Tax Refund Estimator
Estimate whether you'll get a refund or owe money for 2025 or 2024. Enter your income, withholdings, estimated payments, and tax credits to see your estimated refund or balance due.
Estimated Refund
$2,051Your 10.6% effective rate is below the national median of 13.2% for incomes $75k–$100k.
Based on IRS Statistics of Income data. Individual results vary.
Why this number?
For your income range ($75k–$100k), the national median effective rate is 13.2%. Your rate is 2.6pp below the median.
| Total Income | $75,000 |
| Deduction | ($15,750) |
| Taxable Income | $59,250 |
| Federal Income Tax | $7,949 |
| Federal Tax After Credits | $7,949 |
| Total Payments (withheld + estimated) | $10,000 |
| Estimated Refund | $2,051 |
How Form 1040 computes your refund — step by step
- Gross income (line 9) — wages + interest + dividends + capital gains + Schedule C/E/F + IRA/pension + taxable Social Security + alimony (pre-2019 divorces).
- Adjustments (Schedule 1 Part II) — traditional IRA, HSA, half SE tax, student loan interest, educator expenses, self-employed health insurance. Result: AGI (line 11).
- Deductions (line 12) — larger of standard ($15,750 single / $31,500 MFJ 2025) or itemized via Schedule A. §199A QBI (line 13) — 20% pass-through.
- Taxable income (line 15) = AGI − deductions − QBI. Tax (line 16) from bracket table (10/12/22/24/32/35/37).
- Non-refundable credits (Schedule 3 line 6) — CTC ($1,500/child non-refundable portion), ODC, AOTC 60%, LLC, foreign tax credit, savers credit, dependent care.
- Other taxes (Schedule 2) — SE tax, NIIT 3.8%, Additional Medicare 0.9%, AMT.
- Total tax (line 24).
- Payments + refundable credits (Schedule 3 line 11 + 1040 line 25-33) — W-2 withholding (Box 2), 1040-ES, ACTC, refundable AOTC, EITC, Premium Tax Credit, prior-year refund applied.
- REFUND (line 34) = total payments > total tax. BALANCE DUE (line 37) = total tax > total payments.
Withholding vs estimated payments
W-2 withholding
Pay-by-pay federal income tax + 6.2% Social Security + 1.45% Medicare withheld by employer. Controlled by Form W-4. Treated as paid EVENLY across the year for §6654 underpayment-penalty purposes — even if mostly withheld in Q4.
1040-ES estimated payments
Quarterly payments for non-wage income (Schedule C, rental, dividends). Due April 15, June 15, Sept 15, Jan 15. Treated as paid on the date paid for §6654 — Q4 overpayment doesn't cover Q1 underpayment.
Penalty safe harbors (Form 2210): pay 90% of CURRENT year's tax OR 100% of PRIOR year's tax (110% if prior AGI > $150k). The prior-year safe-harbor is the "set it and forget it" — match last year's total and you're penalty-free, even if this year's tax is much higher.
2025 vs 2026 key values
| Item | 2025 | 2026 | Authority |
|---|---|---|---|
| Standard deduction (single) | $15,750 | $16,100 | OBBBA §70101 |
| Standard deduction (MFJ) | $31,500 | $32,200 | OBBBA §70101 |
| CTC per child <17 | $2,200 | $2,200 | OBBBA §70104 |
| CTC refundable max (ACTC) | $1,700 | $1,700 | IRC §24(d) |
| Credit for Other Dependents (ODC) | $500 | $500 | IRC §24(h)(4) |
| CTC phaseout starts | $200,000 / $400,000 | $200,000 / $400,000 | IRC §24(b)(2) (not indexed) |
Common refund-killing mistakes
- Dual-W-4 under-withholding. Both spouses' W-4s set to MFJ status without Step 2 multi-job adjustment → each employer withholds as if only one income → guaranteed balance due.
- Missing Form 1098-T for AOTC. Without the 1098-T (or one of the §25A(g)(8) exceptions) the IRS automatically denies AOTC — math-error notice arrives 3-6 months after filing.
- Forgetting the PATH Act delay. EITC/ACTC refunds are HELD until February 15 minimum. Filing January 24 doesn't get you a refund until early March.
