EisnerAmper LLP
Accountants and Advisors
www.eisneramper.com
2016
personal tax
guide
and tax tips for 2015
Featuring Coverage of the Protecting Americans from Tax Hikes Act of 2015
. . INTRODUCTION:
TAX PLANNING IN UNCERTAIN TIMES
As we start a new year, we find that the higher tax regime resulting
from the passage of the American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012
(“ATRA”) still continues. The top federal long-term capital gains
tax rate is still 20%, and the top federal ordinary income tax
rate is 39.6%. The top alternative minimum tax remains at 28%.
The top estate and gift tax rate remains at 40% and a $5.45 million
gift, estate and generation-skipping tax exclusion (as adjusted
annually for inflation) is in effect.
ATRA also provided for several tax incentives for businesses and
individuals, which expired at the end of 2013. In December 2014,
the Tax Increase Prevention Act of 2014 (“TIPA”) was enacted,
which reinstated these incentives for 2014.
But the relief was
short-lived, since these incentives expired as of December 31,
2014. For most of 2015, individuals could not count on these
incentives when planning for the 2015 tax year or thereafter.
Then, in December 2015, Congress passed with uncharacteristic
bipartisan cooperation the $1.1 trillion Omnibus Appropriations
Act of 2016, which included the Protecting Americans from Tax
Hikes Act of 2015 (“PATH”), a substantially unfunded $680 billion
tax cut over 10 years. The Act was signed into law by President
Obama on December 18, 2015.
PATH extends many of the tax
incentives and credits for businesses and individuals, which
had expired as of December 31, 2014. Some of these incentives
have been permanently extended. Our guide provides extensive
coverage of PATH, which should assist you in planning.
Clearly, ATRA has had a major impact on the tax situation of
many individuals and families.
In addition, the Patient Protection
and Affordable Care Act (“ACA”) had imposed a 0.9% Health
Insurance Tax on earned income for higher income individuals and
a 3.8% Medicare Contribution Tax on net investment income. The
tax is imposed on the lesser of (a) net investment income, such as
interest income, dividends, capital gains and passive income less
expenses directly attributable to the production of such income,
and (b) the excess of modified adjusted gross income over a
specified dollar amount ($250,000 for joint filers or a surviving
spouse, $125,000 for married filing separately and $200,000 for
other taxpayers). These taxes are imposed in addition to the other
taxes discussed.
Other legislation signed into law this year include the Surface
Transportation & Veterans Health Care Choice Improvement
Act of 2015 which makes changes to tax return due dates and
extensions for tax years beginning after December 31, 2015.
Also
enacted this year is the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015 which
removed the automatic ACA registration to new employees and
repealed the Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1982
and the electing large partnership (“ELP”) rules. In addition, the
Fixing America’s Surface Transportation (“FAST”) Act, enacted
in December 2015, allows the IRS to communicate with the
Department of State regarding taxpayers with an assessed tax
debt of more than $50,000. This could result in the Department
of State revoking the delinquent taxpayers’ U.S.
passports.
Also in December 2015, the Federal Reserve announced that
it would raise the short-term interest rate by a quarter of a
percentage point, up from close to zero. This rate increase is
the first since the 2008 financial crisis. While the increase was
small, the move was significant as it signaled a vote of confidence
in the American economy, even as much of the rest of the world
struggles.
Unemployment is approaching 5%, which is very close
to the point when inflationary pressure typically starts to kick
in. The small interest rate increase could ward off this potential
pressure. This change can impact families and individuals.
Mortgage rates are expected to go up, so now may be the perfect
time to lock into a fixed rate mortgage.
Credit card and auto loan
interest rates will also rise.
The 2016 presidential election campaign is underway and so far
we have witnessed very dynamic discussions on some substantial
issues that impact families, business owners and entrepreneurs.
These issues include taxes and the gridlock in Washington,
especially with regard to threatened government shut-downs,
appropriations and budgets. We have also seen a highly volatile
market. All of these events create new realities which we face
together as a nation, and as families and individuals.
The international arena continues to be of concern to many
individuals and families.
The global threat of ISIS, the confrontation
with Russia over the Ukraine and other matters, perennial hot
spots such as North Korea, China’s economic performance,
. and the sluggish recovery in the EU and Japan, continue to be
significant issues. We have also seen, and empathize with the
victims of the grim terrorist attacks at home and abroad; the
unfolding migrant tragedy and all of the suffering of thousands of
families around the world as they, and we, deal with the scourges
of war and terrorism. These, too, are our realities.
Many families with wealth are concerned about their children’s and
grandchildren’s future, and wonder what can be done to sustain
and grow their wealth in these uncertain times. With the many
law changes cited above, and current economic and geopolitical
conditions, it is extremely important that you pay attention to
your financial position so that you can achieve your financial
goals.
Specific items such as retirement planning, managing cash
flow, financing the cost of your children’s college education and
transferring your family’s wealth to the next generation, should all
be top of mind in 2016.
We have written this guide to provide you with a tool to identify
opportunities to mitigate taxes, accomplish your financial goals,
and preserve your family’s wealth. The guide includes all major
tax law changes through January 1, 2016. The best way to use
this guide is to identify areas that may be most pertinent to your
unique situation and then discuss the matter with your tax advisor.
As always, our tax professionals will be pleased to discuss any of
the ideas in this guide or any other tax planning approaches that
might apply to your personal financial situation.
The guide is meant not only to assist with the preparation of your
2015 income tax returns, but also to plan for the 2016 tax year
and beyond.
We find that it is never too early to start planning for
the new year!
Marie Arrigo, CPA, MBA
Tax Partner & Co-Leader
Family Office Services
Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, YouTube and
Google+.
Visit www.eisneramper.com for the most up to date
information and the online version of the Tax Guide.
Download the EisnerAmper 2016 Personal Tax Guide
as an Adobe Acrobat PDF.
. 3
5 Tax Planning Strategies
75 Retirement Plans
14 Tax Rate Overview
83 Estate and Gift Tax Planning
19 Estimated Tax Requirements
92 Tax Credits
22 Alternative Minimum Tax
96 Education Incentives
27 Business Owner Issues
99 Planning for Same-Sex Couples
and Depreciation Deductions
33 Capital Gains and Dividend Income
41 Stock Options, Restricted Stock
103 International Tax Planning
and Reporting Requirements
115 State Tax Issues
and Deferred Compensation
49 Small Business Stock
52 Passive and Real Estate Activities
58 Principal Residence Sale and Rental
62 Charitable Contributions
70 Interest Expense
Appendices
126 Appendix A: 2016 Federal Tax Calendar
127 Appendix B: 2015 Federal Tax Rate Schedules
128 Appendix C: 2016 Federal Tax Rate Schedules
129 Appendix D: 2015 and 2016 Maximum Effective Rates
130 Appendix E: EisnerAmper Tax and Private Business
Service Partners and PrincipalsNotes
Editor-in-Chief
Marie Arrigo
Contributors
Jonathan Acquavella, June Albert, Peter Alwardt,
Stephen Bercovitch, Lina Chan, Christine Faris, Cindy Feder,
Co-Editors
Jeff Chazen, Angela Chen,
Susan Fludgate, William Gentilesco, Nancy Gianco,
Denise DeLisser, Carolyn Dolci,
Matthew Halpern, Kety Hernandez, Mary Ho, Cindy Huang,
Dan Gibson, Stephanie Hines,
Sue Huang, Jean Jiang, Bo Kearney, Cindy Lai,
James Jacaruso, Richard Lichtig,
Michael Mongiello, Richard Shapiro, Chaya Siegfried,
Peter Michaelson, Kenneth Weissenberg,
Barbara Taibi, Holly Wong
Tom Hall
This tax guide highlights tax planning ideas that may help you minimize your tax liability. This guide does not constitute accounting,
tax, or legal advice, nor is it intended to convey a thorough treatment of the subject matter. The best way to use this guide is to
identify those issues which could impact you, your family, or your business and then discuss them with your tax advisor.
The discussion in this guide is based on the Internal Revenue Code as amended through January 1, 2016. Future legislation,
administrative interpretations, and judicial decisions may change the advisability of any course of action.
Because of periodic
legislation changes, you should always check with your tax advisor before implementing any tax planning ideas.
Any tax advice contained in this publication (including any attachments) is not intended for and cannot be used for the purpose
of (i) avoiding penalties imposed by the Internal Revenue Code or (ii) promoting, marketing, or recommending any transaction or
matter addressed herein.
Copyright 2016 by EisnerAmper LLP. All rights reserved. This book, or portions thereof, may not be reproduced in any form without permission of EisnerAmper LLP.
state tax issues
TABLE OF CONTENTS
EisnerAmper LLP
.
. tax planning
strategies
In addition to saving income taxes for the current and future years,
effective tax planning can reduce eventual estate taxes, maximize the
amount of funds you will have available for retirement, reduce the cost of
financing your children’s education, and assist you in managing your cash
flow to help you meet your financial objectives.
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EisnerAmper 2016 personal tax guide
Tax planning strategies can defer some of your current year’s tax
liability to a future year, thereby freeing up cash for investment,
business, or personal use. This can be accomplished by timing when
certain expenses are paid, or controlling when income is recognized.
Tax planning allows you to take advantage of tax rate differentials
between years. However, if tax rates rise in a subsequent year, extra
caution may be necessary. If monitored properly, tax planning can
also help you minimize, or even prevent, the impact of the alternative minimum tax (“AMT”) and preserve the tax benefit of many
of your deductions.
TAX PLANNING GOALS
Proper tax planning can achieve the following goals:
• Reduce the current year’s tax liability.
• Defer the current year’s tax liability to future years.
The key things you should understand as you look for ways to minimize your taxes are:
• Residents of states with high income and property taxes, such as
New York, California, Connecticut, Pennsylvania and New Jersey,
are most likely to be subject to the AMT.
• he current top long-term capital gains tax rate is 20%.
Including
T
the additional 3.8% Medicare Contribution Tax on net investment
income, the top long-term capital gains rate could be 23.8% and
the top short-term capital gains tax rate could be as much as
43.4%.
• Under current law, the complex netting rules have the potential
effect of making your long-term capital gains subject to short-term
rates, so you must carefully time your security trades to ensure
that you receive the full benefit of the lowest capital gains tax rate.
• There may be limitations on the deductibility of your itemized
deductions (“Pease”) provision and on the allowable amount
of your personal exemptions provision (“PEP”) based on your
adjusted gross income (“AGI”). Various phaseouts that reduce
your deductions and/or exemptions can increase your tax liability
and your effective tax rate.
• Consider the impact that the additional Medicare Contribution
Tax on net investment income will have on your particular tax
situation. Certain direct and indirect expenses, such as margin
interest and state taxes, may decrease the surtax and it may make
sense to prepay these expenses, even if you are projected to be
in the AMT.
• Gift and estate taxes can reduce the amount your beneficiaries will
receive by 40% to 50%, depending on which state one is a resident of at date of death.
However, there are planning techniques
and strategies available to maximize the amount of wealth that
is preserved for your family.
• Reduce any potential future years’ tax liabilities.
• Maximize the tax savings from allowable
deductions.
• Minimize the effect of the AMT on this year’s tax
liability.
• Maximize tax savings by taking advantage of
available tax credits.
• Maximize the amount of wealth that stays in your
family.
• Minimize capital gains tax.
• Minimize the Medicare Contribution Tax on net
investment income.
• Avoid penalties for underpayment of estimated
taxes.
• Increase availability of cash for investment, business,
or personal needs by deferring your tax liability.
• Manage your cash flow by projecting when tax
payments will be required.
• Minimize potential future estate taxes to maximize
the amount left to your beneficiaries and/or charities
(rather than the government).
• Maximize the amount of money you will have
available to fund your children’s education as well as
your retirement.
. 7
Tax Tip 1 provides a snapshot of key strategies geared toward helping
you achieve your planning goals. It includes ideas to help you reduce
your current year’s tax as well as ideas to reduce any potential future
taxes. While this chart is not all inclusive, it is a good starting point
to help you identify planning ideas that might apply to your situation.
Keep in mind that many of the strategies involve knowing what your
approximate income, expenses and tax rates will be for the current
and subsequent years and then applying the applicable tax law for
each year to determine the best path to follow. Implementation of
many of these ideas requires a thorough knowledge of tax laws,
thoughtful planning and timely action.
Timing when you pay deductible expenses and when you receive
income (to the extent you have control) can permanently reduce
your taxes — especially if you are subject to the AMT in one year
but not another.
Timing expenses and income can also defer some
of your tax liability to next year (or even later years) giving you,
rather than the government, use of your money.
To gain the maximum benefit, you need to project, as best you can,
your tax situation for the current and subsequent years. This will help
you identify your tax bracket for each year and determine whether
the AMT will likely affect you in either or both years. Your year-todate realized long- and short-term capital gains and losses should
be included in your projections.
Be sure to consider prior-year loss
carry forwards (if any). Based on these results, you can decide what
steps to take prior to year-end. You will be able to decide whether or
not you should prepay deductions and defer income, defer expenses
and accelerate income, realize capital losses, or lock in capital gains.
Tax Tip 2 offers basic guidance for deciding when to prepay or defer
deductible expenses and when to defer or collect taxable income.
Tax Tip 3 offers steps to follow relating to realized capital gains
and/or losses, and the type of gains and losses you should trigger.
STEPS TO TAKE IF THE AMT APPLIES EITHER
THIS YEAR OR NEXT
As a general rule, if your year-end projection indicates that you
will be in the AMT, it is very important that you do not pay any of
the following expenses prior to the end of the year, as they are not
deductible in computing your AMT and you will not receive a tax
benefit from the deduction:
• State and local income taxes
• Real estate taxes
• Miscellaneous itemized deductions such as investment expenses
and employee business expenses
Conversely, if you are not projected to be in the AMT in the current
year, you should try to prepay as many of the above expenses as
possible to receive the maximum tax benefit.
Keep in mind, though,
that the more you prepay, the more likely you will end up in the AMT.
EXPENSES YOU CAN PREPAY
Here are the most common deductible expenses you can easily
prepay by December 31, if appropriate:
Charitable Contributions
You can deduct charitable gifts of cash and tangible personal property, such as clothing and household goods, up to 50% of your
AGI and charitable gifts of appreciated capital gain properties up
to 30% of your AGI.
