- How does the current Tax structure affect you?
- How will the proposed Tax structure affect you?
Feel free to contact Asher Taxation Law for further consultation or help.
The current U.S. tax structure is a progressive system with multiple layers, primarily administered by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). Here's a breakdown of how it works as of 2025:
🧾 1. Federal Income Tax
Tax rates are progressive, meaning higher income is taxed at higher rates. The brackets for single filers are:
Tax Rate
Income Range (Single)
10%
$0 – $11,600
12%
$11,601 – $47,150
22%
$47,151 – $100,525
24%
$100,526 – $191,950
32%
$191,951 – $243,725
35%
$243,726 – $609,350
37%
Over $609,350
(Ranges double roughly for married couples filing jointly)
A parallel tax system to prevent high-income earners from using too many deductions. If your AMT exceeds regular tax, you pay the higher amount.
🏢 2. Corporate Tax
🧾 3. Payroll Taxes (FICA)
Fund Social Security and Medicare:
Tax
Rate
Wage Limit (2025)
Social Security
6.2% (employee) + 6.2% (employer)
$168,600
Medicare
1.45% (each) + 0.9% surtax for high earners
No limit
Self-employed individuals pay both halves (15.3%), but can deduct the employer portion.
💼 4. Estate and Gift Taxes
🏛️ 5. State and Local Taxes (SALT)
🧮 Summary of Federal Taxes
Type
Who Pays
Key Features
Income Tax
Individuals
Progressive brackets, deductions, credits
Corporate Tax
C-Corps
Flat 21% rate
Payroll Taxes
All workers
Social Security & Medicare
Capital Gains
Investors
Preferential long-term rates
Estate/Gift
Wealthy estates
High exemption thresholds
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