Your social security benefits may be
taxable
Did you sign up for social security
benefits last year? If so, you may have questions about how those payments are
taxed on your federal income tax return.
The good news is the formula is the
same as prior years. That's also the bad news, because the thresholds for
determining taxability are not indexed for inflation, and did not change
either. Those thresholds, or "base amounts," remain at $32,000 when
you're married and file a joint return, and $25,000 when you're single.
How much of your social security
benefit is taxable? To determine the answer, calculate your "provisional
income." That's your adjusted gross income plus tax-exempt interest,
certain other exclusions, and one-half of the social security benefits you
received.
When you're married filing jointly,
your benefits are 50% taxable if your provisional income is between $32,000 and
$44,000. If your provisional income is more than $44,000, up to 85% of your
benefits may be taxable. For singles, the 50% taxability range is $25,000 to
$34,000.
In some cases, diversifying the types of other
No comments:
Post a Comment