State and Local Income Taxes
If you are not in the AMT this year, you can prepay before December
31 your fourth-quarter estimated state tax payment due on January
15 of the following year, as well as any state income tax you project
will be due on April 15 of the following year. You will gain the benefit
of a tax deduction in the current year and protect those deductions
that could be lost if you fell into the AMT next year. Prepaying these
taxes will probably outweigh any lost earnings on the use of the
funds.
However, be careful that the prepayment itself doesn’t put you
into the AMT. Prepayment of state income taxes may also reduce
the Medicare Contribution Tax to the extent that such taxes are
allocated against any investment income. As a result, you may wish
to consider such prepayment even if it puts you into the AMT.
Real Estate Taxes
Like state and local income taxes, prepaying next year’s real estate
taxes prior to year-end can be an especially beneficial strategy
should you end up subject to the AMT next year, but not in the
current year.
Miscellaneous Itemized Deductions
Miscellaneous itemized deductions are deductible for regular income
tax purposes only if they exceed, in the aggregate, 2% of your AGI.
Bunching these deductions to gain the most favorable tax result may
be a viable strategy, as a tax benefit is received if you are not subject
to the AMT.
Investment expenses may also reduce the Medicare
Contribution Tax on net investment income.
tax planning strategies
YEAR-END TAX PLANNING TIPS
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EisnerAmper 2016 personal tax guide
tax tip
1
KEY TAX PLANNING STRATEGIES
Situation
Your regular tax rate will be the same or
lower next year and the AMT will not apply
in either year.
Planning idea
Detailed discussion
• Prepay deductions.
• Defer income.
Pg 7
Pg 10
Your regular tax rate will increase next year
• Defer deductions.
and the AMT will not apply in either year.
• Accelerate income, but only if the tax rate increase warrants
accelerating tax payments.
The regular tax rate applies this year and is
• Prepay deductions, especially if they are not deductible against
higher than the AMT rate that you expect will the AMT and would therefore be lost next year. These deductions
apply next year. include state and local income taxes, real estate taxes,
and miscellaneous itemized deductions such as investment fees.
â–ª
• Defer income.
Pg 10
This year you are in the AMT and next year
• Defer deductions, especially those not allowed against the AMT
you will be subject to a higher regular tax rate. that would be lost this year.
• Accelerate income.
Pg 23
You have net realized capital losses this year
• Consider recognizing capital gains by selling appreciated securities
or loss carryforwards from last year. to offset realized losses and loss carryforwards, thereby locking in
the appreciation.
Pg 11
You have net realized capital gains this year.
• Sell securities with unrealized losses to offset the gains — if market
conditions justify it.
â–ª
• Use a bond swap to realize losses.
â–ª
• Consider tax implications of netting rules.
â–ª
• Avoid wash sale rules.
â–ª
• Consider the implications of the Medicare Contribution Tax on net
investment income.
Pg 11
You are contemplating purchasing new
• Accelerate the purchases into 2015 to take advantage of section 179
business equipment. deductions available this year. (Purchases must be placed in service in
2015.)
Pg 28
Your miscellaneous deductions will be
• Bunch these deductions into a single year, thereby increasing the
reduced due to the limitation based on 2% deductible amount. Make sure you avoid the AMT.
To the extent that
of your AGI. these deductions are investment expenses they can reduce the
Medicare Contribution Tax on net investment income.
Pg 12
A penalty for underpayment of estimated
• Withhold additional amounts of tax from your wages before December 31.
taxes will apply.
• Prepay fourth quarter estimates due January 15 and increase the
payment amount, if necessary.
â–ª
• Have withholding taken out of your retirement plan distribution.
Pg 21
You want to diversify a concentrated
• Consider using a charitable remainder trust that will allow you to sell the
low-basis stock position and avoid stock in exchange for an annuity. This will allow you to defer the tax
paying taxes currently. while benefiting a charity of your choice.
Pg 66
Pg 25
Pg 38
Pg 35
Pg 38
Pg 18
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tax planning strategies
tax tip
1
KEY TAX PLANNING STRATEGIES
Situation
Planning idea
Detailed discussion
You have incentive stock options that you
• Consider exercising your options to start the long-term holding period,
Pg 42
can exercise. but only if the spread between the market price of the stock and the
exercise price will not put you into the AMT.
Your passive activity losses exceed your
• Dispose of an activity that is generating passive losses in order to deduct
Pg 53
passive income. the suspended loss on that activity. However, consider the impact of the
Medicare Contribution Tax on net investment income on net passive income.
You would like to make significant charitable
• Donate appreciated securities you have held for more than one year.
contributions.
• Consider establishing a charitable trust or a private foundation, or take
advantage of a donor-advised fund.
â–ª
• Consider donating partial interests in certain assets such as a conservation
easement, remainder interest in real estate or art work to a museum.
Pg 63
Pg 65
You need funds for personal use, such as
• Sell marketable securities with little or no appreciation to fund your needs,
improvements to your home in excess of the and then use margin debt to purchase replacement securities. The interest
mortgage limitations or to pay tax liabilities. on the debt will be deductible, subject to investment interest limitations.
The interest may also reduce the Medicare Contribution Tax on net
investment income.
â–ª
• Take distributions, if available, from partnerships, limited liability
companies, or S corporations on income that you have already paid
taxes on. Be sure you have sufficient tax basis and are “at risk” in the entity.
Pg 72
You want to take advantage of the tax-deferred • Maximize your contributions to your retirement accounts and take
nature of retirement accounts. advantage of the best plans available to you prior to December 31.
Pg 76
You expect the value of your IRA to appreciate
• Consider converting your traditional IRA into a Roth IRA in the current
over time, and you want to position your IRA year.
However, this will cause a current tax liability, since the converted
now so that there will be little or no tax impact amount is subject to income tax in the year of the conversion.
when you or your beneficiaries take distributions
later.
Pg 79
You have a sizeable estate and want to protect
• Make gifts of $14,000 to each individual in 2015, and again in 2016.
your assets from estate tax.
• Pay beneficiaries’ tuition and medical expenses directly to the providers.
• Use your lifetime gift tax exclusion of $5.43 million effective for 2015,
$5.45 million effective for 2016; for subsequent years, the exclusion
will be indexed for inflation.
Pg 85
You want to transfer assets to your designated
• Create a grantor retained annuity trust (“GRAT”).
beneficiaries during your lifetime.
• Set up a family limited partnership (“FLP”) or family limited liability company
(“FLLC”).
• Make loans to your beneficiaries at minimum required interest rates.
â–ª
You want to provide for your children’s and/or
• Establish and fund a 529 plan that can grow tax-free as long as you use the
grandchildren’s qualified education costs. funds to pay for qualified education expenses.
Pg 88
Pg 88
You and your spouse are a legally married
• Review your income and estate tax filings to determine if any tax refund
same-sex couple. claims should be filed.
• Review and update your estate plan.
â–ª
• Review health and retirement plans and Social Security benefits.
Pg 100
Pg 64
Pg 29
Pg 87
Pg 97
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EisnerAmper 2016 personal tax guide
Mortgage Interest
Consider prepaying your mortgage payment for next January in the
current year in order to accelerate the deduction.
Margin Interest
Be sure to pay any margin interest before December 31, since interest
accrued at year-end is only deductible if actually paid. This may also
reduce the Medicare Contribution Tax on net investment income.
INCOME YOU CAN ACCELERATE OR DEFER
Timing income can be more difficult than timing deductions, but
here are some types of income for which you may be able to control
the timing of receipt so you can gain the advantage of having the
income taxed in a year that you are in a lower tax bracket.
Cash Salaries or Bonuses
If you anticipate your current year’s income tax rate to be lower than
next year’s rate, you can accelerate salary or bonuses into the current
year. You would need to determine if there are strict limitations on
amounts that can be accelerated. However, if next year’s rate is
lower than your current year’s rate, it may make sense to defer such
income until next year provided the income is not constructively
received (made available to you in the current year).
Consulting or Other Self-Employment Income
If you are a cash-basis business and you anticipate your current
year’s tax rate to be lower than next year’s rate, you can accelerate
income into the current year.
Otherwise, you would want to defer
such income.
tax tip
2
AMT TAX PLANNING STRATEGIES
Nature of deduction
or income
You will not be in the AMT this
year or next year and next year’s tax rate
You are in the AMT*
will be the same
as the current year
will
only
or will decrease
increase
this year
this year
and
next year
only
next year
Charitable contributions, mortgage
interest, investment interest and
self-employed expenses
Prepay
Defer
Defer
Prepay
Prepay
State and local income taxes,
real estate taxes, and miscellaneous
deductions that are not deductible
if you are in the AMT
Prepay
Defer
Defer
Defer
Prepay
Income such as bonuses, self-employed
consulting fees, retirement plan distributions,
and net short-term capital gains
(unless you have long-term losses offsetting
the gains)
Defer
Collect
Collect
Defer
Defer
Miscellaneous itemized deductions
bunched (not deductible for the AMT)
into a single year to exceed the 2% AGI
income floor
Prepay
Defer
Defer
Defer
Prepay
Legend: Prepay before the end of the current year/Defer into next year or later/Collect before the end of the year
*The chart assumes your regular tax rate on ordinary income is higher than the maximum AMT rate of 28%.
. 11
the netting rule which may result in the offsetting of long-term
losses to short-term gains, resulting in a tax savings of 39.6%
rather than 20%.
• eview your portfolio to determine if you have any securities that
R
The law that allowed tax-free distributions from individual retirement accounts (“IRAs”) to public charities made by individuals age
701/2 of up to $100,000 has been made permanent as a result of
the Protecting Americans from Tax Hikes Act of 2015 (“PATH”).
The provision allows an individual to exclude the distribution from
income — thereby reducing the limitations based on a percentage
of AGI — and also reduced state income taxes by reducing state
taxable income.
Capital Gains
The following ideas can lower your taxes this year:
you may be able to claim as worthless, thereby giving you a capital
loss before the end of the year. A similar rule applies to bad debts.
• onsider a bond swap to realize losses in your bond portfolio. This
C
swap allows you to purchase similar bonds and avoid the wash
sale rule while maintaining your overall bond positions.
• imilarly, you may consider selling securities this year to realize
S
long-term capital gains that may be taxed at the more favorable
rate this year, and then buying them back to effectively gain a
step-up in basis. Since the sales are at a gain, the wash sale rules
do not apply.
• If you have unrealized net short-term capital gains, you can sell
the positions and realize the gains in the current year if you expect
next year’s tax rate to be higher.
This may be a good strategy if the
gain will be taxed at the AMT rate of 28% this year but at 39.6%
next year (exclusive of the additional Medicare Contribution Tax).
Only consider this strategy if you do not otherwise intend to hold
the position for more than 12 months, making it eligible for the
long-term capital gain rate of 20%, exclusive of the additional
Medicare Contribution Tax. However, you may be able to apply
Real Estate and Other Non-Publicly Traded Property Sales
If you are selling real estate or other non-publicly traded property at
a gain, you would normally structure the terms of the arrangement
so that most of the payments would be due next year. You can use
the installment sale method to report the income.
This would allow
you to recognize only a portion of the taxable gain in the current
year to the extent of the payments you received, thereby allowing
you to defer much of that tax to future years.
tax tip
3
YEAR-END CAPITAL GAINS AND LOSSES
If you have
Consider taking these steps
Both short-term and long-term losses
Sell securities to recognize unrealized gains, preferably if held short-term, up to the
amount of your losses less $3,000.
Long-term gains in excess of short-term losses
Take losses equal to the net gain, plus $3,000. Use long-term loss positions first,
then short-term loss positions.
Both short-term and long-term gains, or
short-term gains in excess of long-term losses
Take losses equal to the net gain, plus $3,000. Use long-term loss positions first
to gain the benefit of offsetting short-term gains (taxed at a rate as high
as 39.6% plus 3.8% Medicare Contribution Tax on net investment income).
Worthless securities and bad debts
Identify these securities and debts and take the necessary steps to ensure that the
losses are deductible in the current year, by having the proper substantiation.
Note: If you are married filing separately substitute $1,500 for $3,000 in the above tip.
tax planning strategies
Retirement Plan Distributions
If you are over age 591/2 and your tax rate is low this year, you may
consider taking a taxable distribution from your retirement plan even
if it is not required, or consider a Roth IRA conversion.
.
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EisnerAmper 2016 personal tax guide
U.S. Treasury Bill Income
If you have U.S. Treasury Bills maturing early next year, you may
want to sell these bills to recognize income in the current year if
you expect to be in a lower tax bracket this year than next year.
BUNCHING DEDUCTIONS
Bunching miscellaneous itemized deductions from two different
years into a single year may allow you to exceed the 2% AGI
limitation that applies to these deductions. If you have already
exceeded the 2% floor, or will do so by prepaying some of next
year’s expenses now, prepay the following expenses by December
31 (assuming you will not be in the AMT this year):
Investment Expenses
These include investment advisory fees, custody fees, and investment publications.
Such expenses may also reduce the Medicare
Contribution Tax on net investment income.
Professional Fees
The most common of these fees relate to income, gift, and estate
tax planning; tax return preparation; accounting; and legal expenses
(to the extent deductible).
Unreimbursed Employee Business Expenses
These include business travel, meals, entertainment, vehicle
expenses and publications, all exclusive of personal use. You must
reduce expenses for business entertainment and meals (including
those while away from home overnight on business) by 50% before
the 2% floor applies.
Medical Expenses
These expenses are deductible only if they exceeded 10% of your
AGI (also 10% for AMT purposes). The threshold is 7.5% of AGI for
any tax year beginning before January 1, 2017 for taxpayers who have
attained age 65 before the close of such year.
Therefore, bunching
unreimbursed medical expenses into a single year could result in a
tax benefit. Medical expenses include health insurance and dental
care. If you are paying a private nurse or a nursing home for a parent
or other relative, you can take these expenses on your tax return
even if you do not claim the parent or relative as your dependent,
assuming you meet certain eligibility requirements.
ADJUST YEAR-END WITHHOLDING OR MAKE
ESTIMATED TAX PAYMENTS
If you expect to be subject to an underpayment penalty for failure
to pay your current-year tax liability on a timely basis, consider
increasing your withholding and/or make an estimated tax payment
between now and the end of the year in order to eliminate or
minimize the amount of the penalty.
UTILIZE BUSINESS LOSSES
OR TAKE TAX-FREE DISTRIBUTIONS
It may be possible to deduct losses that would otherwise be limited
by your tax basis or the “at risk” rules.
