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Two centuries of American tax history, one inescapable conclusion: the families who plan proactively keep more, worry less, and Sleep Well At Night. This is the story of how we got here, and why tax planning matters more today than it ever has.
Preserve the Past | Empower the Present | Create the Future
For most successful families, taxes quietly outrun housing, education, and healthcare combined. Yet most advice treats tax as a springtime scramble rather than a year-round strategy. Reactive filing records history. Proactive planning writes it.
First-generation wealth builders feel this most. There is no inherited playbook, no family CFO, no decades-old trust structure. The code does not wait for you to catch up, and it has been changing, on average, more than once per day.
For its first 72 years, the federal government ran almost entirely on tariffs and excise taxes. An income tax was considered un-American, until a war made it unavoidable.
The Civil War brought the first federal income tax: 3 percent on incomes over $800. It was repealed in 1872, but the precedent was set. Emergencies write tax law.
Congress tried again in 1894 with a 2 percent tax. In Pollock v. Farmers' Loan & Trust, the Supreme Court struck it down as an unapportioned direct tax. The fix required amending the Constitution itself.
February 3, 1913. The Sixteenth Amendment is ratified. Congress may now tax income "from whatever source derived." The first Form 1040 follows that fall: rates of 1 to 7 percent, and fewer than 1 percent of Americans owe anything at all. The modern story begins here.
Select an event on the timeline to see what changed and why it still matters. Scroll the strip sideways to travel through time. Filter by theme above.
The top marginal rate has visited 7 percent, 94 percent, and nearly everywhere in between. Wars push it up, prosperity pulls it down, and politics keeps it moving.
Top and bottom statutory marginal rates on ordinary income, selected years. Source: IRS Statistics of Income, Tax Foundation historical tables.
Brackets are the gears of the system, and Congress keeps rebuilding the gearbox. In 1918 there were 56 brackets. The 1986 reform collapsed the structure to just two. Today we are back to seven.
Why it matters: every bracket boundary is a planning opportunity. Income timing, deduction bunching, Roth conversions, gain harvesting, and entity choices all live at the edges of brackets. More movement in the gearbox means more value in steering.
Number of statutory brackets for a single filer, selected years, approximate. The 1988 to 1990 "bubble" phase-out effectively created a hidden 33% zone, proof that even two brackets were never really two.
Drop your income into the bracket tables of 1913, 1944, 1963, 1988, and 2026. "Era dollars" deflates your income by CPI so each era taxes its equivalent of your lifestyle.
Illustrative federal tax on ordinary income, single filer, statutory brackets only. No deductions, credits, surtaxes, or state tax. History is a teacher here, not a tax return.
2026 federal brackets per IRS Rev. Proc. inflation adjustments, after the standard deduction ($32,200 joint, $16,100 single). Ordinary income only; excludes credits, state tax, payroll tax, and the 3.8% NIIT.
Each band shows how much of your income lands in each bracket. Planning works the bands: shifting income across years, between spouses, into entities, or into tax-advantaged wrappers changes which bands fill up. The gap between your marginal and effective rate is the canvas we paint on.
Until 1922, a dollar of gain was taxed like a dollar of wages, at rates that reached 77 percent. The Revenue Act of 1921 changed the philosophy permanently: capital deserves its own lane. The lane has been repaved many times since, but it has never closed.
| Era | Top long-term rate | The headline |
|---|---|---|
| 1913 - 1921 | Up to 77% | Gains taxed as ordinary income |
| 1922 - 1933 | 12.5% | First preferential flat rate |
| 1942 - 1967 | 25% | 50% exclusion, 25% ceiling |
| 1970s | ~35 - 39.9% | Preference erodes, AMT arrives |
| 1982 - 1986 | 20% | ERTA restores the discount |
| 1988 - 1996 | 28% | 1986 reform equalizes rates briefly |
| 1997 - 2002 | 20% | Taxpayer Relief Act |
| 2003 - 2012 | 15% | The modern low-water mark |
| 2013 - 2026 | 20% + 3.8% | NIIT joins the party |
The character of income is negotiable in ways its amount is not. Holding periods, asset location, gain harvesting in the 0 percent band, loss harvesting against gains, installment sales, qualified small business stock, and opportunity zone deferrals all exist because Congress built a second lane and keeps adding exits.
Wages, business, and other ordinary taxable income. This sets where your gain starts stacking in the 0 / 15 / 20 brackets.
Sale price minus what you paid, on an asset held longer than 12 months.
2026 thresholds: 0% to $98,900, 15% to $613,700, 20% above (joint); $49,450 / $545,500 (single). NIIT of 3.8% applies above $250,000 / $200,000 MAGI. Illustrative federal estimate only.
