Radio
Now Playing
Quickyla Radio โ€” Click to play
Open โ†’
3 min left
Back to News

37% of married couples pay more in taxes than they would as singles โ€” and the worst hit earn just $75,000

Two years ago, a friend told Erin Antler she wasn't planning to legally marry. The reason was taxes. Antler laughed it off โ€” until she got married herself. She realized on their first joint return af

37% of married couples pay more in taxes than they would as singles โ€” and the worst hit earn just $75,000
Yahoo Finance โ€” 10 July 2026
Text:
29 0 0

Two years ago, a friend told Erin Antler she wasn't planning to legally marry. The reason was taxes. Antler laughed it off โ€” until she got married her

Read Full Story at Yahoo Finance โ†’
โšก Quickyla Analysis Original editorial context โ€” not sourced from the article above

Why This Matters

The marriage penalty in the U.S. tax code isnโ€™t just an abstract policy quirkโ€”itโ€™s a financial reality shaping life choices for millions. For couples like Antler, the decision to marry isnโ€™t solely about love or commitment; itโ€™s a calculus of potential penalties that can erase thousands in savings. This issue forces a reckoning with how the tax system inadvertently discourages marriage at precisely the moment when families are building futures together.

Background Context

The marriage penalty emerged from the progressive tax systemโ€™s structure, where joint filers face higher marginal rates than singles earning the same combined income. While the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act reduced penalties for higher earners, it left lower- and middle-income couplesโ€”like those earning $75,000โ€”vulnerable. Historically, this flaw has been a bipartisan blind spot, with reform efforts stymied by fiscal trade-offs and competing priorities.

What Happens Next

With inflation eroding purchasing power, more couples may reassess marriage as a financial burden rather than a milestone. Policymakers could face renewed pressure to revisit marriage penalty relief, but the fiscal climate makes such reforms uncertain. Meanwhile, financial advisors may see a surge in demand for tax-planning strategies to mitigate penalties, reshaping their role in pre-marital counseling.

Advertisement
React:
Sources
Sponsored

More to Read

Fire and floods hit Ghanaโ€™s capital as residents are left sโ€ฆ
๐Ÿ“ˆ Markets & Finance
Fire and floods hit Ghanaโ€™s capital as residents are left stranded
Al Jazeera ยท 15 days ago
Jazz ร  Vienne celebrates late Miles Davis for 45th edition
๐Ÿ“ˆ Markets & Finance
Jazz ร  Vienne celebrates late Miles Davis for 45th edition
France 24 ยท 15 days ago
Ondo Finance debuts SEC-aligned tokenized stock model with โ€ฆ
๐Ÿ“ˆ Markets & Finance
Ondo Finance debuts SEC-aligned tokenized stock model with BlackRock ETF, Micron shares
CoinDesk ยท 12 days ago
Why Copart Stock Stumbled Today
โš”๏ธ War & Conflict
Why Copart Stock Stumbled Today
Nasdaq News ยท 15 days ago
PBM lobby goes on the offensive
๐Ÿ›๏ธ Politics
PBM lobby goes on the offensive
The Hill ยท 15 days ago
NextSTEP-3 B: Moon Base Demonstrations
๐Ÿ’ป Technology
NextSTEP-3 B: Moon Base Demonstrations
NASA ยท 14 days ago
Full view