Or, you may be able to take taxfree distributions from a partnership, limited liability company (“LLC”)
or S corporation if you have tax basis in the entity and have already
been taxed on the income. If there is a basis limitation, consider
contributing capital to the entity or making a loan under certain
conditions. See further discussion in the chapter on business owners.
PASSIVE LOSSES
If you have passive losses from a business in which you do not
materially participate that are in excess of your income from these
types of activities, consider disposing of the activity.
The tax savings can be significant since all losses become deductible when you
dispose of the activity. Even if there is a gain on the disposition, you
can receive the benefit of having the long-term capital gain taxed at
23.8% inclusive of the Medicare Contribution Tax with all the previously suspended losses offsetting ordinary income at a potential
tax benefit of 43.4% inclusive of the Medicare Contribution Tax.
INCENTIVE STOCK OPTIONS
Review your incentive stock option plans (“ISOs”) prior to year- end.
A poorly timed exercise of ISOs can be very costly since the spread
between the fair market value of the stock and your exercise price
is a tax preference item for AMT purposes. If you are in the AMT,
you will have to pay a tax on that spread, generally at 28%.
If you
expect to be in the AMT this year but do not project to be next
year, you should defer the exercise. Conversely, if you are not in
the AMT this year, you should consider accelerating the exercise
of the options; however, keep in mind to not exercise so much as
to be subject to the AMT.
ESTATE PLANNING
If you have not already done so, consider making your annual
exclusion gifts to your beneficiaries before the end of the year.
You are allowed to make tax-free gifts of up to $14,000 per year,
per individual ($28,000 if you are married and use a gift-splitting
election, or $14,000 from each spouse if the gift is funded from
. 13
Business Interest
If you have debt that can be traced to your business expenditures
— including debt used to finance the capital requirements of a
partnership, S corporation or LLC involved in a trade or business
in which you materially participate — you can deduct the interest
“above-the-line” as business interest rather than as an itemized
deduction. The interest is a direct reduction of the income from the
business. This allows you to deduct all of your business interest,
even if you are a resident of a state that limits or disallows all of
your itemized deductions.
TAX STRATEGIES FOR BUSINESS OWNERS
CLAIM SOME NOW, CLAIM SOME LATER
Timing of Income and Deductions
If you are a cash-basis business and expect your current year’s tax
rate to be higher than next year’s rate, you can delay billing until
January of next year for services already performed in order to take
advantage of the lower tax rate next year. Similarly, even if you expect
next year’s rate to be the same as this year’s rate, you should still
delay billing until after the year-end to defer the tax to next year.
Alternatively, if you expect to be in a higher tax bracket next year,
or if you expect to be in the AMT this year, you can accelerate
billing and collections into the current year to take advantage of
the lower tax rates.
Effective strategies for couples to maximize Social Security benefits
no longer exist.
A spouse will only be able to receive spousal benefits
if his/her spouse actually begins collecting his/her Social Security
benefit. The ability to postpone and collect delayed credits will be
eliminated.
You also have the option to prepay or defer paying business expenses
in order to realize the deduction in the year that you expect to be
subject to the higher tax rate. This can be particularly significant if
you are considering purchasing (and placing in service) business
equipment.
If you are concerned about your cash flow and want to
accelerate your deductions, you can charge the purchases on the
company’s credit card. This will allow you to take the deduction in
the current year when the charge is made, even though you may not
actually pay the outstanding credit card bill until after December 31.
Business Equipment
Effective for tax years beginning after December 31, 2014, PATH
permanently extends the small business expensing limitations to
$500,000 of the cost of qualifying property placed in service for
the taxable year. In addition, PATH extends bonus depreciation for
property acquired and placed in service from 2015 through 2019.
The bonus depreciation percentage is 50% for 2015, 2016 and 2017;
40% for 2018 and 30% for 2019.
See the chapter on business owner
issues and depreciation deductions.
Business interest also includes finance charges on items that you
purchase for your business (as an owner) using the company’s
credit card. These purchases are treated as additional loans to the
business, subject to tracing rules that allow you to deduct the portion
of the finance charges that relate to the business items purchased.
Credit card purchases made before year-end and paid for in 2016
are allowable deductions in 2015 for cash basis businesses.
tax planning strategies
his and her own separate accounts). By making these gifts, you
can transfer substantial amounts out of your estate without
using any of your lifetime exclusion.
Also, try to make these gifts
early in the year to transfer that year’s appreciation out of your
estate. The annual exclusion for gifts in 2016 remains unchanged
at $14,000. You could gift $14,000 to an individual in 2015 and
another $14,000 to the same individual in 2016 and not incur any
gift taxes.
Again, this benefit is doubled if you are married and use
the gift-splitting election. Furthermore, because of the increased
lifetime gift exclusion, you may wish to make additional gifts to
fully utilize such exclusion of $5.43 million each ($10.86 million
for married couples) in 2015. The 2016 lifetime gift exclusion has
been increased by $20,000 to $5.45 million each ($10.9 million
for married couples).
When combined with other estate and gift
planning techniques such as a grantor retained annuity trust, tax
planning strategies may enable you to avoid estate and gift taxes and
transfer a great deal of wealth to other family members (who may
be in a lower income tax bracket or may need financial assistance).
. tax rate
overview
For 2015, the effective rate of federal tax on income ranged
from 0% to 56%.
. 15
The rate of tax you pay on your income — as well as the benefit you
receive from your deductions — can vary from no tax at all to a rate
of approximately 56% depending on many factors, including:
• What is the nature of your income? Is it ordinary income, qualifying
income. The portion of Social Security FICA tax that employees pay remains unchanged at 6.2% on the first income listed
herein (12.4% for self-employed individuals). The Medicare portion of the FICA tax remains unchanged at 1.45% on all income
earned for employees. For the self-employed, the rate is 2.9%
of all self-employment income.
Also, there is the additional
0.9% additional Medicare tax paid by those earning more than
$200,000 ($250,000 for married taxpayers and $125,000 for
married taxpayers filing separately).
ORDINARY INCOME RATES
dividend income or net long-term capital gain income?
• Are you losing the advantage of the lower long-term capital gains
rate because of netting rules?
• Are you subject to the AMT?
• Are you subject to the Medicare Contribution Tax on net investment income?
• Are you subject to the Medicare Wage Surcharge?
Ordinary income primarily includes wages, business and self- employment income, interest income, nonqualifying dividend income, taxable
retirement plan distributions, rental income, taxable Social Security
benefits, alimony, and your distributive share of ordinary income passing through to you from a partnership, LLC or S corporation.
Net short-term capital gains are subject to the same rate as ordinary
income and, therefore, could be taxed at a rate as high as 43.4%,
inclusive of the Medicare Contribution Tax on net investment income.
Chart 1 shows the different tax brackets that apply to ordinary income
in 2015 and 2016 for married filing jointly and single taxpayers.
• Is any of your income subject to self-employment tax?
• How much of your miscellaneous itemized deductions and total
CAPITAL GAIN AND DIVIDEND INCOME RATES
itemized deductions are being limited?
•
Are your personal exemptions being phased out?
• Is any of your income eligible to be excluded from your taxable
Long-term capital gains and qualified dividend income are eligible
to be taxed at lower maximum tax rates than ordinary income. This
is discussed in detail in the chapter on capital gains and losses. But
here are the basic rules:
base?
• Are credits available to offset your tax?
The most common federal tax rates (exclusive of the Medicare
Contribution Tax on net investment income) are:
• 20% for net long-term capital gains and qualified dividends for taxpayers in the 39.6% tax bracket, such as for married taxpayers with
2015 taxable income over $464,850 ($413,200 for single filers).
• 28% for ordinary income subject to the AMT.
• For 2015, 39.6% maximum rate for ordinary income, including
short-term capital gains for married taxpayers with taxable income
over $464,850 ($466,950 in 2016) and $413,200 for single filers
($415,050 in 2016).
• The top rate for the first $118,500 of wages earned in 2015 ( and
also in 2016) is approximately 48% and 56% for self-employment
Net long-term capital gains are taxed at a maximum rate of 20% (if
your taxable income exceeds certain thresholds) for both the regular
tax and the AMT — with several notable exceptions to be discussed
in the chapter on capital gains and losses.
In some cases, the former
15% rate may still apply. To benefit from long-term capital gains treatment, you must have held the asset for more than 12 months. There
is an additional 3.8% Medicare Contribution Tax on net investment
income, including net long-term capital gains.
For 2015, dividends received from most domestic corporations and
qualified foreign corporations are taxed at the same 15% rate that
applies to net long-term capital gains (20% for married taxpayers with
taxable income over $464,850 ($466,950 in 2016) and $413,200
($415,050 in 2016) for single filers).
Dividends that do not qualify
for the preferential rate of 15% (or 20%), such as dividends from a
money market fund or nonqualified foreign corporations, are subject
to the higher ordinary income tax rates. There is an additional 3.8%
Medicare Contribution Tax on net investment income that will also
apply to dividend income.
tax rate overview
As a result of the American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012 (“ATRA”), the
Bush-era tax cuts were extended and made permanent for married
taxpayers with taxable income below $464,850 in 2015 ($466,950
in 2016) and single taxpayers with income below $413,200 in 2015
($415,050 in 2016). These amounts will be adjusted for inflation in
the future.
.
16
EisnerAmper 2016 personal tax guide
chart
1
2015 AND 2016 FEDERAL TAX RATE SCHEDULES
2015 FEDERAL TAX RATE SCHEDULES
Taxable
Income
Base Tax
Marginal Tax
Rate (Tax on
Next Dollar)
2016 FEDERAL TAX RATE SCHEDULES
Taxable
Income
Married Filing Jointly or Qualifying Widow(er)
$
0
$
0
10%
18,450
1,845.00
10,312.50
151,200
Marginal Tax
Rate (Tax on
Next Dollar)
Married Filing Jointly or Qualifying Widow(er)
15%
74,900
Base Tax
$
0
$
0
10%
18,550
1,855.00
15%
25%
75,300
10,367.50
25%
29,387.50
28%
151,900
29,517.50
28%
230,450
51,577.50
33%
231,450
51,791.50
33%
411,500
111,324.00
35%
413,350
111,818.50
35%
464,850
129,996.50
39.6%
466,950
130,578.50
39.6%
Single
$
0
$
Single
0
10%
9,225
922.50
15%
37,450
5,156.25
90,750
$
0
$
0
10%
9,275
927.50
15%
25%
37,650
5,183.75
25%
18,481.25
28%
91,150
18,558.75
28%
189,300
46,075.25
33%
190,150
46,278.75
33%
411,500
119,401.25
35%
413,350
119,934.75
35%
413,200
119,996.25
39.6%
415,050
120,529.75
39.6%
Note: See Appendix B for detailed 2015 tax rate schedules, including tax rates for married taxpayers filing separately and taxpayers filing as head
of household. See Appendix C for detailed 2016 tax rate schedules, including tax rates for married taxpayers filing separately and taxpayers filing
as head of household.
. 17
Ordinary income subject to the AMT is taxed at a maximum rate of
28%. As mentioned above, the 15% or 20% rate on net long-term
capital gains and qualified dividends also applies to the AMT. While
the AMT rate on ordinary income is lower than the highest regular
tax rate of 39.6%, it usually applies to a higher taxable income base
and frequently results in a greater tax. This is especially true if you
live in a state with high income tax rates and high real estate taxes,
and/or you have significant investment expenses in excess of 2% of
your AGI, since these deductions are not allowed in computing your
AMT.
See the chapter on the AMT for a more detailed discussion.
the child’s). To the extent that the child has earned income such as
wages, that income is taxed at the child’s marginal rate. Unearned
income such as net long-term capital gains and qualifying dividend
income is eligible for the preferential tax rate of 15% or 20% to the
extent that rate applies to the parents’ income.
The child may also be
subject to the Medicare Contribution Tax on net investment income
(see below).
EMPLOYMENT TAXES
KIDDIE TAX
Your wages and self-employment income are also subject to Social
Security and Medicare taxes. The amount of income subject to the
Social Security tax is limited (see Chart 2), but all earned income is
subject to the Medicare Contribution Tax.
The unearned income of a child under age 19, or a full-time student under age 24, is generally taxed at the parents’ tax rate. This
is designed to lessen the effectiveness of intra-family transfers of
income-producing property that would shift income from the parents’
higher marginal tax rate to the child’s generally lower tax rate.
For 2015
and 2016, the first $1,050 of the child’s unearned income is tax-free.
The next $1,050 for 2015 (and 2016) is taxed at the child’s marginal
rate. Any excess of unearned income above $2,100 is then taxed at
the parents’ marginal rate (assuming the parents’ rate is higher than
If you are self-employed, your share of Social Security and Medicare
taxes almost doubles because you pay both the employer’s and
employee’s portions of these taxes. As a result, for 2015, the federal
effective tax rate on self-employment income can be as high as 56%
on the first $118,500 of such income, compared to about 48% for
income from wages (after including your employee share of Social
Security and Medicare taxes).
The reason there is not a greater spread
is primarily because you receive a deduction against AGI for 50% of
the self-employment tax you pay.
chart
2
SOCIAL SECURITY AND MEDICARE TAXES FOR 2015 AND 2016
Tax Rates/Maximum Tax Cost
Maximum Income Subject to Tax
Employer and Employee
Portion
Social Security
Self-Employed
6.2%/$7,347 each
12.4%/$14,694
$118,500
2016
$118,500
6.2%/$7,347 each
12.4%/$14,694
2015
No limit
1.45%/No limit
2.35%/No limit**
2.678%/No limit*
3.578%/No limit**
2016
Medicare
2015
No limit
1.45%/No limit
2.35%/No limit**
2.678%/No limit*
3.578%/No limit**
* The tax rate is actually 2.9%, but only 92.35% of self-employment income is subject to the Medicare Tax.
**Includes 0.9% Hospital Insurance Tax for amounts above certain income thresholds.
tax rate overview
ALTERNATIVE MINIMUM TAX
. 18
EisnerAmper 2016 personal tax guide
MEDICARE WAGE SURTAX
Personal exemptions
An additional 0.9% Hospital Insurance Tax applies to earned income.
This tax applies to wages and/or self-employment income in excess
of $250,000 for married couples filing joint returns, $125,000 for
married filing separate returns and $200,000 for all other taxpayers.