- Claiming child as both QC and ODC. Schedule 8812 distinguishes — under-17 with SSN = CTC ($2,200), 17+/dependent = ODC ($500). Software handles automatically but manual filers swap them.
- Direct-deposit routing errors. Wrong routing/account number → bank rejects → IRS mails paper check (adds 4-6 weeks). Triple-check before filing.
- Ignoring state refund taxability. Last year's state tax refund is taxable federal income THIS year IF you itemized last year and took the SALT deduction (Form 1099-G).
Frequently asked questions
How does the IRS calculate my refund?
Form 1040 follows a specific sequence. (1) GROSS INCOME — line 9: W-2 wages + 1099-INT/DIV interest and dividends + Schedule C/E/F business/rental/farm + capital gains + alimony (pre-2019) + IRA/pension distributions + Social Security taxable portion. (2) ADJUSTMENTS — line 10: traditional IRA, HSA, self-employment tax, student loan interest, educator expenses → ADJUSTED GROSS INCOME (AGI). (3) DEDUCTIONS — line 12: larger of standard deduction ($15,750 single / $31,500 MFJ for 2025, post-OBBBA) or itemized (Schedule A). (4) §199A QBI deduction — line 13. (5) TAXABLE INCOME — line 15. (6) TAX — line 16: bracket table 10-37%. (7) NON-REFUNDABLE CREDITS — Schedule 3 line 6. (8) OTHER TAXES — Schedule 2. (9) PAYMENTS + REFUNDABLE CREDITS — W-2 withholding + 1040-ES + refundable CTC + refundable AOTC + EITC. (10) REFUND or BALANCE DUE = total payments − total tax.
What is the 2025 Child Tax Credit?
OBBBA §70104 raised the CTC from $2,000 to $2,200 per qualifying child under age 17, effective for tax year 2025+. Up to $1,700 per child is REFUNDABLE as the Additional Child Tax Credit (ACTC) under §24(d) — paid even if you owe no tax, computed as 15% of earned income above $2,500. The non-refundable portion of $500 per child only offsets tax owed. Phaseout: $50 per $1,000 of MAGI above $200,000 single / $400,000 MFJ. A two-child family loses the full CTC at $230k single / $430k MFJ. Children must have a valid SSN issued before the due date of the return — ITIN children are barred from CTC entirely (TCJA change, retained under OBBBA).
What is the Credit for Other Dependents (ODC)?
Per IRC §24(h)(4), the $500 non-refundable Credit for Other Dependents covers dependents who don't qualify as "qualifying child" for CTC — most commonly: children 17+, college students 17-23, elderly parents you support, disabled adult dependents, ITIN-only children. Same phaseout as CTC ($50 per $1,000 above $200,000/$400,000). The ODC is fully non-refundable — wasted if you owe no federal tax. Common audit issue: declaring an elderly parent as ODC requires you to provide more than half their support AND the parent's gross income must be below the exemption amount ($5,050 for 2025).
How does Form W-4 withholding affect my refund?
Form W-4 (Employee's Withholding Certificate) tells your employer how much federal income tax to withhold from each paycheck. Steps: 1 — filing status. 2 — multiple-job adjustment (highest leakage point — both spouses working but each W-4 set as if their job is the only one means under-withholding). 3 — claim dependents (multiplies CTC equivalent). 4(a) — additional non-wage income. 4(b) — itemized deductions over standard. 4(c) — extra withholding per pay period. Form 8959 reconciles the 0.9% Additional Medicare Tax employers must withhold above $200k single per employer — but doesn't account for combined-job thresholds, so dual-W-2 high-earner couples often owe at filing.
When will I receive my refund?
IRS standard: 21 days for e-filed returns with direct deposit. Paper-filed returns: 6-8 weeks. Holds and delays: (1) PATH Act §201 (2015) requires the IRS to HOLD refunds containing EITC or Additional CTC until after February 15 — even early filers wait until early March. (2) Identity verification (Letter 5071C, 4883C, 6042C) pauses processing until you respond at idverify.irs.gov. (3) Amended returns (1040-X) take 16 weeks. Track at irs.gov/refunds — refund status updates daily after midnight, e-filed returns appear within 24 hours, paper within 4 weeks. Direct deposit splits across up to 3 accounts via Form 8888.
