict the standard deduction for certain taxpayers:

1. Married Filing Separately When Spouse Itemizes

If your spouse files a separate return and itemizes deductions, you must also itemize. You cannot take the standard deduction even if itemizing produces a worse result for you.

Why this matters for business owners: If you and your spouse file separately (common in community property states or when managing liability), coordinate your deduction strategy. One spouse itemizing forces the other to itemize as well.

2. Nonresident Aliens

If you are a nonresident alien (filing Form 1040-NR), you generally cannot take the standard deduction. There are narrow exceptions:

  • Students and business apprentices from India
  • Residents of certain treaty countries with specific treaty provisions

3. Dual-Status Aliens

If you change tax status during the year (from nonresident to resident or vice versa), you file a dual-status return and typically cannot claim the standard deduction for the nonresident portion.

4. Short Tax Year Returns

If your tax year is less than 12 months due to a change in accounting period, the standard deduction is not available.

5. Estates and Trusts

Estates and trusts cannot claim the standard deduction. They must itemize or claim specific deductions allowed under Subchapter J of the tax code.

6. Dependents With Limited Income

If someone claims you as a dependent, your standard deduction is limited to the greater of:

  • $1,350, or
  • Earned income + $450 (up to the full standard deduction amount)

This primarily affects teenagers and college students with part-time income whose parents still claim them.


Standard Deduction vs. Itemized Deductions

When to Itemize Instead

You should itemize if your total itemized deductions exceed the standard deduction. The common itemized deductions are:

Itemized Deduction2026 Limit
State and local taxes (SALT)$40,400 cap for 2026 ($40,000 in 2025; the OBBBA raised it from $10,000)
Mortgage interestOn up to $750,000 of mortgage debt
Charitable contributionsUp to 60% of AGI for cash gifts
Medical expensesExceeding 7.5% of AGI
Casualty and theft lossesOnly from federally declared disasters

The SALT cap change: The OBBBA raised the SALT deduction cap from $10,000 to $40,000 for 2025, and the cap rises 1% per year through 2029 ($40,400 for 2026) before reverting to $10,000 in 2030. This could push more taxpayers into itemizing, especially those in high-tax states like California, New York, and New Jersey.

The Decision Framework

Itemize if:

  • You own a home with a mortgage and pay significant interest
  • You live in a high-income-tax state and your SALT deductions approach the $40,400 cap
  • You made large charitable donations during the year
  • You had significant unreimbursed medical expenses (above 7.5% of AGI)

Take the standard deduction if:

  • You rent your home
  • You live in a state with no income tax
  • Your total potential itemized deductions fall below $16,100 (single) or $32,200 (MFJ)
  • You want simplicity and lower audit risk

Real Example: Single Freelancer in Texas

Potential itemized deductionAmount
State/local taxes paid$0 (Texas has no income tax)
Mortgage interest$5,400
Charitable donations$1,200
Medical expenses above 7.5% of AGI$0
Total itemized$6,600
Standard deduction$16,100

Result: The standard deduction is $9,500 larger.

Real Example: Married Couple in California

Potential itemized deductionAmount
State income tax$18,000
Property tax$12,000
SALT total ($30,000, under the $40,400 cap)$30,000
Mortgage interest$14,000
Charitable donations$3,500
Total itemized$47,500
Standard deduction$32,200

Result: Itemizing gives $15,300 more in deductions.


The Critical Distinction for Self-Employed Filers

This is where most self-employed people get confused, so here is the rule stated plainly: business deductions and the standard deduction are two different steps, and you get both.

Business Deductions and the Standard Deduction Are Separate

Your business deductions go on Schedule C (Profit or Loss From Business). They reduce your net profit, not your taxable income directly. The standard deduction reduces your adjusted gross income to arrive at taxable income.

LineAmount
Gross business revenue$120,000
Less Schedule C deductions (home office, mileage, supplies, software, insurance)-$30,000
Net business profit$90,000
Less above-the-line deduction (1/2 of SE tax)-$6,358
Adjusted gross income$83,642
Less standard deduction-$16,100
Less QBI deduction (20% of QBI)-$18,000
Taxable income$49,542

You get both. Every single Schedule C deduction AND the full standard deduction. They don't cancel each other out. They stack.

