 Now let's just have the same income and double it up to being married with the same 100,000 income. So now we're at married filing joint here and we have another spouse. So Mr. Anderson got married, which is nice. And so now we can scroll down and say we got the same 100,000. So note when getting married, it's possible that the incomes could likely double or something like that or at least go up but it's not required that that would be the case. So let's just keep it at the same 100,000 for now. And then the standard deduction doubles, which is kind of what you would expect to happen because again, you don't wanna disincentivize marriage. Marriage is usually gonna be a benefit for the tax codes because of the fact that they're trying to accommodate it as if the two people got together and they both have the same amount of income, right? You don't expect to make the same amount of money. You double the income because then they basically stubble the standard deduction and they have similar kind of adjustments to the actual tax calculation tables. But again, if you're on the low income side of things, the tax code can actually disincentivize marriage by not allowing some of the things that you might get like with the refundable credits like the earned income tax credit and the child tax credit can get kind of messy. You could imagine situations where it doesn't turn out to be a benefit. In any case, if I go back to the equation here, all that's happening is now I'm upping the married filing joint to the 25.9. So there's the 25.9 getting us to that 74.1. So the 74.1 on page one is here. And then on page two, the tax calculation is now lower because one, the tax is lower, but also two, we're using different tables for married instead of single. So eight, eight, four, eight, four, eight, four, eight, four, eight, four, eight, four, eight, four, eight, four, right? That would be that. Now you can imagine a situation that if they got married then the income would double. Again, it's probably not likely that you're gonna, you know, that it would double. I mean, maybe, I mean, but usually one spouse earns more than the other. I'm not gonna get into who earns more or whatnot. And it might be likely that after marriage, one of the spouses is gonna take time, you know, with kids, which means we're not gonna be able to work as much you would think. But let's say that it doubled here to W-2-2 and say we had 100,000 and do that. So if I go back on over, now we've got a 200,000 because now we have two people combined in the married tax return, the 25,900. That gets us to the 174,100. If I mirror that on my little worksheet, I'm gonna say this is W-2, employer-2, 100,000. And we'll pull that back onto the first page for 200,000. That gets us to the 174,100. And so 174,100. And then on page two, the tax is now 29,536. So 29,536. So there we have that. So again, the key points you just wanna remember if you go from married to single to married is you're gonna say, okay, well, if they're single, you've got the 12,950. If they were to get married, you're gonna double the standard deduction generally. But you have to also consider the fact that you could possibly have two incomes that are coming together. Or you can just think of if you're looking at a married couple that it would be the standard deduction 12,950 times two, 25,900. And there's usually also gonna be an impact on the tax calculations because the whole progressive tax tables will have to change for married couple versus single.