Why did my refund shrink this year?
Six common causes: (1) WAGES rose — pushed you into a higher bracket or out of credits. (2) EMPLOYER withheld less — common after a W-4 update if you over-corrected. (3) Lost dependent — kids aging out of CTC (turning 17) lose $1,700 each in credit. (4) Capital gains or freelance income that didn't have withholding. (5) Phaseout — MAGI rose past credit thresholds (CTC at $200,000/$400,000, EITC much lower). (6) STATE refund — last year's state refund is taxable federal income this year if you itemized last year. Common misread: refund SHRINKING doesn't mean you paid more tax — often the opposite (less over-withheld). Compare TOTAL FEDERAL TAX (line 24) year over year, not refund amount.
Should I aim for zero refund or a big refund?
Mathematically optimal: ZERO. A $5,000 refund means you gave the IRS a $5,000 interest-free loan — at 5% market rate that's $250 of lost interest. But behavioral economics complicates: many filers use refunds as forced savings, retiring debt, or funding annual goals. Adjust W-4 to break even ONLY if you'd actually save the difference each month — otherwise the refund psychology can be net positive. To zero out: use the IRS Tax Withholding Estimator (irs.gov/individuals/tax-withholding-estimator) in February for prior-year basis and mid-year for current updates. Major life events (marriage, divorce, child, home purchase, job change, large bonus) should always trigger a fresh W-4.
What's the difference between refundable and non-refundable credits?
REFUNDABLE credit: paid even if tax owed is $0 — the credit can EXCEED your tax liability and the excess is refunded. Examples: EITC (fully refundable), Additional CTC (up to $1,700/child), Premium Tax Credit (Affordable Care Act marketplace), 40% of AOTC (up to $1,000). NON-REFUNDABLE credit: only reduces tax owed to zero; any excess is wasted. Examples: $500 ODC, $500/$1,000 Retirement Savings Contributions Credit, foreign tax credit (with carryover), LLC, residual 60% of AOTC, dependent care credit. Refundable credits are why many low-income filers get refunds far exceeding their withholding.
What if I owe money instead?
Pay by the April filing deadline (April 15 for most filers) to avoid penalties. Three options: (1) FULL PAY via IRS Direct Pay (bank), credit card (fee ~1.85%), or check. (2) SHORT-TERM PAYMENT PLAN — up to 180 days, $0 setup fee, interest at federal short-term rate + 3% (currently ~8%). (3) LONG-TERM INSTALLMENT AGREEMENT (Form 9465) — up to 72 months, $31 setup fee (direct debit) or $130 (other), same interest rate, plus 0.25%/month failure-to-pay penalty if not on direct debit. Estimated tax penalty (Form 2210) for under-withholding: avoided if total payments cover 90% of current-year tax OR 100% of prior-year tax (110% if prior AGI > $150k).
What's the 2026 standard deduction?
For 2026, the standard deduction is $16,100 single / $32,200 MFJ (Rev. Proc. 2025-32). HoH is $24,150, MFS half of MFJ at $16,100. These reflect OBBBA §70101's permanent enlargement (overrode the TCJA sunset that would have cut them by ~40% in 2026). Additional standard deduction for age 65+ or blind: $1,600 each (MFJ/QW) or $2,000 each (single/HoH) — stacks if both. OBBBA §70103 added a temporary $6,000 (single) / $12,000 (MFJ) BONUS standard deduction for taxpayers 65+ with MAGI under $75k/$150k for 2025-2028 — a sunset benefit specifically for older filers.
How do quarterly estimated payments work?
If you have non-wage income (Schedule C, rental, large dividends, capital gains, K-1) that won't be covered by W-2 withholding, the IRS requires quarterly estimated payments (Form 1040-ES) by April 15, June 15, September 15, and January 15. Calculate using: prior year safe harbor (pay 100% of prior year's total tax, or 110% if AGI exceeded $150k); current year safe harbor (pay 90% of current year tax). Underpayment penalty (Form 2210) computed quarter-by-quarter — even if you over-pay Q4, you can owe Q1-Q3 penalty. Payments via IRS Direct Pay (bank, free), EFTPS (free), credit card (fee), check (mail).
Sources
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