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Income Taxation of Individuals. Chapter 11. Individual Income Tax Model. Gross income Less: Deductions for adjusted gross income Equals: Adjusted Gross Income (AGI) Less: Itemized or standard deduction Less: Personal & dependency exemptions Equals: Taxable income.
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Income TaxationofIndividuals Chapter 11
Individual Income Tax Model Gross income Less: Deductions for adjusted gross income Equals:Adjusted Gross Income (AGI) Less: Itemized or standard deduction Less: Personal & dependency exemptions Equals: Taxable income
Tax Model (continued) Taxable income Times: Tax rate Equals: Gross income tax liability Less: Tax credits Plus: Additions to tax Less: Tax prepayments Equals: Net tax due or tax refund
Deductions For AGI • Deductions discussed in previous chapters • Retirement plan contributions including IRAs • Moving expenses • 50% of self-employment taxes • Self-employed health insurance • Alimony paid
Deductions For AGI • Deductions discussed in this chapter • Educator expenses • Student loan interest expense • Tuition and fees deduction • Health savings accounts • Penalty on early withdrawals of savings • Other deductions for AGI
Educator Expenses • Kindergarten through 12th grade teachers may deduct up to $250 of unreimbursed expenses for books, supplies, computer equipment, software, and other supplemental materials used in the classroom • Due to expire at end of 2005 unless extended by Congress
Student Loan Interest • Deduction allowed for interest paid on qualified student loans incurred and used for tuition, fees, room, board, books, and supplies • Deduction limit is $2,500 • Limit is phased out for modified AGI of $50,000 - $65,000 ($105,000 - $135,000 for married persons filing jointly) • Individuals claimed as dependents cannot take deduction on their own tax return • Eligible expenses must be reduced for tax-exempt scholarships and education credits
Tuition & Fees Deduction • $4,000 deduction for 2004-2005 for tuition & fees for taxpayer, spouse, and dependents • Income limits apply ($65,000 if single and $130,000 if married filing jointly) • Deduction is reduced to $2,000 for singles with income $65,000 - $80,000 ($130,000 - $160,000 for joint filers) • Individuals who are claimed as dependents cannot take deduction on their own tax return • No double benefit - no deduction if expense is deductible under any other provision (including education credits)
Health Savings Accounts • Taxpayers covered by high-deductible medical insurance policies only may deduct amounts set aside in an HSA • Contributions and earnings on HSAs are not taxed when withdrawn to pay medical expenses • Distributions not spent on qualifying expenses are included in income and subject to a 10% penalty
Health Savings Accounts • To qualify for an HSA in 2005, individuals must have health insurance with deductibles of at least $1,000 ($2,000 for families) • Maximum contribution to HSA equal to lesser of $2,650 ($5,250 for families) or the annual policy deductible
Medical Savings Accounts • MSAs are similar to HSAs but with different limits • Qualified policies are those with deductibles of $1,750 - $2,650 for individuals ($3,500 - $5,250 for families) in 2005 • Contributions to MSAs are limited to 65% of policy deductible for individuals (75% for families) • Distributions not spent on qualifying expenses are included in income and subject to a 15% penalty
Penalty on Early Withdrawals • Penalties assessed on premature withdrawals from certificates of deposits or other savings accounts are deductible • Gross interest income, unreduced by the penalty, is included in taxable income • Deducting the penalty ensures that only net interest income is included in taxable income
Other Deductions For AGI • Unreimbursed travel expenses to attend National Guard or military reserve meetings more than 100 miles from home • Maximum deduction is general government per diem rate for the area • Expenses of fee-basis government officials • Expenses of performing artists
Exemptions • Each taxpayer (who is not a dependent) is entitled to one personal exemption • Exemption deduction is $3,200 for 2005 • Additional exemptions allowed for each person who is considered a dependent • Anyone who is claimed as a dependent cannot claim a personal exemption • For purposes of the dependency exemption, a dependent is a qualifying child or qualifying relative
Qualifying Child • Must meet four tests • Residency test - live with taxpayer more than 6 months • Relationship test - son, daughter, brother, sister, or descendant • Age test - under 19 (or under 24 if full-time student) • Support test - child cannot provide more than half his own support
Qualifying Relative • If not a qualifying child, then three similar tests must be met: • Relationship test - must either be a qualifying relative of the taxpayer or a resident in the taxpayer’s household for the entire year • Gross income test - the qualifying relative's gross income from taxable sources must be less than the exemption amount ($3,200 for 2005) • Support test
The Support Test • Taxpayer must provide more than 50% of the dependent's total support • Support includes amounts spent for food, clothing, shelter, medical care, education and capital expenditures such as a car • Value of services and scholarship funds are omitted in determining support received by a student • Dependent’s nontaxable income used for support must be included in support determination
