By Tom Herman
With the April 15 tax deadline less than three months away, here
are answers to a few reader questions.
The Internal Revenue Service will begin accepting and processing
federal tax returns on Feb. 12. But if you're ready before then,
file electronically, says Eric Smith, an IRS spokesman. "Our e-file
and Free File partners will hold any returns they receive and then
transmit them to us on Feb. 12," he says. The average refund on
federal income-tax returns last year was about $2,500.
What are the chances that Congress will repeal or modify the
$10,000 limit on state and local tax deductions and make changes
retroactive to last year?
It's too soon to know whether Congress will approve any changes
for this year or future years, but don't expect any relief to apply
to last year.
Repealing or altering this limitation is "a high priority for a
number of Democrats," says Hank Gutman, a former chief of staff of
Congress's Joint Committee on Taxation and now of counsel to the
law firm Ivins, Phillips & Barker. Even so, the outlook remains
blurry. But if lawmakers do take action, he says, "I can't imagine
[any changes] would be retroactive" to last year.
The $10,000 cap ($5,000 if married and filing separately) is per
tax return, not per person. This limitation is an especially
important issue for many upper-income residents of high-tax areas,
such as New York City, California, New Jersey and Connecticut.
Hopes for repeal have grown now that the Democrats control the
presidency, House and Senate (where the Majority Leader now is Sen.
Chuck Schumer of New York). It's possible lawmakers might remove or
alter the cap, but only for taxpayers with income below certain
thresholds.
What is the basic standard deduction for the 2020 tax year and
the extra amount for people who were 65 or older at the end of last
year?
The basic standard deduction for singles typically is $12,400.
That's also the amount if you're married and filing separately.
It's $24,800 for joint filers and qualifying widows/widowers.
There are higher amounts for those born before Jan. 2, 1956, or
blind. For example, the standard deduction for a single taxpayer
who was 65 or older at the end of last year typically is $14,050
($12,400 + $1,650). A married couple filing jointly, where one
spouse was 65 or older, gets $26,100 ($24,800 + $1,300). If both
spouses were 65 or older, the total would be $27,400. For more
details, see IRS Publication 17.
You recently wrote about a law enacted early last year allowing
taxpayers who claim the standard deduction for 2020 to deduct as
much $300 of donations to charities. Is that $300 for singles and
$600 for married couples filing jointly?
No. "This dollar limit applies per return for 2020, so whether
you're single or married (and filing jointly), you can only claim
up to $300 as a deduction," says Kevin Martin, principal tax
researcher at the Tax Institute at H&R Block. If you're married
and filing separately, the limit is $150, Mr. Martin says.
This new break applies to cash donations (not stock or other
noncash gifts) made last year to eligible charities. Donations to
donor-advised funds don't qualify. This is an "above the line"
deduction, which means it reduces your adjusted gross income.: That
is important since AGI can affect many other items on your return,
such as the 3.8% surtax on net investment income.
Another reader asked whether the new law changed the
requirements for documenting such gifts. Answer: No. See IRS
Publication 526 for details.
But lawmakers recently did modify this provision for returns for
2021, says Mark Luscombe, principal federal tax analyst at Wolters
Kluwer Tax & Accounting. The deduction will rise to $600 for
joint filers and $300 for singles, he says. Another change: The
deduction for 2021 will be "below the line," meaning it won't
reduce adjusted gross income but still will reduce taxable income,
says the IRS's Mr. Smith.
I have capital gains which will result in having to pay the
additional 3.8% tax imposed by the Affordable Care Act. Am I
correct that the threshold for singles kicks in at $200,000 of
modified adjusted gross income? Can you give an example of how to
calculate the tax?
"You are correct that, for a single filer, $200,000 is the
threshold for the net investment income tax," says Mr. Martin of
H&R Block. For married couples filing jointly, the threshold is
$250,000 (or $125,000 if you're married and filing separately). Net
investment income typically includes such items as interest,
dividends, capital gains, and rental and royalty income, the IRS
says on its website.
Here is an IRS example: Suppose a single taxpayer's AGI is
$270,000, consisting of $180,000 of wages and $90,000 of net
investment income. That's $70,000 above the threshold. The taxpayer
would owe a net investment income tax of $2,660 ($70,000 X 3.8%),
the IRS says. The reason: The tax is based on the amount that the
taxpayer's income exceeded the threshold ($70,000 in this case), or
the taxpayer's net investment income ($90,000), whichever is
smaller.
The IRS also notes that if you sell your personal residence for
a gain, the tax wouldn't apply to any amount of your profit that
can be excluded from gross income for regular income tax
purposes.
Here's another IRS example: Suppose a single filer earns
$210,000 in wages and sells his principal home, which he has owned
and lived in for the past 10 years, for a profit of $220,000. The
taxpayer is allowed to exclude as much as $250,000 of the gain on
the sale. Because it's excluded for regular income tax purposes,
it's also excluded from the calculations for net investment income
-- and, thus, the net investment income tax wouldn't apply to the
gain on the sale of the home, the IRS says.
Here is our annual reminder of an easily overlooked pointer that
may be especially important for some upper-income employees who
worked for two or more employers last year: When organizing your
documents, check to see how much in Social Security tax (Old-Age,
Survivors and Disability Insurance, or OASDI) was withheld from
your pay. Most employers are required to withhold.
The maximum that should have been withheld for 2020 was
$8,537.40. That's 6.2% of $137,700, the maximum amount of earnings
subject to the Social Security tax.
If the total OASDI withheld by all your employers exceeded that
amount, file for a credit for the excess amount on Form 1040,
Schedule 3, Line 10, Mr. Luscombe says. If any one employer
withheld too much, ask that employer to adjust the tax. If that
doesn't work, file a refund claim on Form 843.
Mr. Herman is a writer in California. He was formerly The Wall
Street Journal's Tax Report columnist. Send comments and tax
questions to taxquestions@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
January 23, 2021 10:14 ET (15:14 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2021 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.