The threshold amounts are not indexed for inflation.
The personal exemption amount (“PEP”) for 2015 is $4,000 ($4,050
in 2016) for each of your qualifying dependents. The 2015 PEP begins
to phase out for married taxpayers with AGI over $309,900 ($311,300
in 2016) and single taxpayers with AGI over $258,250 ($259,400 in
2016). It completely phases out for married taxpayers at $432,400
($433,800 in 2016) and for single taxpayers at $380,750 ($381,900
in 2016).
MEDICARE CONTRIBUTION TAX ON NET
INVESTMENT INCOME
The Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010 provided
for a 3.8% tax on net investment income of higher income taxpayers
for years beginning in 2013.
The additional 3.8% tax will apply if your AGI (with certain modifications) is in excess of $250,000 for a joint return, $200,000 if
single, and $125,000 if married filing separate. The tax will apply to
the lesser of your net investment income or your AGI in excess of the
applicable threshold amounts stated above.
Net investment income
includes interest, dividends, capital gains, annuities, royalties, rents,
income from passive business activities and income from trading in
financial instruments or commodities. The amount of gross investment income may be reduced by expenses associated with earning
that income. Such expenses include directly allocable state and local
taxes, investment advisory fees (over 2% of AGI), and investment
interest expenses.
The maximum federal tax rate on long-term capital gains and qualified dividends will be 23.8% (20% plus 3.8% additional Medicare
Contribution Tax on net investment income).
The threshold amounts
are not indexed for inflation.
ITEMIZED DEDUCTIONS AND PERSONAL
EXEMPTIONS
Reduction of miscellaneous itemized deductions
You must reduce certain miscellaneous itemized deductions by 2%
of your AGI. The deductions subject to the 2% disallowance include
investment advisory fees, unreimbursed employee business expenses,
professional dues and subscriptions, tax return preparation fees and
deductible legal expenses.
Reduction of itemized deductions
For 2015, the reduction of itemized deductions effects married taxpayers with AGI over $309,900 ($311,300 in 2016) and single taxpayers
with AGI over $258,250 ($259,400 in 2016). Certain itemized deductions are to be reduced by the lesser of 3% of the amount by which
AGI exceeds a certain limit or 80% of the itemized deductions subject
to the reduction rules.
NEW FOR 2015 AND BEYOND
PATH permanently extended the option to claim an itemized deduction for state and local general sales tax in lieu of an itemized deduction
for state and local income taxes, effective for taxable years beginning
after December 31, 2014.
A taxpayer may either deduct the actual
amount of sales tax paid in a tax year or, alternatively, deduct an
amount prescribed by the IRS.
. estimated tax
requirements
A penalty will apply if a taxpayer fails to make sufficient estimated tax
payments during the year. The appropriate combination of quarterly
estimated tax payments and withholdings on wages (and certain other
income) can enable the taxpayer to avoid this penalty. Proper tax
planning may help you minimize the required estimated tax payments
and avoid the underpayment penalty.
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EisnerAmper 2016 personal tax guide
AVOIDING THE PENALTY
You will not owe the penalty for the underpayment of estimated
taxes if the amount of taxes you pay (through withholding and/or
timely paid estimated tax payments) is the lesser of:
• 90% of the actual tax shown on your current year’s tax return, or
•
110% of the tax on your prior year’s tax return based on a safe
harbor exception (100% if the AGI on your prior year’s return
was $150,000 or less, or $75,000 if married filing separately), or
• 90% of your actual tax for the current year based on the annualized income installment method (see Tax Tip 4).
The penalty is determined on a quarterly basis combining the withholding tax and timely paid quarterly estimated taxes. You may
still owe the penalty for an earlier due date shortage, even if you
pay the tax in later quarters to make up the underpayment. It may
be possible to avoid this situation by using the annualized income
installment method (see Tax Tip 4). Alternatively, you may increase
withholding taxes to be applied evenly throughout the year.
WHAT’S NEW FOR 2015 AND 2016?
When estimating your income tax liability, make sure to consider
the following changes commencing for tax years beginning in 2015
and 2016:
• Tax rates.
For 2015 and subsequent years the individual income
tax rates will remain at 10, 15, 25, 28, 33, 35 and 39.6% for
ordinary income. The top rate for long-term capital gains and
qualified dividends will remain at 20%. These rates also apply
for 2016.
The applicable threshold amounts for the 2015 top tax
rates are: $464,850 for married filing jointly; $439,000 for head
of household; $413,200 for single; and $232,425 for married filing separately. The 2016 applicable thresholds are $466,950 for
married filing jointly; $441,000 for head of household; $415,050
for single; and $233,475 for married filing separately.
• Personal exemption phaseouts. For tax years beginning in 2015,
the personal exemption amount is increased to $4,000 ($4,050
for 2016) for taxpayers with AGI at or below $309,900 if married
filing jointly ($311,300 in 2016); $284,050 if head of household
($285,350 in 2016); $258,250 ($259,400 in 2016) if single, or
$154,950 ($155,650 in 2016) if married filing separately.
The
personal exemption amount for taxpayers with AGI above these
amounts may be reduced.
• AMT exemption amount increased. The AMT exemption amount,
which is indexed annually for inflation, has increased to $53,600
in 2015 for single taxpayers, $83,400 for married filing jointly
and $41,700 if married filing separately. For 2016, the amounts
are $53,900 for singles, $83,800 for married filing jointly, and
$41,900 for married filing separately.
• Increase in employee’s share of payroll tax.
For 2015, employee’s
wages up to the Social Security limitation of $118,500 were withheld at the rate of 6.2%. For 2016, the Social Security limitation
remains at $118,500. There is no change in Medicare withholding.
• Lifetime learning credit income limits increased.
For 2015, in
order to claim the maximum lifetime learning credit, modified
AGI must be less than $55,000 ($110,000 if married filing jointly).
Modified AGI above these levels gradually phases out the credit,
with no credit available for AGI in excess of $65,000 ($130,000
for married joint filers). These amounts remain the same for 2016.
tax tip
4
USE THE ANNUALIZED INCOME INSTALLMENT METHOD TO REDUCE
YOUR QUARTERLY ESTIMATES AND ELIMINATE THE UNDERPAYMENT
OF ESTIMATED TAX PENALTY
The annualized income installment method is a pay-as-you-go
method to calculate the required quarterly estimated tax payments.
You may receive income, such as business income, bonuses and
capital gains, unevenly throughout the year. If you expect to earn
more income in the latter part of 2016 than in the first months of
the year, or pay deductible expenses earlier in the year, you can
reduce your quarterly estimated tax payments by paying the tax
based on actual quarterly tax projections.
This method provides a
way to pay less estimated tax than the safe harbor method based
on 110% (or 100% if applicable) of your actual prior year tax for the
quarter with lower income. If your income changes in a subsequent
quarter, you may increase or decrease the future estimated tax
payments accordingly.
You can also use the annualized income method to reduce a potential
penalty on your 2016 return. If the safe harbor exception based on
110% of your 2015 tax or 90% of your actual 2016 tax does not eliminate the penalty, you can still use the annualized income method
when preparing your 2016 return to reduce or eliminate the penalty.
.
21
“extenders” had expired after 2014. However, these provisions
have been reinstated retroactively for 2015 (and, in some cases,
beyond) as a result of PATH.
1. IRA distributions to a qualified charitable organization. Up to
a maximum of $100,000 per taxpayer will be tax free if the
distribution from an IRA account to a public charity is made
by a taxpayer age 701/2 or older. This special distribution will
satisfy the minimum distribution requirements.
This provision
has been made permanent and is effective for distributions
made in taxable years beginning after December 31, 2014.
2. Work Opportunity tax credit for unemployed veterans extended
through taxable years beginning on or before December 31,
2019.
3. Deduction for qualified tuition and related expenses extended
through December 31, 2016.
4. Nonbusiness energy credits extended through December 31,
2016.
5. Exclusion from income the cancellation of indebtedness of
up to $2 million on a qualified principal residence extended
through December 31, 2016.
OTHER TAX CONSIDERATIONS
• Additional Medicare Tax on Earned Income. A 0.9% additional
Medicare tax applies to Medicare wages and self-employment
income. This additional Medicare tax applies to income over the
threshold of $250,000 for married filing jointly and $200,000
for any other filing status ($125,000 for married filing separately).
• Net Investment Income Tax (NIIT).
There is a surtax of 3.8% on
the lesser of net investment income or the excess of modified AGI
over the threshold amount. The threshold amount is $250,000
for joint filers or a surviving spouse ($125,000 for married filing
separately) and $200,000 for any other filing status.
YEAR-END PLANNING ACTIONS
If your year-end planning indicates that you have already met the
90% test, you may not need to pay some or all of your fourth quarter
estimated tax installment.
If you realize before year-end that you may owe the penalty for
underpayment of estimated tax, you can still reduce or eliminate
your penalty by taking one or more of the following actions:
tax paid through withholdings will be treated to have been paid
evenly throughout the year, an individual may increase his or her
withholding tax before year-end to minimize the underpayment
tax penalty attributable to a prior quarter. There are several ways
to achieve this:
1. Increase your W-2 withholding tax for the remaining pay periods this year.
2. Withhold more than the required bonus rate of 25% (39.6%
rate if the bonus exceeds $1 million) at year-end.
3. Withhold tax from pension or IRA distributions if you are qualified to do so.
• Increase your estimated tax payment to eliminate the penalty
for the fourth quarter.
• Lower your taxable income (if otherwise desirable) by using the
year-end tax planning strategies presented in this guide to reduce
the quarterly underpayment.
• Eliminate or mitigate the underpayment by using the annualized
income installment method.
Caution: If you withdraw money from an IRA and have taxes withheld,
you will need to replenish the IRA within 60 days with the gross amount
withdrawn, not just the net amount (i.e., assuming you still want the
money in a tax-deferred retirement account).
As part of year-end planning, you should consider the current penalty
rates.
If the penalty rates are relatively low (which has been the case
in recent years) and the cash can be invested at higher rates, it may
be more cost efficient to just pay the penalty.
STATE TAX CONSIDERATIONS
The foregoing discussion of tax planning suggestions may also apply
to state and local income tax penalties.
estimated tax requirements
• Tax benefits extended. Some special tax incentives known as • Pay more tax through salary or other withholdings. Since any
.
alternative
minimum tax
The AMT was designed to prevent wealthy taxpayers from using tax
loopholes to avoid paying taxes. Because historically the exemption from
the AMT had not been automatically adjusted for inflation and certain
common deductions were not allowed in computing the AMT, millions
of middle class taxpayers were finding themselves subject to the AMT.
However, Congress provided some annual relief in the recent past by
installing “AMT patches” which increased the AMT exemption.
ATRA permanently increased the AMT exemption beginning in 2012 and
provided for indexing of the exemption for 2013 and beyond. Since ATRA
increased income tax rates for certain taxpayers beginning in 2013, fewer
people may be subject to the AMT while paying a higher overall rate.
Proper planning requires a 2-year analysis in order to determine the true
benefits you can achieve.
. 23
The AMT is computed separately from your regular tax. Using your
regular taxable income as a starting point, adjustments are made
to arrive at your alternative minimum taxable income (“AMTI”).
Many deductions and tax credits that are used to calculate your
regular tax are not deductible or allowable in computing AMTI. So,
even though the AMT maximum tax rate is less than the regular
maximum tax rate, your AMT liability may be higher than your
regular tax. You will pay the higher of the regular tax or the AMT.
Chart 3 shows most of the adjustments necessary to calculate your
AMTI.
As the chart illustrates, certain deductions, such as state
and local income taxes and real estate taxes, are not deductible
when computing your AMTI. Other deductions, such as depreciation on business property, may be different for regular tax and
AMT purposes. And some forms of income are exempt for regular
tax purposes but taxable for AMT purposes.
One example is the
exercise of incentive stock options to the extent the fair market
value exceeds the exercise price.
Tax Tip 5 demonstrates the high cost of being in the AMT.
Tax Tip 6 explains how state taxes on long-term capital gains and
qualified dividends may trigger the AMT.
PRIVATE ACTIVITY BOND INTEREST
Tax-exempt interest on specified private activity bonds issued in
2009 and 2010 are no longer an item of tax preference and, therefore, not subject to the AMT. However, the interest on such bonds
issued before 2009 and after 2010 is still subject to the AMT.
2016) if filing single or head of household or $41,700 ($41,900
for 2016) if married filing separately. Exemptions are fully phased
out for taxpayers when their AMTI reaches $492,500 (married
filing jointly), $333,600 (single or head of household) or $246,250
(married filing separately).
Be advised that while you are in the AMT exemption phase out
range, your marginal AMT tax rate can be as high as 35%.
PLANNING FOR AMT SCENARIOS
Tax planning can help you determine whether or not you will be
subject to the AMT.
This can enable you to take steps to reduce
your overall tax liability. Using Chart 3 to guide you, here are 3
possible AMT scenarios to plan for:
You are subject to the AMT in the current year, but don’t expect
to be next year:
• Defer until the following year any deductions that are not
deductible for AMT purposes. Avoid the pitfall of automatically
prepaying your state income taxes before the end of the year.
• Taxpayers with large itemized deductions that are disallowed
for AMT but considered a direct expense that can be deducted
when computing net investment income may want to consider
taking such deductions in the current year, even if in the AMT.
Expenses such as state and local taxes paid, investment fees,
etc.
are directly allocable to net investment income and can be
used to lower the 3.8% surtax even if the deductions are not
allowed for AMT purposes.
• Accelerate ordinary income into the current year to benefit from
AMT RATES
For 2015, the 28% maximum tax rate applies to ordinary AMTI
in excess of $185,400 for joint returns and unmarried individuals ($186,300 for 2016) and $92,700 if married filing separately
($93,150 for 2016) net of any allowable exclusion. Ordinary AMTI
of $185,400 or less is subject to a tax rate of 26%. Net longterm capital gains and qualified dividends are taxed at the same
maximum 20% rate for both the AMT and regular tax beginning
in tax year 2013.
AMT EXEMPTION
Beginning in 2013, the exemption amount is indexed for inflation.
For 2015, you are allowed an AMT exemption of up to $83,400
($83,800 for 2016) if married filing jointly, $53,600 ($53,900 for
the lower AMT rate.
• Realize net short-term capital gains this year to benefit from
the lower AMT rates, unless these gains will offset short-term
losses next year or would otherwise be held long term.
