Standard Deduction 2026 — Filing Status Thresholds and When to Itemize
Key Takeaways
- The 2026 standard deduction is $16,100 for single filers and $32,200 for married couples filing jointly, reflecting a 2.8% inflation adjustment.
- Roughly 90% of taxpayers benefit from the standard deduction over itemizing, largely because of the $10,000 SALT cap.
- Taxpayers aged 65 or older receive an additional $1,600 to $2,050 standard deduction, further reducing the incentive to itemize.
- Homeowners in high-tax states with large mortgages remain the group most likely to benefit from itemizing.
- The elevated standard deduction framework depends on continued congressional extension beyond the TCJA provisions.
The standard deduction is the single most impactful line item on most Americans' tax returns. For the 2026 tax year, the IRS has raised the standard deduction to $16,100 for single filers and $32,200 for married couples filing jointly — increases driven by cumulative inflation adjustments under the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act framework. These higher thresholds mean that even more taxpayers will find the standard deduction more beneficial than itemizing.
Understanding when to take the standard deduction versus itemizing is not just an academic exercise. The decision directly determines how much taxable income you report to the IRS, and getting it wrong in either direction costs real money. Roughly 90% of taxpayers currently claim the standard deduction, but that does not mean itemizing is never the better choice — particularly for homeowners with large mortgages, residents of high-tax states, or individuals with significant charitable giving.
This guide breaks down the 2026 standard deduction amounts by filing status, explains the additional deductions available to taxpayers over 65 or those who are blind, and provides a practical framework for deciding whether to itemize. If you have already read our [Federal Tax Brackets for 2026](/article/federal-tax-brackets-for-2026-rates-income-thresholds-and-filing-strategies) guide, this article picks up where that one left off.
2026 Standard Deduction by Filing Status
2026 Standard Deduction by Filing Status
Taxpayers who can be claimed as dependents on someone else's return face a different calculation. Their standard deduction is limited to the greater of $1,350 or their earned income plus $450, up to the regular standard deduction amount for their filing status.
Additional Standard Deduction for Age and Blindness
Itemized Deductions — What Qualifies and Common Misconceptions
When to Itemize — A Decision Framework
Itemizing Breakeven — Expenses Needed to Beat Standard Deduction
How Inflation Adjustments Affect Your Standard Deduction Over Time
The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 nearly doubled the standard deduction and introduced annual inflation adjustments using the Chained Consumer Price Index (C-CPI-U). This index typically grows more slowly than the traditional CPI because it accounts for consumer substitution behavior — when beef gets expensive, people buy chicken.
Since 2018, the standard deduction for single filers has risen from $12,000 to $16,100, a cumulative increase of 34.2%. For married couples, it has climbed from $24,000 to $32,200. These adjustments have kept pace with — and in some years slightly exceeded — actual inflation, effectively protecting taxpayers from bracket creep on the deduction side.
However, the TCJA provisions are currently set to sunset after 2025 under the original law's terms. Congressional action in late 2025 extended the framework through 2026, maintaining the elevated standard deduction and the $10,000 SALT cap. Whether these provisions continue beyond 2026 depends on future legislation. If the standard deduction were to revert to pre-TCJA levels (adjusted for inflation, roughly $8,500 for single filers), significantly more taxpayers would find itemizing beneficial again.
With the Consumer Price Index at 326.6 as of January 2026 and the Federal Reserve holding the federal funds rate at 3.64%, the inflationary environment suggests continued modest increases to the standard deduction in future years — assuming Congress maintains the current framework.
Conclusion
The standard deduction is the default tax benefit for the vast majority of American taxpayers, and the 2026 amounts — $16,100 for single filers and $32,200 for married couples — continue the upward trajectory established by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. For most people, the standard deduction is the right choice: it is simpler, requires no documentation, and eliminates audit risk on Schedule A.
But simplicity should not override arithmetic. If you own a home with a substantial mortgage in a high-tax state, or if you made significant charitable contributions, run the numbers. The $10,000 SALT cap remains the key constraint that pushes most taxpayers toward the standard deduction, but it does not eliminate the value of itemizing for those whose qualifying expenses genuinely exceed the threshold.
For a complete picture of how the standard deduction interacts with the broader tax system, read our guide to [Federal Tax Brackets for 2026](/article/federal-tax-brackets-for-2026-rates-income-thresholds-and-filing-strategies) and our breakdown of [Capital Gains Tax](/article/capital-gains-tax-explained-short-term-vs-long-term-rates-and-how-to-minimize-your-tax-bill) rates. Together, these three guides cover the core elements of federal tax planning for the current tax year.
Frequently Asked Questions
Sources & References
www.irs.gov
fred.stlouisfed.org
Disclaimer: This content is AI-generated for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Consult qualified professionals before making investment decisions.