๐ŸŒ Tax Freedom
๐Ÿ“Š Core Concept

Marginal vs Effective Tax Rate: What's the Difference?

“I don't want a raise โ€” it'll push me into a higher tax bracket and I'll take home less.” This widespread fear is almost always wrong. Here is why.

By the My Tax Freedom Day Editorial Team ยท Last reviewed June 29, 2026

Two rates that sound alike but mean opposite things

Your marginal tax rate is the rate charged on your next dollar of income โ€” the rate of your highest bracket. Your effective tax rate is the average rate across all your income: total tax divided by total income. They are almost never the same number, and the gap between them is the source of endless confusion.

The key fact that dissolves most of the confusion: in a progressive system, tax brackets are marginal. A bracket rate applies only to the income that falls inside that band, not to your whole income. Moving into a higher bracket only changes the tax on the dollars above the threshold โ€” never on the dollars below it.

A worked example

Imagine a simplified system with three brackets: 0% on the first 15,000, 20% on income from 15,000 to 50,000, and 40% above 50,000. Now suppose you earn 60,000.

  • The first 15,000 is taxed at 0% → 0.
  • The next 35,000 (from 15,000 to 50,000) is taxed at 20% → 7,000.
  • The final 10,000 (from 50,000 to 60,000) is taxed at 40% → 4,000.

Total tax is 11,000 on 60,000 of income. Your marginal rate is 40% โ€” the rate on your last dollar. But your effective rate is 11,000 / 60,000 = 18.3%. You are “in the 40% bracket,” yet less than a fifth of your income actually goes to income tax. Tax Freedom Day is built on that 18.3%, not the 40%.

Why the raise always helps

Now suppose you get a 5,000 raise, taking you from 60,000 to 65,000. Only the new 5,000 is taxed at the 40% marginal rate, costing 2,000 in tax. You keep the other 3,000. There is no cliff where crossing a bracket boundary makes your total take-home pay fall. Your effective rate rises slightly โ€” from 18.3% to about 20% โ€” but your after-tax income still goes up. The fear of “earning less because of a higher bracket” comes from imagining the top rate applies to everything, which it never does.

There are real exceptions, but they are about benefit withdrawal and allowance tapering, not tax brackets themselves. In some countries a personal allowance is withdrawn over a certain income, or a means-tested benefit phases out, creating a high effective marginal rate over a narrow band. Those are specific, identifiable traps โ€” not a general reason to refuse a raise.

Which rate should you care about?

It depends on the decision. For “should I take this extra work, bonus or raise?” the marginal rate is what matters, because it tells you how much of the next amount you keep. For “what is my overall tax burden?” โ€” and therefore for Tax Freedom Day โ€” the effective rate is the right number, because it describes your whole income.

This is also why a flat “tax bracket” headline tells you very little about someone's actual burden. Two people in the same top bracket can have very different effective rates depending on allowances, deductions, pension contributions and how their income is split. The only way to know your real burden is to compute the average, which is what the Tax Freedom Day calculator does for you.

The takeaway

Marginal rate = the rate on your next dollar; effective rate = the average across all your dollars. Progressive brackets mean your effective rate is always lower than your top marginal rate. A raise can never reduce your total take-home pay through brackets alone. And when anyone quotes a scary “tax bracket,” the honest follow-up question is always: but what is the effective rate?

๐Ÿงฎ Try the related calculators

Sources & further reading

Figures are drawn from official national tax authorities and the OECD Taxing Wages dataset for the 2025โ€“2026 period, summarised on our Methodology & Data Sources page. This article is educational and is not tax, legal, or financial advice; confirm specifics with your national revenue agency or a qualified adviser.