Tax Refund Calculator: Refund or Balance Due?
Use this tax refund calculator for a quick estimate of your federal refund or balance due. Plug in income, withholding, deductions, and credits to know what to expect before you file.
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$
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Estimated tax liability$0
Refund (or balance due)$0
Status—
Effective rate after credits0.00%
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How this calculator works
This is a simplified refund estimator: project full-year liability from gross income, deduction, and your average (effective) tax rate; subtract from withholding; the difference is refund or balance due.
refund = withheld − max(0, (income − deduction) × effective_rate − credits)
For exact federal calculation including bracket-by-bracket math, AMT, and capital-gains rates, use the IRS Tax Withholding Estimator or filing software. This calculator gets you within ~$200 of the real answer for most W-2 situations.
Source: 2026 standard deductions per IRS — Single $15,000 / MFJ $30,000 / HoH $22,500. See IRS Publication 17 for the full table.
FAQ
How is my tax refund calculated?
Refund = Withheld YTD − max(0, (Income − Deduction) × effective_rate − credits). If withholding exceeded liability, you get a refund. The IRS Withholding Estimator does this exactly with bracket-by-bracket math; this calculator is a quick W-2 shortcut.
How do I use a simple tax refund calculator?
Enter gross income, pick your standard deduction (or 'itemized'), enter your effective federal rate (average, not marginal), enter YTD withholding from your last paystub or W-2 box 2, and any refundable credits. The result is your projected refund or balance due.
How do I use a 1099 tax refund calculator?
Same calculator, but you typically have $0 withholding (1099s don't withhold) and you must factor in self-employment tax (15.3%) on net earnings up to the SS wage base. Add quarterly estimated payments already made to the 'Withheld YTD' field.
How do I calculate tax refund from my W-2?
Use W-2 box 1 (wages) for income, box 2 (federal income tax withheld) for the withheld field. Estimate your effective rate from last year's return: line 24 ÷ line 9 on Form 1040. The calculator gives you a working estimate within ~$200 for most W-2 filers.
Why does this not match my filing software's number?
This is a 'rate × taxable' shortcut. Real federal tax is computed bracket-by-bracket, AMT may apply, capital gains have their own rates, and many credits are phased out by income. For W-2-only filers under $100K, the shortcut is within ~$200. For complex returns, use filing software.
Is a big refund a good thing?
Financially, no — it means you over-withheld and gave the IRS an interest-free loan all year. A $3,000 refund means you could have had $250 more per month. Adjust your W-4 to land near zero. Some prefer the forced-savings effect; that's fine, just know you're trading interest for discipline.
What's the average tax refund in the US?
The IRS reported an average refund of ~$3,138 for tax year 2023 — slightly down from 2022's ~$3,176. Around 70% of filers receive a refund. Size depends heavily on withholding choices, refundable credits (EITC, child tax credit), and itemized deductions.
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