Common Schedule C Deductions (Taken Regardless of Standard vs. Itemized)

These deductions reduce your net profit on Schedule C. You claim them whether you take the standard deduction or itemize:

  • Home office deduction: Simplified ($5/sq ft, up to 300 sq ft = $1,500) or actual expenses. Read our full guide
  • Vehicle/mileage: 72.5 cents per mile for 2026 (IRS Notice 2026-10), or actual vehicle expenses. Read our full guide
  • Business supplies and equipment: Section 179 deduction up to $2,560,000 for 2026
  • Professional services: Accounting, legal, consulting fees
  • Business insurance: Liability, E&O, professional insurance
  • Software and subscriptions: Business tools, SaaS, cloud services
  • Marketing and advertising: Website, ads, business cards
  • Travel expenses: Business travel, lodging, transportation. Read our full guide
  • Business meals: 50% of business meals with clients or while traveling

For a complete list: Tax Write-Offs for LLC Owners

Above-the-Line Deductions (Also Separate from Standard Deduction)

These adjustments reduce your AGI and are available whether you take the standard deduction or itemize:

  • Deductible half of self-employment tax: Roughly 7.65% of net earnings
  • Self-employed health insurance deduction: 100% of premiums for you, spouse, and dependents. Read our full guide
  • SEP IRA or Solo 401(k) contributions: Up to $72,000 for 2026 (SEP and total defined-contribution limit); the Solo 401(k) employee deferral is $24,500. Read our full guide
  • HSA contributions: $4,400 individual, $8,750 family for 2026
  • Student loan interest: Up to $2,500

How the Standard Deduction Interacts With the QBI Deduction

The Qualified Business Income (QBI) deduction under Section 199A gives pass-through business owners an additional deduction of up to 20% of their qualified business income. Here's how it works alongside the standard deduction:

The Calculation Order

  1. Calculate net business profit (Schedule C)
  2. Calculate AGI (profit minus above-the-line deductions)
  3. Subtract the standard deduction from AGI
  4. Calculate the QBI deduction (20% of qualified business income)
  5. Subtract the QBI deduction
  6. The result is your taxable income

Important: The standard deduction and QBI deduction are both subtracted from AGI, but they are independent calculations. Taking the standard deduction does not reduce your QBI amount. Your QBI is based on your net business profit, not your AGI.

Example: Full Calculation for a Single Freelancer

LineAmount
Gross freelance revenue$100,000
Less Schedule C deductions-$15,000
Net profit (Schedule C)$85,000
Self-employment tax ($85,000 × 92.35% × 15.3%)$12,010
Less deductible half of SE tax-$6,005
Adjusted gross income$78,995
Less standard deduction-$16,100
Less QBI deduction (20% × $85,000)-$17,000
Taxable income$45,895

This freelancer gets $15,000 in business deductions, a $16,100 standard deduction, AND a $17,000 QBI deduction. Total deductions from gross revenue to taxable income: $54,105.

A precision note: The examples here use the simplified 20%-of-net-profit figure. On the actual return, Form 8995 reduces QBI by the deductible half of SE tax (and any SE health insurance or retirement deductions) before applying the 20%, so the final deduction comes out slightly lower.

For the full QBI deduction guide: QBI Deduction 2026: Maximize Your 20% Pass-Through Tax Deduction


How the Standard Deduction Reduces Your Tax Bill

The standard deduction directly reduces your taxable income, which means it saves you money at your marginal tax rate. The higher your bracket, the more each dollar of standard deduction is worth. Find your bracket in our 2026 Tax Brackets Guide.

Tax Savings by Bracket (Single Filer, $16,100 Standard Deduction)

Marginal Tax RateTax Saved by Standard Deduction
10%$1,610
12%$1,932
22%$3,542
24%$3,864
32%$5,152
35%$5,635
37%$5,957

Note: Your actual savings may span multiple brackets. If your income crosses a bracket boundary, part of the deduction saves at the lower rate and part saves at the higher rate.

What the Standard Deduction Does NOT Reduce

The standard deduction reduces federal income tax only. It does not reduce:

  • Self-employment tax: SE tax is calculated on net profit from Schedule C, before the standard deduction
  • State income tax: States have their own standard deduction amounts (often different from federal)
  • FICA on W-2 wages: If you also have W-2 employment, FICA is calculated separately
  • Net Investment Income Tax (NIIT): The 3.8% surtax is based on AGI thresholds, not taxable income

This distinction is critical for self-employed people: your SE tax bill is based on your net business profit, and the standard deduction has zero effect on it.


Common Mistakes With the Standard Deduction

Mistake #1: Thinking You Must Choose Between Business Deductions and the Standard Deduction

Problem: A freelance graphic designer skips claiming her home office, mileage, and software expenses because she "already takes the standard deduction."

Impact: She leaves $8,000+ in Schedule C deductions unclaimed, overpaying both income tax and self-employment tax.

Solution: Business deductions and the standard deduction are completely separate. Claim every legitimate Schedule C deduction AND the standard deduction. They stack.

Mistake #2: Not Checking Whether Itemizing Beats the Standard Deduction

Problem: A married couple assumes the standard deduction is always better without adding up their potential itemized deductions.

