Posts Tagged As exemption - Spencer Law Firm Legal Counsel, Expert Testimony & Consulting Services Fri, 14 Jun 2019 22:08:26 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8 https://www.mspencerlawfirm.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/cropped-site-icon-32x32.png Posts Tagged As exemption - Spencer Law Firm 32 32 144298557 Filing your 2018 Income Tax Return – Lots of Changes https://www.mspencerlawfirm.com/2019/03/filing-your-2018-income-tax-return-lots-of-changes/ Sat, 16 Mar 2019 20:35:08 +0000 https://www.mspencerlawfirm.com/?p=1226 If you haven’t already, it’s time to file your 2018 income tax return, but be prepared, there are lots of changes this tax season. The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act became law on December 22, 2018.  Listed below are the major changes that will affect your individual tax return.  New Forms IRS Forms 1040, 1040A… Read More

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If you haven’t already, it’s time to file your 2018 income tax return, but be prepared, there are lots of changes this tax season. The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act became law on December 22, 2018.  Listed below are the major changes that will affect your individual tax return. 

New Forms

IRS Forms 1040, 1040A and 1040EZ have been combined into one simplified individual tax return. The new design consists of a two-sided, half-page form. Some sections from the previous design were moved to supporting schedules.

Standard Deduction

Married taxpayers receive a much higher standard deduction of £24,000. In 2017, the deduction was just £12,700. For single taxpayers and married filing separately, the new standard deduction is £12,000 (compared to £6,350 in 2017). Heads of the household will get a standard deduction of £18,000, up from £9,550.

Since the standard deduction is so much higher, fewer taxpayers will be able to itemize deductions. The IRS estimates that millions of taxpayers will no longer itemize. The prediction is that 94% of households will claim the standard deduction. That means you may not be itemizing your mortgage interest, state taxes and charitable deductions.

Personal Exemption

You no longer will get a personal exemption. In 2017, the personal exemption was £4,050 for yourself, your spouse and eligible dependents. For single filers, there is still a £1,600 exemption if you are over 65 and a £1,600 exemption if you are blind. For married couples, the amount is £1,300 for each spouse with some conditions so that the maximum exempt amount does not exceed £5,200.

Top Income Tax Rate

For individuals with income of £426,700 and higher or married couples with income of £480,050 or higher, the new top rate of tax is 375.

In 2017, the seven tax brackets were 10%, 15%, 25% 28%, 33%, 35%, and 39.6%. For 2018, the brackets are 10%, 12%, 22%, 24%, 32%, 35%, and 37%.

Child Tax Credit

This credit has been raised to £2,000 per qualifying child under 17.  The first £1,400 is refundable, meaning the taxpayers receives that amount in cash even if they paid no tax. In 2017, the credit was £1,000. For dependents who do not get the £2,000 credit, there was a £500 credit available. Married couple filing jointly who earn less the £110,000 are eligible for the credit. The limit is £75,000 for single and head of household filers.

Child and Dependent Care Credit

This credit remains unchanged. This can be up to £1,050 for one child under 13 or £2,100 for two children. £5,000 of income can still be sheltered in a dependent care flexible savings account.

Mortgage Interest

The deduction for mortgage interest is capped at £750,000 for mortgage loan balances taken out after December 15, 2017. For mortgages created before December 15, 2017, the limit is still £1 million.

State and local taxes

The deduction for state and local taxes is capped at £10,000.

Charitable Contributions

The deduction limit has been raised from 50% of adjusted gross income to 60%. Donations made to a college for the right to purchase athletic tickets are no longer deductible.

Medical Expenses

The thresholds for the deductibility of medical expenses has been reduced from 10% in 2017 to 7.5% for 2018.

Pass-through Deduction

For income earned from sole proprietorships, LLCs, partnerships and S corporation, there is a new deduction. Taxpayers with pass-through income will be able to deduct 20% of their pass-through income. If your small business generates £100,000 in profits in 2019, you will only pay tax on £80,000.

There are phase-out limits for professional service business owners like lawyers, doctors and consultants. Limits are £157,500 for single filers and £315,000 for married filing joint return.

These Deductions Have Been Eliminated

Eliminated are casualty and theft losses (except those attributable to a federally declared disaster), unreimbursed employee expenses, tax preparation expense, other miscellaneous deductions formerly subject to the 2% adjusted gross income floor, moving expenses, and employer subsidized parking and transportation reimbursement.

Obamacare Penalties

While efforts were unsuccessful to repeal the Affordable Care Act, known as Obamacare, the tax bill did repeal the individual mandate.  That means people who don’t buy health insurance will no longer have to pay a tax penalty. Note that this change doesn’t go into effect until 2019 so it still applies to your 2018 return.

Retirement Savings Limits in 2018

For employees who are participants in 401(k), 403(b) and most 457 plans, they can contribute (through elective deferrals) £18,500 for 2018. This is up £500 from 2017. The total amount to be contributed by you and your employer went up from £54,000 in 2017 to £55,000 for 2018. The catch-up contribution for taxpayers aged 50 and older remains at £6,000,

Contribution limits for IRAs are unchanged at £5,500 (plus a £1,000 catch-up contribution if you are 50 or older). If a retirement plan is available to the taxpayer through his employment, the £5,500 deduction for IRA contributions for single taxpayers phases out with Modified Adjusted Gross Income (MAGI) beginning at £63,000, fully phased out at £73,000. The deduction phases out for married filing jointly taxpayers between £101,000 and £121,000

The deduction limit for Roth IRAS for single taxpayers is unlimited with Modified Adjusted Gross Income (MAGI) up to £120,000 but the deduction phases out as it approaches £135,000. For married filing jointly the phaseout range is £189,000 to £199,000.