• Delay exercising any incentive stock options (“ISOs”) since you
could wind up paying the AMT on the spread between the fair
market value and the exercise price.
If you already exercised the
options, consider a disqualifying disposition as discussed in the
chapter on stock options. Also, see the rule discussed later in this
chapter that may offer some credit relief for the AMT resulting
from the exercise of ISOs.
alternative minimum tax
WHAT TRIGGERS THE AMT?
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EisnerAmper 2016 personal tax guide
tax tip
5
THE HIGH COST OF THE AMT
Failing to consider the AMT and incorrectly timing the payment of some of your deductions can be costly. Let’s say that before December
31, 2015, you paid the following expenses:
• $15,000 state estimated fourth quarter tax payment (due January 15, 2016),
• $10,000 in real estate taxes (not due until January, 2016), and
• $20,000 in charitable contributions that you could have delayed until 2016.
AMT
$ 200,000
25,000
25,000
175,000
175,000
$ 400,000
Earned income
Regular Tax After
Year-End Payments
$ 200,000
Income
$ 400,000
$ 100,000
$
Qualifying dividends
Long-term capital gains
Total income
Deductions
State & local income taxes
0
Real estate taxes
20,000
0
Mortgage interest
50,000
50,000
Contributions
40,000
40,000
Investment advisory fees
25,000
0
Disallowance of advisory fees (2% of AGI)
(8,000)
0
3% AGI Floor
(2,703)
0
Net itemized deductions
$ 224,297
Personal exemptions (married with 2 children) (after phaseouts)
Taxable income
Federal tax
90,000
4,160
0
$ 171,543
$ 310,000
$
Medicare Contribution Tax on net investment income
Total federal tax (including Medicare Contribution Tax on net
investment income)
$
14,496
$
5,700
$
20,196
35,503
5,700
$
41,203
Because you must pay the higher of the two taxes, your tax will be $41,203 — that’s $21,007 of AMT tax in excess of your regular tax.
Therefore, you lost the full benefit from the prepayment of your state estimated tax and real estate taxes, as well as some of the benefit
of prepaying charitable contributions.
. 25
• Prepay deductions that are not deductible for AMT purposes
to get the full tax benefit in the current year rather than lose
the tax benefit next year.
• Prepay your fourth-quarter state and local income tax estimate
by December 31, as well as any projected remaining balance
due on your current year’s state/local income tax return that
you would otherwise pay on April 15 of the following year.
• Prepay deductions that are deductible against the AMT, such
as charitable contributions, to gain the benefit of the higher
ordinary tax rate in the current year.
• Defer ordinary income, such as bonuses if possible, to the
following year to take advantage of the lower AMT rate.
• Review your ISO awards to determine if you can exercise any
shares before the end of the year. The exercise will be tax-free
this year up to the extent of the break-even point between your
regular tax and the AMT. In the following year, any exercises
will result in an AMT liability based on the fair market value
of the shares at the time of exercise over the exercise price.
You are not subject to the AMT in either year:
• You have avoided the AMT, but you still want to reduce your
regular tax liability in the current year. Turn to the chapter on
tax planning strategies for year-end planning ideas that can
minimize your tax exposure.
AMT CREDIT CAN REDUCE FUTURE TAXES
If you pay the AMT, you may be entitled to a tax credit against your
regular tax in a subsequent year.
You qualify for an AMT credit
based on “deferral items” that contributed to your AMT liability.
The most common deferral items are depreciation adjustments,
passive activity adjustments and the tax preference on the exercise
of ISOs. Other deductions, such as state and local income taxes
and investment fees, are called exclusion items. You cannot get an
AMT credit from these deductions.
The AMT illustrated in Tax Tip
5 would not create an AMT credit since none of the adjustments
are deferral items.
The reason a deduction is classified as a deferral item is because
over time you will end up with the same total deductions for both
regular tax and AMT purposes. As an example, a depreciation
difference is a deferral item if it is calculated using a different
asset life and method for AMT purposes then used for regular tax
purposes. However, over the life of the asset the total depreciation will be the same under either tax computation.
Special rules
apply for bonus depreciation. See chapter on business owners and
depreciation deductions.
tax tip
6
LONG-TERM CAPITAL GAINS AND QUALIFYING DIVIDEND
INCOME CAN PUT YOU INTO THE AMT
Long-term capital gains and qualifying dividend income can cause
you to be subject to the AMT, even though both are taxed at the
maximum tax rate of 20% for regular tax purposes and for the
AMT. The reason for this is that when you pay state and local
taxes on the income, which reduces your regular tax liability, these
taxes are not deductible in computing your AMT.
Therefore, your
AMT taxable income is higher than your regular taxable income.
As an example, let’s say you file a joint return and your income
only included a long-term capital gain of $600,000 and, as a New
York City resident, your state and city income tax was $60,000.
Ignoring all other deductions, exemptions, phaseouts and rate
differentials, your regular taxable income would be $540,000
after the $60,000 deduction. At the maximum tax rate of 20%,
your regular tax would be $108,000. Your AMT liability would be
$120,000 ($600,000 taxed at the same maximum rate of 20%)
because you are not allowed a deduction for state and local income
taxes.
Therefore, you would pay the higher of the two taxes (an
additional cost of $12,000). Keep in mind that not all of the longterm capital gains (regular or AMT) will be taxed at the 20%
rate, since there is also a 15% rate applied up to certain income
thresholds.
If you find yourself in this tax situation, avoid paying your state
and local income taxes in the year of the sale. To the extent possible, consider deferring the payments until next year if there is a
possibility that you will not be in the AMT and you may therefore
receive a federal tax benefit.
Keep in mind that if you are subject to the Medicare Contribution
Tax on net investment income, consideration should be given to
paying expenses that are allocable in arriving at net investment
income even if they are not deductible for AMT purposes.
alternative minimum tax
You are not subject to the AMT in the current year and will
be taxed at the regular tax rate of 39.6% but expect to be
subject to the AMT next year:
.
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EisnerAmper 2016 personal tax guide
chart
3
AMT VS. REGULAR TAX
Deductible in Computing
Description
Regular Tax
AMT
State and local income taxes (non-business)
•
Qualified Motor Vehicle Tax
(State or local sales tax or excise tax on purchase)
•
Investment interest expense
•
•
Charitable contributions
•
•
Investment advisory fees
•
Employee business expenses (W-2)
•
Mortgage interest on:
• Qualified acquisition and equity debt up to $1,000,000 used to
buy, build, or improve your residence
• Equity debt (up to $100,000) not used to improve your
residence
•
•
•
•
Other AMT
Differences
•
Real estate taxes (personal)
Taxable for
AMT Only
•
Note: Interest on acquisition debt in excess of $1 million and equity debt
over $100,000 is not deductible as mortgage interest, but the debt is
subject to the interest tracing rules to determine if deductible as interest on
other debt, such as investment interest.
Medical expenses in excess of 10% of AGI*
Exercise of incentive stock options (to the extent the fair market
value exceeds the exercise price)
•
Depreciation (subject to different AMT rules)
•
Gain or loss on disposition of certain assets, including sale of small
business stock
•
Passive activity adjustments
•
Interest on private activity bonds issued before 2009 and after
2010
•
Net operating losses (subject to different AMT rules)
•
*For regular tax purposes, the medical expense threshold is 7.5% for any tax year beginning after December 31, 2012 and before January 1, 2017 for
taxpayers who have attained age 65 for close of such year.
. business owner
issues and
depreciation
deductions
Individuals who are owners of a business, whether as sole proprietors or
through a partnership, limited liability company or S corporation, have
specific tax planning opportunities available to them.
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EisnerAmper 2016 personal tax guide
TAX ADVANTAGES FOR BUSINESS OWNERS
If you are a self-employed individual, or own an interest in an operating business through a partnership, LLC, or S corporation, there may
be additional tax planning opportunities available to you. Unlike a
salaried employee, your business deductions can offset your AGI
rather than be treated as itemized deductions subject to various
limitations and disallowances. This chapter deals with some of the
tax planning ideas you should consider.
TIMING OF INCOME AND DEDUCTIONS
If you are a cash-basis business, you can delay billing until January
of the following year for services already performed, thereby deferring your tax until next year. Alternatively, if you expect to be in a
higher tax bracket in the following year, or if the AMT applies in the
current year but is not expected to apply in the following year, you
can accelerate billing and collections into the current year to take
advantage of the lower tax rate.
Similarly, you can either prepay or defer paying business expenses
so the deduction comes in the year you expect to be subject to
the higher tax rate.
This can be particularly significant if you are
considering purchasing (and placing in service) business equipment, as the next section discusses. If you are concerned about
your cash flow and want to accelerate your deductions, you can
charge them on your credit card. This will allow you to take the
deduction in the current year, when the charge is made, even
though you may actually pay the outstanding credit card bill in
January of the following year.
Another advantage of deferring income or prepaying expenses is that
you can defer the 2.9% Medicare component of your self- employment taxes.
If your self-employment income plus wages are below
$118,500 in 2015 ($118,500 in 2016 as well), you can also reduce
the Social Security tax.
Caution: You should also consider the impact of the imposition of the
additional 3.8% Medicare Contribution Tax on net investment income
and the 0.9% Health Insurance Tax on earned income.
BUSINESS EQUIPMENT
Effective for tax years beginning after December 31, 2014, PATH
permanently extends the small business expensing limitations to
$500,000 of the cost of qualifying property placed in services for the
taxable year. The $500,000 amount is reduced (but not below zero)
by the amount by which the cost of qualifying property during the
taxable year exceeded $2,000,000. These amounts will be indexed
for inflation for taxable years beginning after 2015.
Qualified property is defined as depreciable tangible personal property that is purchased for use in the active conduct of a trade or
business.
PATH treats air conditioning and heating units placed in
service in tax years beginning after 2015 as eligible for expensing.
Special rules that allowed expensing for computer software and
qualified real property (e.g., qualified leasehold improvement property, qualified restaurant property and qualified retail improvement
property) prior to 2015 are permanently extended.
Observation: The basis of property for which a section 179 election
is made is reduced by the amount of the section 179 deduction. The
remaining basis is depreciable under the normal rules.
BONUS DEPRECIATION
PATH extends bonus depreciation for property acquired and
placed in service from 2015 through 2019 (with an additional year
for certain property with a longer production period). The bonus
depreciation percentage is 50% for property placed in service during 2015, 2016 and 2017 and phases down, with 40% in 2018 and
30% in 2019.
Taxpayers can continue to elect to accelerate the use
of AMT credits in lieu of bonus depreciation under special rules for
property placed in service in 2015. The provision modifies the AMT
rules beginning in 2016 by increasing the amount of unused AMT
credits that may be claimed in lieu of bonus depreciation.
BUSINESS INTEREST
If you have debt traced to your business expenditures — including
debt used to finance the capital requirements of a partnership, S
corporation or LLC involved in a trade or business in which you
materially participate — you can deduct the interest as business
interest rather than as an itemized deduction. The interest is a direct
reduction of the income from the business.
This lets you deduct all of
your business interest. You will need to check your particular state,
as it may vary as to which states allow this deduction.
Business interest also includes finance charges on items that you
purchase for your business (as an owner) using your credit card.
These purchases are treated as additional loans to the business,
subject to tracing rules that allow you to deduct the portion of the
finance charges that relate to the business items purchased.
HOME OFFICE DEDUCTIONS
When you use part of your home for business, you may be able
to deduct the business portion of the costs of running your home,
such as real estate taxes, mortgage interest, rent, utilities, insurance,
. 29
Generally, you must meet the following two requirements to qualify
for the home office deduction:
• You must regularly use part of your home exclusively for a trade
or business. Incidental or occasional business use is not regular
use. “Exclusive use” means a specific area of your home is used
only for trade or business activities.
• The home office must be your principal place of business. This
requirement can be satisfied if the home office is used for the
administrative or management activities of your business and
there is no other fixed location where you can conduct these
activities.
If you deduct depreciation for a home office in your principal residence, your ability to fully use the taxable gain exclusion on the sale
of a principal residence will be limited since the portion of the gain
attributable to your home office is not eligible for this exclusion.
See
the discussion in the chapter on principal residence sale and rental.
Expenses that are deductible only because the home is used for business (such as the business portion of home insurance and utilities)
are limited to the gross income derived from the use of the home.
Unused deductions are carried over to the subsequent year but are
subject to the limitations calculated in that year. Expenses that would
have been otherwise deductible, such as real estate taxes and qualified home mortgage interest, are not subject to these limitations.
For taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2013 taxpayers can
use a simplified option when calculating the home office deduction.
The requirements to qualify for the deduction remain the same but
the recordkeeping and calculation is simplified. Under the simplified
option, the standard deduction is $5 per square foot used for business with a maximum of 300 square feet allowed; home-related
itemized deductions are claimed in full on Schedule A; no home
depreciation deduction or later depreciation recapture for the years
the simplified option is used.
The taxpayer may choose to use either
the simplified method or the regular method for any taxable year
on a timely filed original federal income tax return for the year. The
method may not be changed for a particular year once selected but
a different method may be used in a subsequent year.
START-UP EXPENSES
The amount of capitalized business start-up expenses eligible for
deduction in the year the active business commences (instead of
amortization over 180 months) is $5,000, reduced (but not below
zero) by the amount the start-up expenses exceed $50,000.
Expensing is automatic, and no longer requires an election to be
formally made. However, taxpayers wishing to elect out must “affirmatively elect to capitalize” the costs on a timely filed federal income
tax return (including extensions).
The election to either deduct or
capitalize start-up costs is irrevocable and applies to all start-up
costs of the taxpayer. Capitalized start-up costs must be amortized
over 180 months.
ORGANIZATION COSTS
The amount allowed as a current expense for organization costs is
$5,000 (reduced by the amount of costs that exceed $50,000).
The excess amount must be amortized over 180 months. Expensing
is automatic and no formal election need be made.
Affirmatively
electing to amortize the organization costs on a timely filed return
(including extensions) will be considered as “opting out” of the
expense election.
SELF-EMPLOYED HEALTH INSURANCE
DEDUCTION
As a self-employed individual, you can deduct 100% of the health
insurance premiums you pay for yourself, your spouse, your dependents, and any child of the self-employed under the age of 27 as of
the end of the tax year. This deduction applies if you are a general
partner in a partnership, a limited partner receiving guaranteed
payments, or a more-than-2% shareholder who receives wages
from an S corporation. You can also include the premiums paid
for eligible long-term care insurance policies as deductible selfemployed health insurance subject to certain limitations.
