What's your alternative minimum tax (AMT) preference?
Though you might prefer to not think about the AMT, certain
income and deductions, known as preference items, affect the way the tax will
apply to you. Those amounts, along with others called "adjustments,"
are added to or subtracted from the income shown on your tax return to arrive
at your AMT taxable income.
For example, certain bond interest that you exclude from your
regular taxable income must be included when computing income for the AMT. This
is a "preference item" because tax-exempt interest gets preferential
treatment under ordinary federal income tax rules.
Adjustments include personal exemptions and your standard
deduction. In the AMT calculation, these taxable-income reducers are not
deductible. Instead, they're replaced with one flat exemption, which is
generally the amount of income you can exclude from the AMT.
Note: For your 2013 tax return, the AMT exemption is $80,800
when you're married filing a joint return or are a surviving spouse, $51,900
when you file as single, and $40,400 if you're married and file separately. The
exemption decreases once your income reaches a certain level.
What if you itemize? Some itemized deductions are allowed,
such as charitable contributions. Others, including medical expenses and
mortgage interest, are computed using less favorable rules.
Whatever AMT preference – or adjustment – applies to you, we're
here to help calculate the best tax outcome. Please contact us for details or
assistance.
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