What is the Marriage Penalty? The marriage penalty refers to higher taxes
levied when a couple is married then the total of the taxes they would have
paid as individuals. In fact, filing a
joint tax return can have a negative effect, penalty, or a positive effect,
bonus, depending on the income and deductions for the individuals getting married. Generally, lower and middle income
individuals do not get hit with the penalty.
Higher income couples usually will pay more taxes filing jointly then if
they remained single and filed individually. This occurs because the tax code
is progressive, with marginal tax rates rising as income rises and because the
tax brackets for married are less than twice the span of the brackets for
single filers. For 2013, the rates go up to 39.6%. Remember the marginal rate applies to the
income within the bracket. A married couple must file “married filing jointly”
or “married filing separately”. Married
filing separately has the highest tax; the brackets are narrower than single
status.