Medicare
premiums are also includible.
Note: These rules only apply for any calendar month in which you are not
otherwise eligible to participate in any subsidized health plan maintained
by any employer of yours or of your spouse, or any plan maintained by
any employer of your dependent or your under-age-27 child.
UTILIZE BUSINESS LOSSES OR TAKE TAX-FREE
DISTRIBUTIONS
If you have an interest in a partnership, LLC or S corporation, you
can deduct losses from the entity only to the extent you have tax
basis and are “at-risk” for the losses. If you have a loss from any of
these entities that will be limited, you may want to make a capital
contribution (or a loan) before year-end to allow you to deduct the
loss. However, losses may still be limited by the passive activity
loss rules.
business owner issues and depreciation deductions
painting, repairs and depreciation.
The home office deduction is
available to both renters and homeowners, but is subject to an overall
limitation that will prevent you from deducting a net loss from your
business resulting from your home office deductions.
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EisnerAmper 2016 personal tax guide
You can take tax-free distributions from a partnership, LLC or S
corporation if you have tax basis in the entity and have already
been taxed on the income. Since you are taxed on your share of the
income of these entities, regardless of whether or not distributions
were made, you may have paid tax in a prior year, or will pay tax in
the current year, on income that you have not received. Therefore,
you can now take a distribution without paying additional tax, if
funds are available and the entity permits such distributions, to the
extent of your tax basis and at-risk amount in the entity. However,
there are special considerations for distributions from S corporations.
SELF-EMPLOYMENT TAX
Your net earnings from self-employment are subject to Social
Security and Medicare taxes.
As a self-employed individual, your
share of these taxes almost doubles since you pay both the employer’s and employee’s portions of these taxes. However, if you are
also a salaried employee, your wages will offset the portion of your
self-employment earnings subject to the Social Security tax.
The self-employment tax rate is 15.3%, which consists of 12.4%
Social Security tax and 2.9% Medicare tax. The maximum amount
of combined 2015 wages and self-employment earnings subject to
the 12.4% Social Security tax is $118,500 (also $118,500 in 2016).
There is no limitation on self-employment income subject to the
2.9% Medicare tax.
An additional 0.9% Hospital Insurance tax
(which, combined with the 2.9% Medicare tax, will total 3.8%)
will be imposed on self-employment income in excess of $250,000
for joint returns; $125,000 for married taxpayers filing separate
returns; and $200,000 in all other cases. See the chapter on tax
rate overview.
Because of these taxes, your federal effective tax rate on selfemployment income can be as high as 56%, compared to about
48% for income from wages (after including your employee share
of Social Security and Medicare taxes). The reason the spread is
not greater is primarily because you receive a deduction against
AGI for 50% of the self-employment tax you pay.
See the chapter
on tax rate overview.
PENSION AND PROFIT SHARING PLANS
NET OPERATING LOSS CARRYBACKS
Net operating losses generated can be carried back 2 years and
carried forward 20 years.
Note: A taxpayer can elect to relinquish the carryback period if a timely
election is filed. Taxpayers whose losses are de minimis or who expect to
be in a higher tax bracket in future years may benefit from this election.
REPORTING REQUIREMENTS FOR EMPLOYEE
STOCK PURCHASE PLANS AND ISOS
Corporations are subject to certain reporting requirements related
to employee stock purchase plans and incentive stock options. See
the chapter on stock options, restricted stock, and deferred compensation plans.
FINAL REPAIR/CAPITALIZATION REGULATIONS
The IRS released the final “repair” regulations in September 2013.
These regulations explained when business owners must capitalize
costs and when they can deduct expenses for acquiring, maintaining,
repairing, and replacing tangible property.
These regulations apply
to tax years beginning on or after January 1, 2014. Taxpayers had
the option to apply either the final or temporary regulations to tax
years beginning in 2012 or before 2014. Taxpayers may consider
whether to file amended tax returns for 2012 to take advantage of
these elections.
Elections are made year-to-year, are not permanent and require
either a simple attachment to the tax return or a change in accounting method by filing Form 3115.
The final regulations included a de minimis expensing rule that allows
taxpayers to deduct certain amounts paid to acquire or produce
tangible property.
If there is an Applicable Financial Statement
(“AFS”) and a written accounting policy for expensing amounts paid
or incurred for such property, then up to $5,000 per invoice can be
deducted. Therefore, taxpayers should have had this written policy
in place by the end of 2013 in order to qualify for 2014 and beyond.
Note: The AFS should be an audited financial statement.
Rules governing contributions to, and distributions from, retirement
plans are very complex, so an entire chapter is dedicated to this
discussion. You should refer to that chapter for more specific information, including various plan restrictions.
There are certain relief provisions applicable for smaller businesses.
A $500 expense threshold per item or invoice is allowed if the taxpayer does not have an AFS and has a written expensing policy in
place at the beginning of the year.
The $500 de minimis expense is
increased to $2,500 starting for tax year 2016.
. 31
The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010 (“ACA”),
along with the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act, represents the most significant regulatory overhaul of the U.S. health
care system since the passage of Medicare and Medicaid in 1965.
ACA was enacted to increase the quality and affordability of health
insurance through the use of mandates, subsidies and insurance
exchanges. The following are the major considerations of the ACA:
• Large Employer Mandate
The ACA requires that an applicable large employer pay an excise
tax if:
1. The employer fails to offer its full-time employees (and their
dependents) the opportunity to enroll in minimum essential
coverage under an eligible employer-sponsored plan and any
full-time employee is certified to the employer as having a
premium assistance tax credit or cost-sharing reduction; or
2. The employer offers its full-time employees (and their dependents) the opportunity to enroll in minimum essential coverage
under an eligible employer-sponsored plan, but the plan is
either underfunded or too expensive. Also, at least one or more
full-time employee is certified as having a premium assistance
tax credit or cost-sharing reduction.
The Premium Assistance Tax Credit was designed to help offset the
cost of health insurance coverage obtained through the marketplace.
Subject to certain transition relief for 2015, an applicable large
employer is defined as one that employs within one calendar year
an average of at least 100 (50 for 2016) full-time employees (including full-time equivalent employees).
A full-time employee for every
calendar month is an employee who has an average of at least 30
hours of service per week or at least 130 hours of service during the
calendar month. For example, 40 full-time employees employed 30
or more hours per week on average plus 20 employees employed 15
hours per week on average are equivalent to 50 full-time employees. Seasonal workers are taken into account under special rules in
determining the number of full-time employees.
Seasonal workers
are workers who perform services on a seasonal basis, including
retail workers employed exclusively during the holiday season.
• Employer and Insurer Reporting
The ACA generally requires applicable large employers to file an
information return that reports the terms and conditions of the
employer-provided health care coverage for its full-time employees.
Other parties, such as health insurance plans, have similar reporting
requirements.
Effective for calendar 2015, the reporting begins in the first quarter of 2016. Separate from this rule, the ACA requires employers
with 250 or more employees to provide the cost of the applicable
employer-sponsored coverage on the employee’s Form W-2, “Wage
and Tax Statement.”
• Small Employer Health Insurance Premium Credit
The ACA provides a tax credit to encourage eligible small employers
to provide health insurance coverage to their employees. An eligible
taxpayer can claim the Code Section 45B credit for 2 consecutive
years beginning with the first tax year on or after 2014.
A taxpayer
may claim the credit for tax years beginning in 2010 through 2013
without those years counting towards the 2-consecutive-year period.
An eligible small employer is one with no more than 25 full-time
equivalent employees for the tax years whose employees have an
average annual wage that does not exceed $51,600 per employee
in tax years beginning in 2015 and $51,800 in tax years beginning
in 2016 (this number is indexed for inflation). Also, the employer
has a qualifying arrangement in which the employer pays a uniform
percentage of not less than 50% of the premium cost of a qualified
health plan offered by the employer to its employees through a small
business health options program (“SHOP”) marketplace.
The maximum credit for 2014 and thereafter is 50% of the premium
paid for small business employers and 25% for small tax-exempt
employers.
• Individual Mandate
Beginning January 1, 2014, individuals must carry minimum essential
coverage for each month or make a “shared responsibility payment”
(penalty) with his or her tax return. Minimum essential coverage is
that from an employer-sponsored plan, coverage obtained through
a state or federal marketplace, Medicare, Medicaid, most student
health plans or other similar plans.
For 2015, the penalty is the greater of $325 per person or 2% of
taxable income and for 2016, it is the greater of $695 or 2.5% of
taxable income.
Certain family limits apply.
Planning Opportunity: Employers facing increased costs in their health
insurance coverage to meet the minimum essential coverage requirements, or incur a penalty, must decide if they should “pay or play.”
Business owners may wish to consider reviewing their company’s entire
employee compensation package, including the cost-effectiveness of
their retirement plans, and perhaps revamping their entire compensation
strategy to obtain and retain human capital.
business owner issues and depreciation deductions
AFFORDABLE CARE ACT
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EisnerAmper 2016 personal tax guide
NEW LEGISLATION
The Surface Transportation & Veterans Health Care Choice
Improvement Act of 2015 was signed into law on July 31, 2015.
There are changes to tax return due dates and extensions for tax
years beginning after December 31, 2015, thus impacting the 2017
filing season. For C corporations, the new due date is the 15th day
of the 4th month following the end of the tax year. So for calendar
year C corporations, the new due date will be April 15. Generally, a
6-month extension will be granted.
C corporations with a June 30
year-end keep the September 15 due date until 2026. For partnerships, the new due date is the 15th day of the 3rd month following
the end of the year, or March 15. Partnerships will be granted a
6-month extension, so the extended due date will be September
15.
S corporations’ due date of March 15th is unchanged.
The Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015 was signed into law on November
2, 2015. The law removed the automatic ACA registration to new
employees (if over 200 in number). It also repealed the Tax Equity
and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1982 (“TEFRA”) and the electing
large partnership (“ELP”) rules for audit and legal procedures for
partner-ships.
The law reduces the audit process for
partnerships from 3 audit systems to one streamlined system,
moves IRS audit adjust-ments from partner level to the
partnership level, and provides for an option to elect out if there are
100 or fewer partners. Partnership agreements may need to be
amended to reflect the impact of this legislation.
PATH permanently extends the rules reducing to 5 years (rather
than 10 years) the period for which an S corporation must hold its
assets following conversion from a C corporation to avoid the tax on
built-in gains. In general, a corporate-level built-in gains tax, at the
higher marginal rate applicable to corporations (currently 35%), is
imposed on an S corporation’s net realized built-in gain that arose
prior to the conversion of the C corporation to an S corporation and
is recognized by the S corporation during the recognition period.
.
capital gains and
dividend income
Managing capital gains and losses can help you save taxes, defer taxes and obtain the
highest after-tax yield on your assets. This planning is very critical when considering
the various tax rates since the rate on short-term capital gains can be as high as 43.4%
(including the 3.8% Medicare Contribution Tax for certain taxpayers) compared to the
long-term capital gain rate of 23.8% (including the 3.8% Medicare Contribution Tax for
certain taxpayers).
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CAPITAL GAIN TAX RATES
As a result of the ACA an additional 3.8% Medicare Contribution
Tax may be imposed on your net investment income depending
upon your tax bracket. For more information on how this tax is
computed, see the chapter on tax rate overview. As Chart 4 illustrates, for 2015 and thereafter, many different tax rates can apply
to capital gains, but the most important rates to remember are
the maximum tax rates of 39.6% on net gains from assets held 12
months or less (short-term) and 20% on most assets held more
than 12 months (long-term). However, the actual rate of tax you
pay on the sale of a capital asset can depend on more than just
how long you have held the asset, including:
• Type of property sold.
• The AMT rate of 28% on assets held short-term.
chart
4
CAPITAL GAIN TAX RATES
39.6%
39.6%
28%
28%
25%
25%
20%
20%*
0%
15%
Regular tax purposes
•
•
AMT purposes
•
•
0%
Short-Term Rate (Holding period 12 months or less)
Regular tax purposes
•
•
AMT purposes
Long-Term Rate (Holding period greater than 12 months)
Exceptions to the 20% tax rate on property held more than 12 months
•
Collectibles, such as artwork & precious metals
•
Gain attributable to depreciation on real property
•
Gains otherwise taxable at the 10% or 15% ordinary tax rate
Gain attributable to depreciation on tangible personal property
•
Taxpayers are liable for the additional 3.8% Medicare Contribution Tax on net investment income if their Modified
Adjusted Gross Income (“MAGI”)** exceeds the threshold amount for the applicable filing status:
Filing Status
Threshold Amount
Married Filing Joint & Qualifying Widow(er)
$ 250,000
Single & Head of Household
$ 200,000
Married Filing Separate
$ 125,000
*The 20% tax rate applies to taxpayers with income above certain threshold amounts ($450,000 for married filing jointly; $425,000 for head
of household; $400,000 for single filers; and $225,000 for married filing separately).
**MAGI is AGI increased by the net income excluded from foreign income under Internal Revenue Code Section 911(a).
.
35
7
USE THE NETTING RULE TO GET THE BEST RESULTS
Assume you determine that your year-to-date net capital gains are $240,000, made up of short-term losses of $160,000 and long-term gains
of $400,000. In 2015, your capital gains tax would be $48,000 ($240,000 of excess long-term gains at 20%). You also have assets with an
unrealized short-term gain of $150,000 that you would like to sell, but are reluctant to pay the short-term capital gain rate of 39.6%. Since
gains are netted, if you realized the gain you would have net capital gains of $390,000 (short-term losses of $10,000 and long-term gains of
$400,000).
Your capital gains tax would be $78,000 ($390,000 of excess long-term gains at 20%). So your tax increase would be $30,000
($78,000 less the original tax of $48,000). You actually paid the long-term rate of 20% on the additional short-term gain of $150,000.
Note: The above example is exclusive of the Medicare Contribution Tax, and also assumes that the top rates apply.
• A netting rule that can flip the actual rate from 20% to 39.6%
on long-term gains (and the reverse for short-term gains) since
you must net excess losses from one holding period against the
gains of the other holding period (see Tax Tip 7).
you consider the following when determining your year-to-date
realized gains and losses:
Trade date
• 28% rate on the sale of collectibles, such as artwork and precious metals (including ETFs that invest in precious metals).
