Key Retirement and Tax Numbers for 2025

Every year, the Internal Revenue Service announces cost-of-living adjustments that affect contribution limits for retirement plans and various tax deduction, exclusion, exemption, and threshold amounts. Here are a few of the key adjustments for 2025.



Estate, gift, and generation-skipping transfer tax

Standard deduction

A taxpayer can generally choose to itemize certain deductions or claim a standard deduction on the federal income tax return. In 2025, the standard deduction is:

The additional standard deduction amount for the blind and those age 65 or older in 2025 is:

Special rules apply for an individual who can be claimed as a dependent by another taxpayer.

IRAs

The combined annual limit on contributions to traditional and Roth IRAs is $7,000 in 2025 (the same as in 2024), with individuals age 50 or older able to contribute an additional $1,000. The limit on contributions to a Roth IRA phases out for certain modified adjusted gross income (MAGI) ranges (see table). For individuals who are active participants in an employer-sponsored retirement plan, the deduction for contributions to a traditional IRA also phases out for certain MAGI ranges (see table). The limit on nondeductible contributions to a traditional IRA is not subject to phaseout based on MAGI.


MAGI Ranges: Contributions to a Roth IRA
 

  2024 2025

Single/Head of household

$146,000–$161,000

$150,000–$165,000

Married filing jointly

$230,000–$240,000

$236,000–$246,000

Married filing separately

$0–$10,000

$0–$10,000



MAGI Ranges: Deductible Contributions to a Traditional IRA
 

  2024 2025

Single/Head of household

$77,000–$87,000

$79,000–$89,000

Married filing jointly

$123,000–$143,000

$126,000–$146,000


Note: The 2025 phaseout range is $236,000–$246,000 (up from $230,000–$240,000 in 2024) when the individual making the IRA contribution is not covered by a workplace retirement plan but is filing jointly with a spouse who is covered. The phaseout range is $0–$10,000 when the individual is married filing separately and either spouse is covered by a workplace plan.


Employer-sponsored retirement plans

Kiddie tax: child’s unearned income

Under the kiddie tax, a child’s unearned income above $2,700 in 2025 (up from $2,600 in 2024) is taxed using the parents’ tax rates.