When we talk about taxes, we usually obsess over the marginal brackets—12%, 22%, or 24%. We fear moving into a higher bracket, forgetting that marginal rates are progressive; they only apply to the next dollar you earn. However, the real damage to your wealth often comes from “stealth taxes” hidden in the code. These are specific income thresholds that, once crossed, trigger massive penalties or the loss of valuable credits.
Unlike tax brackets, which are gradual, these thresholds often act like cliffs. In 2026, many of these numbers remain “fixed,” meaning they do not adjust for inflation even as your cost of living rises. As your income grows with COLA and inflation, you are pushed closer to these dangerous lines every year. Crossing one by a single dollar can cost you thousands in lost benefits. Here are the seven thresholds you must watch like a hawk this filing season.
1. The Social Security “Tax Torpedo”
The most punishing threshold for retirees is the taxation of Social Security benefits. If your “combined income” exceeds $25,000 (single) or $32,000 (married), up to 85% of your benefits become taxable. These numbers were set decades ago and have never been adjusted for inflation, effectively becoming a tax increase every single year.
Crossing this line creates a phenomenon known as the “Tax Torpedo.” For every $1 you withdraw from an IRA, you might trigger taxes on $0.85 of your Social Security. This causes your effective marginal tax rate to double or triple over a very short income range. It catches millions of middle-class seniors by surprise, turning a modest withdrawal into a major tax event.
2. The Net Investment Income Tax (NIIT)
If your Modified Adjusted Gross Income (MAGI) hits $200,000 (single) or $250,000 (married), you get hit with an extra 3.8% tax. This applies to all your investment income, including dividends, interest, and capital gains. Like the Social Security threshold, this number is not indexed for inflation.
This means a “middle class” couple selling a longtime home can easily trigger this tax on the profit, even if they aren’t typically high earners. It is a surcharge that layers on top of your existing capital gains rate. You must plan your asset sales carefully to stay under this fixed ceiling to avoid surrendering nearly 4% of your investment growth to the Treasury.
3. The IRMAA Medicare Cliff
The Income-Related Monthly Adjustment Amount (IRMAA) is a surcharge on your Medicare premiums. For 2026 premiums, the Social Security Administration looks at your 2024 tax return. If your income exceeded $109,000 (single) or $218,000 (joint), your Part B and Part D premiums jump significantly.
Unlike tax brackets, this is a “cliff” penalty. If you earn $1 over the limit, you pay the full surcharge for the entire year. You cannot prorate it; that single dollar of income could cost you hundreds in premiums. According to 2026 CMS projections, the standard Part B premium is $202.90, but the first tier of IRMAA bumps that to $284.10 per month.
4. The SALT Cap Marriage Penalty
The State and Local Tax (SALT) deduction remains capped at $10,000 for the 2025 tax year. The pain point here is the massive marriage penalty built into the law. Two single people living together can each deduct $10,000, for a total of $20,000.
However, a married couple is limited to the same $10,000 total, effectively cutting their deduction in half. This threshold hits dual-income households in high-tax states like New York and California incredibly hard. It makes filing separately worth investigating, though usually not beneficial for other reasons.
5. The Rental Loss Allowance Phaseout
If you own a rental property, you can typically deduct up to $25,000 in passive losses against your regular job income. However, this allowance begins to phase out once your MAGI hits $100,000. By the time you reach $150,000, the deduction is gone completely.
This threshold has not moved since the 1980s, making it irrelevant for many modern landlords due to inflation. Losing this deduction means paying tax on rental income that you might not actually have in cash flow (due to principal payments or repairs).
6. The Saver’s Credit Cliff
For low-to-moderate income savers, the Saver’s Credit is free money—a tax credit worth up to 50% of your retirement contributions. However, the income limits are strict cliffs. For 2026, the 50% credit applies to married couples earning up to $48,500.
If you earn $48,501, the credit drops instantly to 20%. That single dollar of extra income could cost you $600 or more in lost tax credits. Watching your AGI near the end of the year is crucial to preserving this benefit; sometimes contributing more to a traditional IRA lowers your AGI enough to save the credit.
7. The 0% Capital Gains Ceiling
Retirees often aim to stay in the 0% capital gains bracket to sell stock tax-free. For 2026, this threshold is projected to be approximately $96,700 for married couples. If your taxable income pushes $1 over this line, your capital gains are taxed at 15%.
While only the dollars over the line are taxed at 15%, the interplay with other credits makes this a dangerous zone. “Harvesting” gains up to—but not over—this limit is the golden rule of retirement tax planning.
Mind the Gap
In 2026, it is not enough to know your tax bracket. You must know your distance from these cliffs. A well-timed IRA contribution or delaying a bonus by one week can keep you on the safe side of the threshold, saving you thousands in unnecessary taxes and premiums.
Did you trigger the IRMAA surcharge this year? Leave a comment below—tell us how much your premium went up!
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