Skip to content

Even After Deductions and Credits, the Income Tax System Is Progressive

1 min readBy: Andrew Lundeen, Scott Hodge

People mistakenly believe that because the rich benefit from many popular tax deductions and credits, they pay a lower average (or “effective”) taxA tax is a mandatory payment or charge collected by local, state, and national governments from individuals or businesses to cover the costs of general government services, goods, and activities. rate than other taxpayers. This is not the case. The average tax rate for all Americans is about 10.4 percent. However, taxpayers earning over $1 million pay a 23 percent effective rate and taxpayers earning over $250,000 pay a 21 percent effective rate— more than twice the national average.

Meanwhile, “middle class” taxpayers earning between $50,000 and $100,000 pay an effective rate below the national average—just 9 percent. The effective tax rate for Americans making less than $30,000—who owe no income taxes—is actually negative due to refundable credits that give them a check back from the IRS.

For more charts like the one below, see the second edition of our chart book, Putting a Face on America's Tax Returns.

Share this article

About the Authors

Andrew Lundeen

Director of Federal Projects
Scott Hodge Tax Foundation
Expert

Scott Hodge

President Emeritus

Scott Hodge is President Emeritus of the Tax Foundation, which he led as President for over two decades, between 2000 and 2022. Scott Hodge is recognized as one of Washington’s leading experts on tax policy, the federal budget, and government spending.