The trade date, not the settlement date, determines the holding period and the year you recognize gain or loss on the sale of
publicly traded securities, except for short sales closed at a loss.
• Sale of real estate that is subject to depreciation recapture at a
Excess capital losses
maximum rate of 25%.
• Exclusion and rollover provisions on the sale of certain assets.
• Capital loss limitations that only allow you to deduct $3,000 of
losses in excess of gains against ordinary income, such as wages
and interest income.
(If married filing separately, the limit for
each individual is $1,500.) It should be noted that net capital
losses cannot reduce other categories of income in calculating
the Medicare Contributions Tax.
YEAR-END TRADING STRATEGIES
If you have unrealized capital gains or losses, you should refer
to Tax Tip 3 in the chapter on tax planning strategies to help you
decide whether to take additional gains or losses before the end
of the year. But as this tip illustrates, the exact nature of your
gains and losses will dictate which stock positions you should
consider selling.
COMPUTING YEAR-TO-DATE REALIZED GAINS
AND LOSSES
Before determining which year-end strategy to use, it is important
to compute your year-to-date realized gains and losses. Make sure
Only $3,000 of capital losses in excess of capital gains can reduce
your ordinary income per year ($1,500 if you are married filing
separately).
Excess losses are carried forward indefinitely (but not
back) until used. Capital loss carry forwards are terminated when
the taxpayer dies; however, you can carry back some losses on
Section 1256 contracts against prior years’ income from similar
contracts.
Mutual fund distributions
Dividends paid by mutual funds typically include long-term capital gain distributions that are taxed as capital gains rather than
dividend income. Many funds make their largest distributions in
December, so make sure you consider them when computing your
year-to-date net capital gain or loss.
Short-term capital gain distributions and non-qualifying dividends, such as from money market
constant dollar funds, are treated as dividend income subject to
the ordinary income tax rates. However, mutual funds paying out
qualifying dividends in 2015 and beyond are subject to rates of 15%
or 20%. The 3.8% Medicare Contribution Tax rate also applies.
Note: Absent unusual circumstances, and strictly from an income tax
perspective, it is usually inadvisable to buy mutual funds shortly before
an announced dividend distribution (see below).
Pass-through entities
Gains and losses from pass-through entities, such as partnerships,
S corporations, and LLCs, are taxable to you whether or not you
capital gains and dividend income
tax tip
.
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EisnerAmper 2016 personal tax guide
actually receive a cash distribution. You will need to determine
your projected share of any distributable capital gains and losses
from any entities in which you are an owner or investor.
Mark-to-market assets
Capital gains and losses on mark-to-market assets such as S&P
Index options and regulated futures contracts should also be considered when determining your year-to-date capital gains and
losses. For the tax treatment of these “Section 1256 contracts,”
see the discussion later in this chapter.
TAX BASIS REPORTING REQUIREMENTS FOR
INVESTORS
The Energy Improvement and Extension Act of 2008 provides that
in the case of a covered security, every broker who is required to
report the gross proceeds from the sale of the security must also
report the adjusted basis in the security and whether any gain or
loss with respect to the security is long-term or short-term. The
reporting is generally done on Form 1099-B, “Proceeds from Broker
and Barter Exchange Transactions.” A covered security includes
all stock acquired beginning in 2011 except stock in a regulated
investment company for which the average basis method is available and stock acquired in connection with a dividend reinvestment
plan, both of which are covered securities if acquired beginning in
2012.
Options granted or acquired on or after January 1, 2014 are
required to be reported.
The basis reported on Form 1099-B may not reflect application
of the wash sale rules. Brokers are only required to report wash
sales when the purchase and sale transactions occur in the same
account. Therefore, you are required to adjust your basis for losses
disallowed under those rules.
AVERAGE BASIS OF MUTUAL FUND SHARES
If you acquire shares in a mutual fund at various times and prices,
you can calculate the gain or loss using an average cost basis.
The
shares need to be on deposit in an account handled by a custodian
or agent who acquires or redeems those shares.
IDENTIFY LOTS TO REDUCE YOUR TAXES
If you only want to sell part of your holdings of a specific stock, you
typically want to sell the lot with the highest cost first so that you
can report the lowest gain. However, brokers frequently automatically sell the lots that you bought first, regardless of their relative
cost. Avoid this mistake by instructing your broker in advance, in
writing, that you want to sell the lots you have held long-term with
the highest cost, assuming you are selling the position at a gain.
If you are selling at a loss, generally sell the lowest cost lots first.
Note: This assumes that the objective was to lower realized capital
gains in the current year.
It may have been more prudent to accelerate
gains in the current year and postpone losses until the following year, if
it is anticipated that your tax rate will increase in the subsequent year.
WATCH OUT FOR THE AMT
Substantial net long-term capital gains will increase your deductible state and local income taxes, with the potential adverse effect
of triggering the AMT either this year or next year. This will result
in your losing the benefit of some or all of the deduction for the
additional state income taxes. See Tax Tip 6 in the chapter on the
AMT for an example of this.
Also, substantial net long-term capital
gains will increase your AGI, which will decrease applicable AMT
exemptions and can result in triggering the AMT.
tax tip
8
MUTUAL FUND DISTRIBUTIONS ARE TAXABLE,
EVEN IF THEY ARE AUTOMATICALLY REINVESTED
Typically, distributions from mutual funds are reinvested in the fund.
The distribution itself does not change your aggregate value in the
fund since it simply increases the number of shares you own at a
lower per-share value.
capital gain income of $20,000 (4,000 shares at $5 per share),
reportable on your 2015 return, even though the share value has
decreased since your purchase. But your basis in the shares increases
by the $20,000 that you reported as income.
However, a distribution is taxable in the year made, even if reinvested
in the fund. For example, let’s say you purchased 4,000 shares of
an equity mutual fund on September 1, 2015 at $50 per share.
Just
before year-end, the fund makes a capital gain distribution of $5 per
share when the fund is selling for $35 per share. You end up with
Warning: Exchanging mutual funds is generally considered a sale of
the initial fund with potential capital gain or loss results, even if the
new fund is in the same family of funds.
. 37
Note: Do not confuse bankruptcy with worthlessness. Shares of stock
of many companies in bankruptcy have some value.
You can avoid paying capital gains tax on appreciated securities
that you have held for more than one year if you use them to make
your charitable contributions. (For donations to private foundations, the stock must be publicly traded.) You receive a contribution
deduction based on the fair market value of the security (subject
to certain limitations based on your AGI), yet you never pay tax
on the appreciation.
A non-business bad debt, typically an uncollectible loan, is similarly deductible as a capital loss at the end of the year in which
it becomes entirely worthless. However, the loss is treated as a
short-term loss regardless of how long the debt was outstanding.
But make sure that it is not really a loan that you have simply
forgiven.
A forgiven loan will be treated as though you made a gift.
If the total amount of gifts to any one person exceeds $14,000 for
2015 or 2016, it will either reduce your lifetime gift tax exclusion
or result in a gift tax if you have already exhausted the exclusion.
See the chapter on gift and estate planning.
This can reap even greater rewards if you front load a private
foundation or a donor-advised fund with appreciated long-term
securities to fund future contributions. See the chapter on charitable contributions for a detailed discussion.
BEWARE OF THE MUTUAL FUND TRAP
A capital gain distribution from a mutual fund may include significant gains realized by the fund before you bought the shares.
As Tax Tip 8 shows, you end up paying tax on the gains, regardless of whether or not your position in the fund has appreciated.
In effect, you have converted part of your initial investment into
taxable income.
A benefit of owning stocks directly rather than through a mutual
fund is that you can control when you realize gains and losses,
giving you the advantage of deferring the tax on the gain, or taking
losses to minimize your tax. However, by having direct ownership
of stocks you may sacrifice some of the investment diversity that
may be available in a mutual fund.
An alternative to an actively managed mutual fund would be a
passively managed exchange traded fund or indexed fund.
TAKE LOSSES FROM WORTHLESS SECURITIES
AND BAD DEBTS
When a security or non-business loan becomes completely worthless, you can at least recover some of your losses through tax savings.
A worthless security is treated as a capital loss in the year it becomes
totally worthless.
For determining whether the loss is long-term or
short-term, the security is deemed to be sold on December 31. To be
considered worthless, a security must have absolutely no value. If it
has even negligible value, you will usually be prevented from claiming
it as a worthless security.
You can avoid the absolute-no-value test
by selling the security (in a bona fide sale) to an unrelated party for a
nominal amount. If you complete the sale before the end of the year,
you will be able to take the loss in the current year.
TREATMENT OF LOSSES FROM FRAUDULENT
INVESTMENT ARRANGEMENTS
Unfortunately, taxpayers sometimes experience a loss from a
fraudulent investment arrangement. For example, an investment
advisor may have reported investment activities and resulting
income amounts that were partially or wholly fictitious.
In some
cases, in response to requests for withdrawals, the investment
advisor made payments of purported income or principal to the
taxpayer, but these payments were made from amounts that other
investors had invested in the fraudulent arrangement (e.g., a Ponzi
scheme).
The Internal Revenue Code allows a deduction for losses sustained during the taxable year, not compensated by insurance
or otherwise subject to various limitations. A loss from a fraudulent investment arrangement is deductible in the taxable year in
which the taxpayer discovers the loss, provided that the loss is
not covered by a claim for reimbursement or other recovery as to
which the investor has a reasonable prospect of recovery. To the
extent that the investor’s deduction is reduced by such a claim,
recoveries on the claim in a later taxable year are not includible in
the investor’s gross income.
The loss resulting from a fraudulent investment arrangement is
generally the initial amount invested in the arrangement plus any
additional investments, less amounts withdrawn, if any, reduced
by reimbursements or other recoveries and reduced by claims as
to which there is a reasonable prospect of recovery.
If an amount is reported to the investor as income in years prior
to the year of discovery of the theft, and the investor included
the amount in his or her gross income, and the investor does
not subsequently withdraw the amount previously reported as
income, the fictitious income may be included in the amount of
the deductible theft loss.
capital gains and dividend income
AVOID CAPITAL GAINS TAX THROUGH
CHARITABLE GIVING
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A theft loss in these types of transactions entered into for profit
may create or increase a net operating loss that can be carried
back and/or forward under special rules.
WASH SALE CAN DISALLOW YOUR LOSS
The wash sale rule prohibits you from realizing a loss on a security
if you buy the same or a substantially identical security (or option
to buy such a security) within 30 days before or after you sell it.
This requires you to be out of the position and/or at an investment
risk for those 61 days if you want to realize a loss on the security yet
buy it back for future growth. If you fail the wash sale “test,” your
loss will be realized only when the replacement security is sold.
If you don’t want to risk being out of the position for more than 61
days, consider the following alternatives:
• Buy securities of another company in the same industry, or
• Buy shares in a mutual fund (or an exchange-traded fund) that
specializes in the same industry, or
• Double up on the position 31 days before selling at a loss.
You can sell the alternative security or mutual fund after 30 days
and use the proceeds to buy back securities in your original company, if you prefer.
One planning technique available is to sell appreciated securities
in the current year in order to utilize capital losses and then buy
back the stock immediately, thereby securing a step-up in basis.
The wash sale rule does not apply to gains.
USE A BOND SWAP TO REALIZE LOSSES
You may be holding losses in your bond portfolio where you can
realize a loss and immediately purchase somewhat similar bonds,
yet avoid the wash sale rule. This strategy is referred to as a bond
swap because your net position after the sale and subsequent
purchase is similar to your position prior to the swap. For example,
the replacement bond is not considered a substantially identical
security (the wash sale test) if it has a different issuer or has a
materially different stated interest rate or maturity.
SELLING SHORT AGAINST THE BOX
The reverse of the wash sale rule — the ”constructive sale” rule —
prevents you from locking in the appreciation on a security without
recognizing any taxable gain by selling an identical security short.
The 2 positions are deemed to be a constructive sale and you must
realize gain as if the appreciated security was sold for its fair market
value on the date of the short sale, thereby preventing you from
deferring the gain to a future year.
An exception to this rule allows you to close the short sale within
30 days after the end of the tax year if you keep your appreciated
position open and at risk for at least 60 days following the close of
the short sale.
Since closing the short sale is based on the delivery
date, you actually need to close the short sale earlier so that you
have enough time to have the shares delivered within the 30 days.
LONG-TERM CAPITAL GAINS AND DIVIDEND
INCOME TAXED AT 0%
Net long-term capital gains and qualifying dividend income that
would normally be taxed are not taxed at all for taxpayers whose
taxable income is below certain thresholds. This rule applies to
taxpayers with taxable income that would otherwise be taxed at
either 10% or 15% before application of this rule.
TRANSFER APPRECIATED STOCK TO
SAVE TAXES
You can transfer appreciated securities that you have held longterm to your child, or other beneficiary, who is subject to a low
income tax rate and then have the child sell the securities and
pay no federal tax. The child must be over age 19 (or if a full-time
student, over age 24) to avoid the kiddie tax rule that assesses
tax based on your tax rate, as discussed in the tax rate overview
chapter.
However, keep in mind that gift tax issues must be considered, as discussed in the chapter on gift and estate planning.
As an example, assume you transfer securities with unrealized
gains of $30,000 to your single child over age 19 (who is not a
full-time student), and the child only has wages from a summer
job of $4,000. He or she would pay no tax on the $30,000 gain.
This is because of a provision that treats capital gain income that
would otherwise be taxed at either the 10% or 15% graduated tax
rates as being taxed at a rate of zero. A single taxpayer can have
taxable income of up to $37,450 in 2015 ($37,650 in 2016) and
still be in the 15% tax bracket, thereby qualifying the taxpayer to
a 0% tax rate on his or her capital gains.
.
39
If you have appreciated securities that you are reluctant to sell
because of the capital gains tax, consider creating a charitable
remainder trust. By doing so, you will defer the tax and the trust
will make annual payments to you. The remainder amount at the
end of the trust’s term will go to a charity you designate. See the
chapter on charitable contributions for a more detailed discussion
of the different types of charitable trusts.
SECTION 1256 CONTRACTS
Section 1256 contracts include regulated futures contracts, foreign
currency contracts, non-equity options (including stock index
options), dealer equity options and dealer securities futures contracts.
