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If your total income is more than $25,000 for an individual or $32,000 for a married couple filing jointly, you must pay federal income taxes on your Social Security benefits. Below those thresholds, your benefits are not taxed. That applies to spousal benefits, survivor benefits and Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) as well as to retirement benefits.
The portion of your benefits subject to taxation varies depending on your income level. You’ll be taxed on:
- up to 50 percent of your benefits if your income is $25,000 to $34,000 for an individual or $32,000 to $44,000 for a married couple filing jointly.
- up to 85 percent of your benefits if your income is more than $34,000 (individual) or $44,000 (couple).
'Combined' income is key
For purposes of determining how the IRS treats your Social Security payments, “income” means your adjusted gross income (line 11 on your 1040 form) plus nontaxable interest income plus half of your Social Security benefits. The IRS calls this your “combined” or “provisional” income.
Say you file individually and your income for 2025 consisted of $40,000 in 401(k) withdrawals and a $1,500-a-month retirement benefit. Your combined income was $49,000 ($40,000 from your savings and half of the $18,000 you got from Social Security). You owed taxes on 85 percent of your $18,000 in annual benefits, or $15,300, at the regular rate for your tax bracket. Nobody pays taxes on more than 85 percent of their Social Security benefits, no matter their income.
The IRS has an online tool you can use to calculate how much of your benefit income is taxable. The Social Security Administration (SSA) estimates that about half of Social Security recipients owe income taxes on their benefits.
New deduction could affect taxes on benefits
The One Big Beautiful Bill, enacted in July 2025, includes a new tax deduction for people 65 and older. This bonus deduction does not change the way Social Security income is taxed — but it could reduce or offset taxes on benefits for millions of older Americans by lowering their overall taxable income.
More on retirement
Are Social Security benefits taxable regardless of age?
Can I have taxes withheld from Social Security?
Do I have to pay FICA if I am working and collecting benefits?