Loading…
Loading…
About FinCalc
FinCalc is an independent personal-finance reference. Every calculator is built against published government and central-bank sources and updated for the current tax year, following the documented methodology below. We don't take money from lenders, brokers, or advisors — so the math is the math.
Tax brackets and contribution limits come from official sources: IRS, HMRC, CRA, ATO, the German Bundesministerium der Finanzen (BMF), and the Spanish AEAT. Inflation, interest-rate, and benchmark figures come from central banks (Fed, ECB, BoE) and Eurostat. Each calculator that depends on tax-year data carries an inline source citation.
Calculator data is checked against the officially published figures for the current tax year. Calculators that depend on annually-published tax tables are updated shortly after the official release for each tax year. .
We act on every credible correction request. If a calculator produces an incorrect result for a documented input, we fix it and add a note to the page's change log. Report errors to [email protected].
FinCalc does not accept payment for placement of products, lenders, brokers, or advisors. We do not currently run sponsored comparisons or affiliate links inside calculator outputs.
We treat the calculators on FinCalc as reference tools, not advice. Every page that touches taxation, retirement, mortgages, or investment outcomes carries an explicit disclaimer that the result is an estimate based on declared inputs and current published rates.
We do not personalize results based on user data, and we don't collect identifiers — calculations run client-side. When a calculator output could materially affect a financial decision, we link to the relevant authoritative source (e.g. IRS publication, HMRC notice) so readers can verify the underlying numbers themselves.