Multiple Support Agreement • Multiple support agreements allow one member of group of support providers to claim the exemption when • Together the group meets the support test • All other dependency tests are met • Member who claims exemption must provide more than 10% of the total support and other members providing more than 10% support agree to exemption
Phaseout of Exemptions • Both personal and dependency exemptions are phased out at a rate of 2% (4% for MFS) for each $2,500 (or fraction thereof) of AGI above thresholds for 2005 of • $145,950 if single • $182,450 if head of household • $218,950 if married filing jointly • $109,475 if married filing separately
Exemption Phaseout • (AGI – threshold AGI)/$2,500 = Phaseout Factor (always round up to next whole number) • Phaseout Factor x 2% = Phaseout Percentage • Exemption Amount x (1 – Phaseout Percentage) = Adjusted Exemption Deduction • Once AGI exceeds the threshold AGI by more than $122,500 ($61,250 for MFS), the exemption deduction is completely phased out
Filing Status • Taxpayer’s filing status determines standard deduction and tax rate schedule • Marital status determined on the last day of the tax year • Separated spouses are considered married until divorce becomes final
Filing Status - Married • Can file jointly if both spouses are US citizens or US residents (or if nonresident alien agrees to be taxed on worldwide income) • If the couple files separately, both must itemize deductions or both must use the standard deduction
Surviving Spouse • Marital status is determined at the date of death so a joint return can be filed for the year in which a spouse dies • A surviving spouse may continue to use the tax rates and standard deduction for married persons filing jointly for the next 2 years only if a dependent child lives with the taxpayer
Filing Status – Unmarried • Unmarried taxpayers file as • Head of household - an unmarried person who provides more than half of the cost of maintaining a home in which a qualifying child or other qualifying relative lives for more than half the year • Single
Head of Household • Claimed if taxpayer is unmarried (and not a surviving spouse) • Taxpayer pays more than half the cost of maintaining home which is the principal residence for more than half the year of • A qualifying child • An individual for whom the taxpayer may claim a dependency exemption • A parent is not required to live with the taxpayer
Abandoned Spouse • A taxpayer who is married but whose spouse did not live with him or her at any time during the last six months of the tax year and who provides more than half the cost of maintaining the home in which a dependent child lives • A qualifying abandoned spouse uses head of household tax rates and standard deduction
Standard Deductions • Standard Deductions • $10,000 married filing a joint return • $5,000 married filing separately • $7,300 head of household • $5,000 single individual • Additional standard deduction if taxpayer is elderly (age 65 or older) or blind • $1,250 if single or head of household • $1,000 if married
Dependent’s Standard Deduction • Dependent’s standard deduction is limited to the greater of: • $800 or • Earned income + $250 (up to otherwise allowable standard deduction) • Earned income includes salary and wages • Earned income does not include interest income, dividend income, capital gains, or income as beneficiary of a trust
Itemized Deductions • Itemized deductions provide tax benefit only to the extent that, in total, they exceed the taxpayer’s standard deduction • Taxpayers can maximize use of the standard deduction and itemized deductions by timing certain deductible payments
Medical Expenses • Medical expenses paid for the taxpayer, spouse and dependents, after reduction for insurance reimbursements, are deductible only to the extent they exceed 7.5% of AGI for the year • Qualified medical costs includes prescription drugs and insulin, costs of a hospital, clinic, doctor, dentist, eyeglasses, contract lenses, transportation for medical care and health insurance costs
Medical Expenses • Health insurance premiums for taxpayers and their dependents are deductible only if paid from after-tax income • Premiums paid through an employer-sponsored cafeteria plan are not deductible • Premiums for disability insurance and for loss of life, limb or income are not deductible • Premiums for long-term care insurance are deductible, subject to limits based on age
Deductible Taxes • Deductible taxes include • State, local, and foreign real property taxes • State and local personal property taxes • State, local, and foreign income taxes • Other federal, state, local, and foreign taxes incurred in a business or other income-producing activity • For 2004 & 2005 can elect to deduct state & local general sales taxes instead of state & local income taxes
Nondeductible Taxes • Nondeductible taxes include • Federal income taxes • Employee's share of payroll taxes • Federal excise taxes not incurred for business • Assessments on property that increase property value
Interest Expense • Deductible interest includes • Investment interest • Home mortgage interest • No deduction for most other personal interest (except previously mentioned student loan interest) including interest on • Auto loans • Life insurance loans • Credit card debt • Delinquent tax payments