Alternative Minimum Tax

The 2017 exemption level for a single filer was £54,300, raised to £70,300 for 2018. For married filing jointly the exemption increases from £84,500 in 2017 to £109,400 for 2018.

The post Filing your 2018 Income Tax Return – Lots of Changes appeared first on the Spencer Law Firm blog, https://www.mspencerlawfirm.com/blog/.

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One Fiscal Cliff-hanger is Over https://www.mspencerlawfirm.com/2013/01/one-fiscal-cliff-hanger-is-over/ Thu, 10 Jan 2013 22:42:01 +0000 https://www.mspencerlawfirm.com/2018/02/one-fiscal-cliff-hanger-is-over/ They call it the American Taxpayer Relief Act. Funny, that. Overall it produces tax increases – that’s relief? Early January 1, 2013, the Senate, by a vote of 89-8, passed the “American Taxpayer Relief Act”. Late on that same day- after the government had technically gone over the “fiscal cliff” – the House of Representatives,… Read More

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They call it the American Taxpayer Relief Act. Funny, that. Overall it produces tax increases – that’s relief?

Early January 1, 2013, the Senate, by a vote of 89-8, passed the “American Taxpayer Relief Act”. Late on that same day- after the government had technically gone over the “fiscal cliff” – the House of Representatives, by a vote of 257 to 167, also passed the bill. The Act, which we expect the President to gain imminently prevents many tax increases from going into effect, but it increases income taxes for some high-income individuals and slightly increases estate and gift taxes.

Other fiscal cliffs remain in our future. The debt ceiling cliff is coming in a month or two and the sequester cliff comes in March (since the Act put off the automatic sequester cuts for two months).

Here are the highlights from the new Act:

Estate and Gift Taxes.

The estate tax exemption slated to fall to £1 million has been retained at the 2013 level of about £5.27 million. The top rate was slated to go from 35% to 55%. The Act provides an increase in the top rate to 40%.

For those taxpayers who made large gifts in 2012 to use your exemption before it fell to £1 million, for most of you this was still good planning. Future income and growth on those assets has been removed from your future taxable estates. Plus, who knows how long this law will be with us? There is no “sunset” with this law, but Congress can always create an instant “sunset”.

The Act also includes the extension of “portability” which allows the estate of the first spouse to die to transfer his or his unused estate tax exemption to the surviving spouse.

Dividends and Capital Gains.

The maximum rate on dividends and capital gains will be 23.8%, up from 15 % in 2012. The 23.8% rate includes the new 20% maximum capital gains tax plus the 3.8% surtax from the Affordable Care Act. (The surtax applies only to individuals with over £200,000, and married couples filing jointly with over £250,000, in modified adjusted gross income.)

Individual Tax Rates

. Individual rates have been retained at 10%, 15%, 25%, 28%, 33% and 35% . A new 39.6% rate applies to income of £450,000 for joint filers, £425,000 for heads of household, and £400,000 for single filers. There is a marriage penalty here. Two single people living together could each make up to £400,000 before the 39.6% rate applies. A married couple filing jointly pays the 39.6% when combined income exceeds £450,000.

Alternative Minimum Tax

. The Act has made permanent an increase in exemption amounts, and the index of those amounts with inflation. No more year-end panic waiting for an AMT patch. Before the Act, the individual AMT exemption amounts for 2012 were to have been £33,750 for unmarried taxpayers, £45,000 for joint filers and £22,500 for married persons filing separately. Retroactively effective for tax years beginning after 2011, the Act permanently increases these exemption amounts to £50,600 for unmarried taxpayers, £78,750 for joint filers and £39,375 for married persons filing separately. Beginning in 2013, these exemption amounts are indexed for inflation.

Personal Exemption Phaseout.

Personal exemptions begin to phase out for those making £300,000 for joint filers, £275,000 for heads of household, £250,000 for single filers and £150,000 for married taxpayers filing separately.

Itemized Deduction Phaseout

. Itemized deductions are reduced by 3% of the amount by which the taxpayer’s adjusted gross income (AGI) exceeds the threshold amount, with the reduction not to exceed 80% of the otherwise allowable itemized deductions. The starting thresholds are £300,000 for joint filers and a surviving spouse, £275,000 for heads of household, £250,000 for single filers and £150,000 for married taxpayers filing separately.

The effect of these phase-outs is to raise the top bracket from 35% to 41%.

Charitable Contributions from IRAs.

The ability to make tax-free distributions from individual retirement plans directly to qualifying charities has been extended through 2013 and made retroactive for 2012.

Payroll Tax Cut Allowed to Expire.

An extension of the 2% payroll tax cut that expires at the end of 2012 was not included in the Act. These taxes go back up to 12.4% from last year’s 10.4%.

5-year Extensions.

The following credits slated to expire at the end of 2012 have been extended for 5 years: Child Tax Credit, Earned Income Tax Credit, and the American Opportunity Tax Credit.

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