Impact: With the SALT cap now at $40,400 for 2026 (versus $10,000 before the OBBBA), couples in high-tax states may have itemized deductions well above the $32,200 standard deduction.

Solution: Run the numbers both ways every year. Major life changes — buying a home, moving to a high-tax state, large charitable donations — can tip the balance toward itemizing.

Mistake #3: Filing MFS Without Coordinating Deduction Strategy

Problem: One spouse itemizes (they have a mortgage and high state taxes), but the other spouse takes the standard deduction on their separate return.

Impact: This is not allowed. If one spouse itemizes, both must itemize. The second spouse gets forced into itemizing even if their itemized deductions are small.

Solution: Before choosing MFS, both spouses should calculate their total tax liability under MFJ vs. MFS to determine which status produces the lowest combined tax.

Mistake #4: Confusing Federal and State Standard Deductions

Problem: A self-employed consultant assumes his state uses the same standard deduction as the federal return.

Impact: Many states have different (usually lower) standard deduction amounts. Some states don't offer a standard deduction at all (like California, which calls it a different name and sets different amounts).

Solution: Check your state's standard deduction separately. Your state return is a completely different calculation from your federal return.

Mistake #5: Not Claiming the Additional Standard Deduction for Age or Blindness

Problem: A 67-year-old freelance consultant doesn't realize he qualifies for the additional standard deduction.

Impact: He misses an extra $2,050 deduction, costing $451 in tax at the 22% bracket, plus up to $6,000 more from the OBBBA senior deduction if his MAGI is under the phase-out threshold.

Solution: If you're 65 or older or legally blind, claim the additional standard deduction. If married filing jointly and both spouses are 65+, that's an extra $3,300, before the senior deduction.


No Missed Deductions: How Jupid Helps

The standard deduction is the easy part; the hard part is keeping your Schedule C complete all year so the deductions that stack on top of it don't leak away. Jupid is an AI accountant that connects to your bank accounts and categorizes business transactions with 95.9% accuracy, so home office, software, and mileage-adjacent expenses land in the right Schedule C category automatically. Ask "standard or itemized this year?" in WhatsApp or iMessage and Jupid answers from your actual tracked numbers, factoring in the SE tax and QBI layers too. Try Jupid


Resources and Citations

IRS Publications (Official Sources)

Tax Code and Regulations

  • IRC §63(c) — Standard deduction defined and amounts
  • IRC §63(c)(3) — Additional standard deduction for aged and blind
  • IRC §63(c)(6) — Limitations on standard deduction
  • IRC §63(c)(7) — Standard deduction for dependents
  • IRC §199A — Qualified Business Income deduction (QBI)

2026 Key Numbers

Item2026 Amount
Standard deduction (single)$16,100
Standard deduction (MFJ)$32,200
Standard deduction (HOH)$24,150
Standard deduction (MFS)$16,100
Additional deduction (single, 65+/blind)$2,050
Additional deduction (married, 65+/blind)$1,650
OBBBA senior deduction (65+, through 2028)$6,000
SALT cap$40,400
QBI deduction20% of qualified business income

Final Thoughts

The standard deduction is one of the simplest provisions in the tax code, but its interaction with business deductions, above-the-line adjustments, and the QBI deduction creates a layered system that works strongly in favor of self-employed filers, if you understand how the pieces fit together.

Three things to remember:

  1. Business deductions come first. Your Schedule C deductions reduce net profit before anything else. They lower both your income tax and self-employment tax.

  2. The standard deduction stacks on top. After calculating AGI, the standard deduction provides an additional $16,100 (single) or $32,200 (MFJ) reduction in taxable income. It does not replace or conflict with business deductions.

  3. Run the numbers both ways. With the SALT cap at $40,400 for 2026, more taxpayers in high-tax states may benefit from itemizing. But for most self-employed people, especially those in no-income-tax states, the standard deduction will still win. Our Standard vs. Itemized Calculator does the comparison in a minute.

Understanding these layers is the difference between paying only what you owe and overpaying because you left deductions unclaimed.


Disclaimer

This article provides general information about the standard deduction and should not be considered tax advice. Standard deduction amounts, itemized deduction limits, and tax rules are subject to annual changes and legislative updates. Your actual tax liability depends on your filing status, income sources, deductions, and individual circumstances. For advice specific to your situation, consult with a qualified tax professional.

Last Updated: July 7, 2026

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Slava Akulov
Slava Akulov

CEO & Co-Founder

Fintech CEO with 10+ years building accounting and financial technology products. Previously co-founded and scaled an AI-powered accounting platform to $30M revenue and 100K+ business users, achieving 30,000 customers per accountant through automation — recognized by CNBC as a top fintech company. Holds a Master's in Management Information Systems. At Jupid, he leads the development of AI-native bookkeeping, tax, and compliance tools designed for freelancers and small business owners.

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