Deductions are expenses that are subtracted from your adjusted gross income when calculating taxable income. There are three types of standard deductions depending on your filing status (single, married filing jointly, or head of household). In certain cases, we recommend making itemized deductions which can reduce your taxable income.
If you own a home and have a mortgage, you should itemize your deductions if your mortgage interest is higher than your standard deduction.
Income taxes paid to your state or local government are also deductible. Estimated payments to your state or local government, along with the previous year's state and local returns, are deductible.
Charitable donations to organizations, such as the Red Cross or other nonprofit organizations, are also tax deductible. Medical expenses such as doctor's fees, lab fees, and medical supplies, that exceed 7 1/2 % of your income , are tax deductible. Medical expenses paid by your employer are not tax-deductible since they already received a tax benefit. Long-term care services prescribed by a physician can be deducted if you require help performing daily living activities for at least 90 days and if you require supervision due to a cognitive impairment.
If you are relocating for a new job, you can deduct the cost of storing and insuring household goods within a period of 30 days after the move, the cost of traveling from the old to the new home (standard mileage rate of 10 cents/mile), and lodging expenses while traveling from one place to the other.
You can deduct your gambling losses if you keep detailed records of your transactions (gains and losses). Records must include date, location, wager amount, type of gambling, such as bingo, lottery, slot machines or horse/dog races.
There are additional miscellaneous deductions as long as they add up to more than 2% of your AGI. Some of these expenses include fees paid to a union or professional organization related to your work, subscriptions to magazines or other publications related to your work, tuition for continuing education classes related to your work, expenses related to a job search as long as it is in the same line of work, depreciation of your computer if you use it to keep track of your taxable investments, fees charged for IRA accounts, safe deposit box rental fees if used to store investment related documents, professional tax return preparation fees, and qualifying legal fees.
Gifts
The gift tax is imposed on the donor and there is a tax exclusion that applies. There are no exclusion limits on gifts given to a spouse unless the spouse is not a U.S. citizen. Each spouse has their own exclusion amount which is $11,000 per year. You have to file a gift tax return but you don't have to pay the tax unless it exceeds $1,000,000 through the years.
Gifts can reduce income and estate taxes. Giving to charity does not have a $11,000 tax exclusion and it reduces both taxes. Giving money to relatives does not reduce your income taxes but it does reduce your estate taxes. When your estate is worth more than $1,000,000, the amount above that figure is subject to estate taxes. When you die, 41% of that taxable portion goes to the Federal Government. So making tax-free gifts can reduce your taxable estate.
The recipient of the gift does not report income except when the gift is a property or stock. The recipient still has to pay taxes if he or she makes a profit from the gift.
Family
When talking about family taxes, we must consider marriage and divorce.
First let's address the former. You can identify dependents to reduce your taxable income. In order for someone to be claimed as a dependent, they must meet one of the following five tests: support, gross income, citizenship, joint return, member-of-household or relationship test. We will clarify three of them
For the support test, you must provide more than 50% of the person's total financial support or more than 10% of the person's total financial support if you share that responsibility with others (the total shared support must be more than 50% of the person's total financial support).
For the citizenship test, the dependent must be either a U.S. citizen, resident or national; or a resident of either Canada or Mexico.
For the member-of-household or relationship test, the dependent must live in your household the entire year or be "closely" related to you.
Now, spouses can also transfer property to each other, as long as you are legally married, you will not incur a gain or a loss for tax purposes.
In the case of a divorce, there are two important topics to discuss. Alimony is a payment to or for a spouse or former spouse under a divorce or separation. Child support is the payment for a child under a divorce or separation.
In order to get alimony, one spouse must prove that they cannot support themselves, and they must prove that the other spouse has the money to pay. The courts decide if the alimony should be paid considering the length of the marriage, the ages of both spouses, their earning capacities, the type of property involved, and the conduct of both spouses. In general, if a spouse has been dependent of the other, a judge will award alimony to him or her.
To determine the amount for the child support payments, there are guidelines provided by the Welfare Reform Act of 1997, which is being incorporated into each state. A weekly income for the child is established using the gross income from both parents, also giving allowances for deductions for taxes and other mandatory payments.
Marriage
When the tax rate system was created, married households with two incomes were very rare so the taxes were imposed with the assumption that two people were supported only by the head of the household. Nowadays, around 78% of married households have dual incomes, unfortunately the tax tables and codes have not been updated, so married couples pay more income taxes than if they were single. This is called the marriage penalty.
Here's how it works. If you and your spouse work, you may be paying more income tax filing jointly or as married filing separately, than if you were both single. The standard deduction for a married couple is $7,600, compared with $9,100 for two separate single people. If you are married you are allowed to write off a total of $3,000 in losses, if filing separately, each only has a $1,500 limit. When it comes to IRA contributions, they are phased out at income levels between $52,000 - $62,000 for married couples versus a range of $32,000 - $42,000 for single taxpayers.
So until there is a change, married couples will continue to pay an additional $1,500 on average in taxes a year because of the marriage penalty.
Children
For many years, people passed assets to their children to take advantage of their children's lower tax rate. For this reason, the IRS has placed limitations on this tax-savings technique. The "kiddie tax" is not really a tax at all, but a provision with the following guidelines:
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The first $750 in unearned income (interest, dividends, capital gains, etc.) by the child is not subject to tax at all.
Unearned income between $700 and $1,500 is taxed at the child's rate (which is usually lower than the parent's rate).
Unearned income of more than $1,500 is taxed at an adjusted parent's rate.
These rules do not apply if the child is under 14 and if both parents are dead at the end of the taxable year, or if the child is 14 or older as of December 31st of the taxable year.
Home
Home equity loans, mortgages, reverse mortgages.
A mortgage is a loan to finance the purchase of real estate, usually with specified payment periods and interest rates. The borrower (mortgagor) gives the lender (mortgager) a lien on the property as collateral for the loan. It includes the amount of principal, interest, real estate taxes, and property insurance or private mortgage insurance (PMI). You have the option to pay additional points equivalent to a portion of the closing interest to get a lower interest rate; this only makes sense if you plan to stay in that home for more than seven years.
You can deduct your home mortgage interest and real estate taxes when you file your taxes. "Points", another form of mortgage interest, may also be deductible depending on your local laws. You will receive a mortgage interest statement with the amounts paid through the year at the end of January.
A reverse mortgage is an arrangement in which a homeowner borrows against the equity in his/her home and receives regular monthly tax-free payments from the lender. This arrangement is also called a reverse-annuity mortgage or a home equity conversion mortgage.
You can exclude $250,000 ($500,000 if you are married filing jointly) from capital gains on the sale of personal property.
A home equity loan is an arrangement in which you borrow against the equity of your home. The equity is determined by the difference of the home's value and your outstanding mortgage balance. In other words, you gain equity as you pay off the principal of your mortgage. Home equity loans have become more popular because of low interest rates and tax deductibility. Interest rates for home equity loans are lower than other loans; since you are borrowing against the equity of your home, loans are more secure. You can deduct the interest on home equity loans up to a limit of $100,000.
College/Education
There are different ways to save for Education purposes. Education IRAs can enable you to save up to $500 per year. A 529 Plan allows you to prepay tuition for qualified universities or save funds in tax-deferred accounts. Taxes on the earnings within this plan are deferred until the money is withdrawn. HOPE/Lifetime credits lets qualified people take up to a $1,500 tax credit for payment of qualified education expenses.
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