Disclaimer
What these calculators are, what they aren't, and where the math stops being reliable.
Last updated: May 2026
Educational purposes only
The calculators on FigureCal produce estimates for informational and educational purposes only. They are designed to illustrate how published tax brackets, amortization formulas, and official government data apply to a set of user-supplied inputs. The outputs are not tax returns, official tax determinations, appraisals, loan approvals, or financial projections. They are starting points for your own research, not conclusions you should act on without independent verification.
No professional relationship
Using this site, running a calculator, or receiving a numerical output does not create a CPA-client relationship, an attorney-client relationship, a fiduciary relationship, or any other professional or advisory relationship between you and FigureCal or its author. Wanyu T is an independent researcher, not a licensed CPA, enrolled agent, tax attorney, or registered investment advisor. Nothing on this site constitutes professional tax, legal, financial, or investment advice, and no communication from this site should be interpreted as such.
Known limitations and exclusions
These calculators deliberately model well-documented, commonly applicable scenarios. They do not model every situation, and some situations that appear simple on the surface are not. The following provisions, scenarios, and edge cases are explicitly not modeled by the current calculator set:
- Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT). If your income or deductions make AMT plausible, these calculators will not flag it or account for it.
- SALT cap edge cases. The SALT deduction calculator models the standard cap; it does not model contested state workarounds, pass-through entity elections, or refund-inclusion rules.
- OBBB phase-outs above MAGI thresholds. The tip and overtime deductions phase out above $150,000 (Single) / $300,000 (Married Filing Jointly) MAGI. The calculators apply a simplified phase-out; the actual statutory computation may differ depending on how MAGI is calculated for your situation.
- Multi-state income nexus. If you earn income in more than one state, or work remotely for an employer in a different state, your state tax liability is outside the scope of these tools.
- Part-year resident allocations. Income allocation rules for taxpayers who moved states mid-year are not modeled.
- Mortgage points, origination fees, and closing costs. The mortgage calculator models principal and interest only; upfront costs are not amortized into the payment or APR.
- Adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs). Only fixed-rate, fully-amortizing loans are modeled.
- PMI variation by lender and credit score. PMI is estimated at a flat rate; actual PMI pricing varies by loan-to-value, credit profile, and lender.
- Assessed-value caps. Property tax caps like California Proposition 13, Texas's 10% homestead assessment cap, and similar state-level constraints on assessed-value growth are not modeled. The calculator uses effective rates applied to market value.
- Chained CPI. The inflation calculator uses BLS CPI-U (standard). It does not model chained CPI-U (C-CPI-U).
- PCE deflator. The Federal Reserve's preferred inflation measure, the Personal Consumption Expenditures price index, is not modeled.
Knowing where the math breaks down is part of using these tools responsibly. If your situation involves any of the above, treat the output as a rough floor or ceiling rather than a precise estimate, and verify with a qualified professional.
Source-currency notice
Tax brackets, CPI values, rate tables, and phase-out thresholds are sourced from official government publications — primarily IRS Revenue Procedures, IRS Publications, and Bureau of Labor Statistics data releases. Each calculator's “Last reviewed” date indicates when the underlying source data was last verified against the official publication. Updates to calculator data may lag the relevant IRS Revenue Procedure or BLS release by up to 48 hours. During the gap between a new official release and our update, outputs may reflect prior-period data.
External links
Calculator pages and methodology documentation on this site include links to external resources including the IRS, Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Treasury, Tax Foundation, and other government and research organizations. These external sites are not under FigureCal's control. FigureCal does not endorse, guarantee, or take responsibility for the accuracy, completeness, or availability of external sites. Links are provided as source citations; verify the content at its source.
Independent verification
For any financial, tax, or legal decision — filing a return, applying for a mortgage, selling an investment, planning for retirement — consult a licensed CPA, tax attorney, enrolled agent, or registered financial advisor. A qualified professional will have access to your complete financial picture, the ability to apply judgment to ambiguous rules, and the professional and legal accountability that a calculator does not carry.
The IRS provides a directory of credentialed tax professionals at irs.gov/tax-professionals.
Maintained by
Wanyu T — Independent Researcher
Not a CPA, EA, or licensed financial advisor. Questions or error reports: [email protected]