Investment Interest Expense • Investment interest includes interest on loans to acquire or hold investment property and margin account interest paid to a broker • Investment interest expense is only deductible to the extent of net investment income • Net investment income = excess of investment income over investment expenses • Excess is carried forward (indefinitely) subject to same limit in future years
Investment Interest Expense • Investment incomeincludesgross income from interest, annuities, and short-term capital gains from investment property • Long-term capital gains or dividends taxed at favorable rates are excluded unless election made to forgo the favorable rate • Investment expenses include safe deposit box rental fees, investment counsel fees, brokerage account maintenance fees • Limited to the lesser of total investment expenses or net miscellaneous itemized deductions after reduction for 2% AGI floor
Qualified Residence Interest • Interest paid for acquisition debt or home equity debt for up to 2 qualified residences • Interest on acquisition debt of up to $1 million principal amount (combined limit for 2 homes) is deductible • Acquisition debt includes mortgage to buy, construct, or improve the residence
Qualified Residence Interest • Interest on up to $100,000 principal amount of home equity loan is deductible • Loan proceeds can be used for any purpose • Points (loan origination fees) paid on initial home mortgages are deductible • Points paid to refinance an exiting loan must be amortized over life of loan
Charitable Contributions • Congress allows individuals, corporations, estates and trusts to deduct contributions to certain qualified organizations • Partnerships and S corporations pass the contributions through to their partners and shareholders who then claim the deductions on their own income tax returns
Charitable Contributions • Qualified charitable organizations • Governmental units (federal, state and local governments) and entities formed and operated exclusively for religious, charitable, scientific, literary or educational purposes, including churches, nonprofit hospitals, school and universities, libraries, and social service agencies • Direct contributions to needy individuals are notdeductible
Charitable Contributions • No deduction allowed to the extent that valuable goods or services are received in return for the contribution • Exception - contributors to universities who receive preferred rights to purchase tickets for university athletic events may deduct 80% of the amount of their contribution • Individual’s deduction limited to 50% of AGI • Excess contributions may be carried forward up to 5 years
Charitable Contributions • No deduction for contributions of the taxpayer’s services and rent-free use of the taxpayer’s property • Out-of-pocket costs incurred for volunteer work for a qualifying charity are deductible • Property other than long-term capital gain property is valued at lesser of FMV or basis
Contributions of LTCG Property • LTCG property is valued at FMV (which is usually greater than adjusted basis) • Tangible personalty given to a charity which does not use the property in its tax-exempt activity is valued at adjusted basis, if lower than FMV • Deduction for LTCG property limited to 30% of AGI • 30% limit can be avoided (and 50% AGI limit applied) if taxpayer elects to use lower basis • If made, election applies to all LTCG contributions that year
Charitable Contributions • Stocks or other income producing property that have declined in value should be sold so that the loss can be claimed with the sale proceeds donated • Fees incurred for appraisals of donated property may be deducted as a miscellaneous itemized deductions • Deduction for donated vehicles sold by charity limited to gross sales proceeds
Casualty and Theft Losses • Loss is the lesser of • Asset’s adjusted basis or • Decline in asset’s fair market value as a result of the casualty • Loss is reduced for any insurance proceeds received • $100 floor applies to each casualty • Deductible only to extent total losses exceed 10% of AGI
Miscellaneous Deductions • Only excess over 2% of AGI is deductible • Unreimbursed employee business expenses • Job hunting expenses (in searching for a new job in current line of business) • Investment-related expenses • Hobby expenses (up to hobby income) • Tax preparation and planning advice
Phaseout ofItemized Deductions • Total deductions phased out by 3% of AGI in excess of $145,950 in 2005 ($72,975 if MFS) • Exception - deductions not phased out for • Medical expenses • Investment interest • Casualty and theft losses • Total deductions are not reduced by more than 80% regardless of type
Tax Rates forMarried Filing a Joint Return • For married filing a joint return for 2005 • 10% on first $14,600 taxable income • 15% on $14,601 - $59,400 • 25% on $59,401 - $119,950 • 28% on $119,951 - $182,800 • 33% on $182,801 - $326,450 • 35% over $326,450
Tax Rates forMarried Filing Separately • For married filing separately for 2005 • 10% on first $7,300 taxable income • 15% on $7,301 - $29,700 • 25% on $29,701 - $59,975 • 28% on $59,976 - $91,400 • 33% on $91,401 - $163,225 • 35% over $163,225
Tax Rates for Single Individuals • For single individuals for 2005 • 10% on first $7,300 taxable income • 15% on $7,301 - $29,700 • 25% on $29,701 - $71,950 • 28% on $71,951 - $150,150 • 33% on $150,151 - $326,450 • 35% over $326,450