Now replay it with planning: spread the sale across two tax years, harvest offsetting losses, gift appreciated shares to a donor-advised fund, or pair the exit with a qualified opportunity investment. Same gain, different decade of outcomes.
Top statutory estate tax rate, selected years. Exemption shown in callouts. Sources: IRS, Joint Committee on Taxation, Tax Foundation.
The same estate, settled in five different years. Exemptions moved by a factor of 250; rates fell by half. Timing, residence, and structure decide what a legacy keeps.
Simplified estimate: (estate minus exemption) times top rate, using each year's top statutory rate and exemption, couple assumes full use of both exemptions. Real estate tax is graduated and planning-sensitive; this is directional, not advice.
The quiet lesson of 2010 and 2025: the rules of legacy are rewritten roughly once a decade. Trusts, gifting programs, valuation strategy, and life insurance architecture are not set-and-forget documents. They are living systems that must be steered as the law moves.
Sources: Tax Foundation word-count analyses; National Taxpayers Union Foundation, Tax Complexity 2024.
The statute says what Congress wrote. The case law says what it means. Cohan gives us reasonable estimation. Duberstein defines a gift. Welch v. Helvering polices "ordinary and necessary." Decades of Tax Court memoranda decide whether a strategy is settled ground or thin ice. Reading only the code is reading half the book.
Americans spend billions of hours a year on compliance. But complexity cuts both ways: every page of it contains elections, safe harbors, and intended incentives. Families who treat the code as a maze pay the complexity tax. Families who treat it as a map collect the complexity dividend.
"A century of evidence says the same thing: rates move, brackets move, exemptions move. The only constant advantage is planning that moves first."
So how do you organize 70,000 pages of opportunity? At Kotini & Kotini, we sort every strategy along two questions: does it require deploying capital, and how mature is the law behind it? That gives every family a clear, honest spectrum.
Strategies built entirely from elections and provisions already in the code. Mature law, low cost, and almost universally underused.
Investment-driven strategies resting on decades of statute, regulation, and case law. Well-trodden paths with known guardrails.
Newer statutes with thinner case law and evolving IRS guidance. Real opportunity, real diligence burden, sized accordingly.
We never lead with the exotic. Foundational strategies fund themselves and build the discipline. Established strategies compound it. Frontier strategies are reserved for families whose foundation is already pouring concrete, and they are stress-tested against guidance, case law, and exit scenarios before a dollar moves.
Our maturity test: How old is the statute? Has Treasury issued final regulations? Have courts ruled? Is the IRS listing it, blessing it, or litigating it? The answers decide the tier, and the tier decides the allocation.
April is an autopsy. Real planning happens in the living years: before the sale, before the exit, before the estate. We plan forward so filings become formalities.
A tax idea that ignores your risk, legal, and business picture is a liability wearing a deduction's clothing. Our Virtual Family Office puts tax strategy at the same table as everything else.
Every strategy must pass the Sleep Well At Night test. If a tactic saves dollars but costs sleep, it fails. Confidence and calm are the actual deliverables.
For first-generation wealth builders, the tax code is the one inheritance everyone receives. We exist to make sure you actually collect it: preserving what you have built, empowering what you are building, and creating what comes next.
Tax touches everything, so tax planning cannot live alone. Each discipline feeds the tax engine, and the tax engine feeds each discipline back. No silos. No scrambling. One coordinated plan with a single set of eyes on the whole board.
Savings reinvested at an assumed 7% annual return. Hypothetical illustration for educational purposes, not a projection or guarantee. Actual results depend on facts, circumstances, and implementation.
"Any one may so arrange his affairs that his taxes shall be as low as possible; he is not bound to choose that pattern which will best pay the Treasury; there is not even a patriotic duty to increase one's taxes."
Judge Learned Hand, Gregory v. Helvering (1934)
The same case drew the other line that guides us: strategies must have real substance, not just clever form. Planning boldly and planning soundly are the same discipline. That is precisely where Kotini & Kotini lives.
The code will keep growing. The rates will keep moving. The exemptions will keep being rewritten by whoever holds the pen. None of that is in your control. All of it is plannable.
Protect what you have built from rates and rules that have changed 399 times a year.
Put the Foundational tier to work this year, with no capital required, only intention.
Design a legacy that outlasts the next nine rewrites of the estate tax.
Kotini & Kotini | A non-traditional Virtual Family Office. Educational presentation; not tax, legal, or investment advice. Figures from IRS, Tax Foundation, NTUF, and Joint Committee on Taxation sources as of 2026.