The tax issues related to these contracts are different than
typical capital gain assets. The gain or loss on these contracts is
automatically treated as 60% long-term and 40% short-term,
regardless of the holding period. Thus, the maximum effective
federal tax rate on Section 1256 gains for 2015 and 2016 is
27.84% (31.64% when considering the additional 3.8% Medicare
Contribution Tax) for certain taxpayers.
Any unrealized gain or loss
on the contracts at year-end is taxable in the current year as if sold,
with an adjustment to your tax basis for the gain or loss already
treated as realized at the end of the previous year.
Note: Like-kind exchange reporting is mandatory if the replacement
property is the same as the surrendered property. Unlike installment
sales, you cannot “opt out” of like-kind exchange reporting. While a likekind exchange does not have to be a simultaneous swap of properties,
you must meet 2 time limits or the entire gain will be taxable.
The first
limit is that you have 45 days from the date you sell the relinquished
property to identify potential replacement property. The second limit is
that the replacement property must be received and the exchange completed no later than 180 days after the sale of the exchanged property
or the due date (with extensions) of the income tax return for the tax
year in which the relinquished property was sold, whichever is earlier.
The replacement property received must be substantially the same as
the property identified within the 45-day limit described previously.
QUALIFIED DIVIDEND INCOME
Qualified dividends received by an individual shareholder through
December 31, 2015 and 2016 are taxed at 15% and 20% for taxpayers who fall into the 39.6% tax bracket. These rates are exclusive of
the Medicare Contribution Tax of 3.8%.
The following requirements
and restrictions must be satisfied:
•
The dividends must be paid by either a domestic corporation or
a qualified foreign corporation (as defined below).
•
You must hold the stock for more than 60 days during the
121 days beginning 60 days before the ex-dividend date. This
increases to 90 days out of 181 days for certain preferred stock.
The reduced rate is not available for dividends received if you
are holding an equivalent offsetting short position in the same
security.
INSTALLMENT SALE REPORTING BENEFITS
An installment sale can be a very tax-efficient method to realize
a gain on the sale of an asset. While typically considered for real
estate sales, it can also apply to sales of non-publicly traded
property, such as stock in a privately held corporation or an interest
in an LLC or partnership.
If you are considering selling any of these
assets, see the discussion in the chapter on passive and real estate
activities.
SECTION 1031 LIKE-KIND EXCHANGES
The like-kind exchange rule allows you to defer taxes by exchanging
property for other property that has the same nature or character.
You don’t pay taxes on any gain until you sell the property that you
have received in the exchange, except to the extent of any cash or
other boot (“unlike” property) received. Typically, this rule applies
to the sale of rental real estate, although certain other types of
property are also eligible. See the chapter on passive and real estate
activities for a more detailed discussion of like-kind exchanges.
Dividends taxed at 15% or 20% are not investment income for
purposes of the investment interest expense limitation.
However,
just as is the case for net long-term capital gains, you can elect
to tax the dividends at ordinary rates and eliminate some or all
of this limitation on the deduction of investment interest. See the
discussion in the chapter on interest expense.
Dividend income that is generally not eligible for the 15% or 20%
rates, and therefore taxed at your ordinary income tax rate (as
high as 39.6% or 43.4%, inclusive of the additional Medicare
Contribution Tax), includes dividends received from:
•
Money market mutual funds and bond funds.
•
Real estate investment trusts (“REITs”).
•
Payments you received in lieu of dividends if your broker loans
your shares to a customer (as part of a short sale) and dividends
are paid to the short sale buyer before the short sale is closed.
capital gains and dividend income
DEFER CAPITAL GAINS TAX ON HIGHLY
APPRECIATED SECURITIES
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A qualified foreign corporation is generally a foreign corporation
that is eligible for the benefits of a comprehensive income tax treaty
with the U.S. that includes an exchange of information program.
In addition, a foreign corporation is treated as a qualified foreign
corporation if its stock is readily traded on an established securities
market in the U.S. For this purpose, a share will be treated as so
traded if an American Depository Receipt (“ADR”) backed by the
share is so traded. Dividends received from a foreign corporation
that was either a foreign investment company or a passive foreign
investment company (“PFIC”) either for the year of distribution
or the preceding year are not qualified dividends eligible for the
15% or 20% rates.
SECTION 1035 EXCHANGE
The law provides that no gain or loss shall be recognized on the
exchange of an annuity contract for another annuity contract.
The
exchange treatment is for individuals who have merely exchanged
one insurance policy for another which better suits their needs. The
exchange without gain or loss recognition of an annuity contract for
another annuity contract is limited to cases where the same person
or persons are the obligee or obligees under both the original and
exchanged contracts.
Under Revenue Procedure 2011-38, the direct transfer of a portion
of the cash surrender value of an existing annuity in exchange for
a second annuity contract will be treated as a tax-free exchange
under Section 1035 if no amount (other than an amount received
as an annuity for a period of 10 years or more or during one or
more lives) is received during the 180 days beginning on the date
of the transfer. A subsequent direct transfer of all or a portion of
either contract involved in an exchange is not taken into account
if the subsequent transfer qualifies (or is intended to qualify) as
a tax-free exchange.
.
stock options,
restricted stock
and deferred
compensation
Stock options, restricted stock, and other types of deferred compensation
continue to be included by many employers as part of the overall benefits
offered to executives of both private and public companies. The taxation of
these components of compensation are quite complex and, if these benefits are
mismanaged by an employee, the tax cost could be substantial.
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STOCK OPTION PLANS
In recent years, the number of companies offering stock options
to their employees has decreased. However, given the recent
stock market performance, there are many employees faced with
important decisions of what to do with the stock options that they
presently hold. These options may represent a significant portion
of an employee’s overall compensation. If you hold stock options, it
is vital to understand the tax rules related to your options in order
to maximize the after-tax cash flow related to these instruments.
You need to frequently review your inventory of options which
have been granted but not yet exercised, along with stock still held
from previously exercised options, to come up with a strategy for
exercising your options and selling your stock, while minimizing
your tax exposure.
There are two kinds of employee stock options: incentive stock
options (“ISOs”) and nonqualified stock options (“NQSOs”).
The
tax rules governing the taxation of the exercise of options and the
subsequent sale of shares differ substantially between ISOs and
NQSOs. For all employee stock options there are 3 critical dates
to remember for tax purposes: (1) the date the options are granted
to you, (2) the date they are exercised, and (3) the date the stock
acquired via the options are sold. You must carefully plan when
to exercise stock options and how long to hold the shares (after
they are exercised) before selling them.
INCENTIVE STOCK OPTIONS
ISOs give you the right to buy company stock in the future at a
fixed price that is determined at the time the options are granted.
The options usually must be exercised within 10 years of receiving
them.
They cannot be transferred (except on death) and can be
exercised only during employment or within 3 months of leaving
the company. The exercise price cannot be less than the stock’s
fair market value at the time of the grant, and thus the stock must
appreciate before the ISOs have any value. If they do — and once
you’ve satisfied the applicable holding periods — you can buy
shares at a price that is below their fair market value.
The key tax consequences related to the granting and exercising
of ISOs include the following:
• If the stock acquired by exercising the ISOs is owned at least 2
years from the time the options were granted or one year after
they were exercised, whichever is later, a profitable sale of the
stock will produce long-term capital gain income taxed at a
maximum rate of 20%, plus a 3.8% Medicare Contribution Tax
on net investment income for taxpayers above the threshold
amounts.
The gain will generally be the difference between the
fair market value of the stock on the date of the sale and your
exercise price. This is known as a qualifying disposition. For AMT
purposes, the basis in the stock will be the fair market value on
the date of exercise (to account for the adjustment mentioned
above).
Thus, the capital gain will be lower for AMT purposes
than for regular tax purposes, although the maximum of a 20%
federal tax rate applies to each.
• A disqualifying disposition occurs if you sell the stock within
the later of one year after the option is exercised, or within 24
months of the grant date. The gain on this sale will be included
as compensation and will be taxed at a federal rate as high as
39.6%. If the price of the stock sold changed from the date of
exercise, you may also have a short-term gain component as
well.
However, there are no Social Security or Medicare taxes
due on the compensation derived from disqualifying dispositions of ISOs.
In order to make the best decision of when to exercise your options
and sell the underlying shares from both cash flow and tax perspectives, you need to:
• Project both your regular tax and AMT for the current year to
determine the number of shares you can exercise without incurring a current-year AMT liability.
• Project multiple future tax scenarios based on different stock
prices to assist you in deciding if you should exercise options
now, even at the expense of incurring an AMT liability, to gain
from potentially greater future tax savings. Also, you should
consider the availability of the AMT credit discussed below.
• Determine how much cash you have available to exercise the
options and, if necessary, consider a financing option for purchasing the stock. Among these alternatives are a cashless
exercise and a stock swap.
These techniques will be discussed
later in this chapter.
• There is no tax liability on the date the options are granted.
• There is no regular tax liability when you exercise a previously
granted ISO. However, the spread between the exercise price
(what is paid for the shares) and the fair market value of the
shares at the time of exercise is treated as an addition when
computing your AMTI.
AMT CREDIT
Even if the exercise of your ISOs results in an AMT liability, you
will be eligible in future years to receive an AMT credit for AMT
paid on these option exercises in future years. Generally, the credit
you can use is limited to the annual amount that your regular tax
.
43
option, and the length of time you have held the shares since you
exercised the option. But trying to plan for different scenarios when
it is impossible to predict the future price of the stock makes it
difficult to know the best choice. Here are some alternatives based
on your current holdings combined with certain assumptions.
Please see the chapter on tax credits for a detailed discussion of
the AMT credit.
SHOULD YOU EXERCISE EARLY?
Exercising your options early rather than waiting until the expiration date can be advantageous, but you must consider cash flow
and potential tax costs. On the plus side, exercising early:
ISO SCENARIOS
The first decision you have to make is when to exercise your
existing options, from right now up to just before they are due
to expire.
Once you have exercised the options, you then must
decide when to sell the shares. However, the tax consequence
of selling the shares compared to continuing to hold the shares
can be complicated since it depends on several factors. Some
are clearly defined, such as the current trading price, the original
exercise price, the trading price at the time of the exercise of the
• Starts your holding period so you can be eligible for the federal
long-term capital gain rate that much sooner.
• Allows you to manage
your AMT liability by giving you the
ability to exercise just enough options to reach a break-even
point between the AMT and regular tax (thereby avoiding the
AMT).
This can be done annually to allow you to exercise your
options with minimal, or no, AMT cost.
tax tip
9
ISO TAX BENEFITS
Assume the following facts:
1.
Y
ou are granted incentive stock options to buy 9,000 shares of your company stock for $20 per share on June 3, 2008.
2. n January 10, 2016, you exercise all 9,000 options when the fair market value is $30.
O
3. ou hold the shares until January 12, 2017 and then sell them for $45 per share, and you were in the AMT in all years up to the year of the sale.
Y
Your tax consequences without considering the Medicare Contribution Tax of 3.8% would be as follows:
• There is no tax due when the options are granted.
• There is no regular tax due when you exercise the grant and purchase the shares.
However, you will have an AMT preference of $90,000
(9,000 shares at the excess of $30 over your cost of $20). Assuming you are already in the AMT, your additional AMT tax is $25,200
($90,000 times the AMT rate of 28%).
When you sell the shares:
Y
ou have a federal regular tax liability of $45,000 computed by applying the 20% long-term capital gain rate to the gain of $225,000,
computed by subtracting the cost of $180,000 (9,000 shares at $20 per share) from your proceeds of $405,000 (9,000 shares at
$45 per share).
Y
ou will be eligible to offset your regular tax from the sale by $25,200 of AMT that you paid when you exercised the option. This is your
AMT credit amount, but you can only utilize it to the extent your regular tax exceeds your AMT before the offsetting credit.
E
ven if you cannot utilize the AMT credit because you are still in the AMT, your AMT tax on the gain is $27,000.
This is 20% of the
AMT gain of $135,000 based on proceeds of $405,000 less your AMT tax cost of $270,000 (9,000 shares at $30 per share when you
exercised the options and reported a tax preference amount). You pay the lower AMT tax of $27,000 in the year of the sale rather than
the regular tax of $45,000, thus saving $18,000 currently and possibly saving an additional $25,200 in the future.
I
f you are not able to use all the AMT credit, you can continue to carry the unused credit forward to offset regular tax in a subsequent year.
stock options, restricted stock and deferred compensation
exceeds your AMT without regard to the credit in each year. Any
unused credit can be carried forward until the full amount is used.
While it is usually recommended to avoid paying AMT on ISO
exercises whenever possible, there may be situations when you
may decide to go ahead with the exercise because of favorable
market conditions.
.
44
EisnerAmper 2016 personal tax guide
• May reduce your overall AMT liability if you are able to exer-
cise the ISOs at a time when you think the market price is
close to bottoming out. Since the price is lower and the spread
between the fair market value and your exercise price may be
negligible, you can exercise more options without incurring an
AMT liability, or just having to pay a small liability. Even if the
exercise triggers the AMT you’ll pay less than you would if you
had exercised an equal number of options at a time when the
stock price was higher.
Alternatively, on the negative side, exercising early:
• Accelerates the use of funds you need to purchase the shares,
• Can create an AMT liability before you have the proceeds from
the sale of the stock to pay an AMT liability, and
savings will be $18,480 ($28,000 AMT credit less the $9,520
regular and Medicare Contribution Tax on the sale, assuming you
have sufficient regular tax liability).
The current trading price is higher than both your exercise
price and the trading price at the time of the exercise
If you sell the shares, you will have a capital gain for both regular
tax and AMT purposes. Assume the current stock price is $35.
If
you are not in the AMT, you would pay tax on the gain of $20 per
share ($35 less your exercise cost of $15). As discussed above,
you may have an AMT credit available to offset the tax on the gain.
If you are subject to the AMT this year, your AMT gain would be
$10 per share ($35 less the price at the time of exercise of $25).
Your tax increase for federal tax purposes would be based on the
AMT gain of $10 rather than the regular tax gain of $20. However,
the additional 3.8% Medicare Contribution Tax on net investment
income would be based on the $20 gain.
• Exposes you to a loss if the value of the shares drops below
your exercise cost.
tax tip
ISO EXERCISED IN PRIOR YEARS
Assume the following: You have held 10,000 shares for more than
12 months from the exercise of an ISO grant in a prior year.
Your
exercise cost was $15 per share, and the stock was trading at $25
per share when you exercised the grant. You were subject to the
AMT in the year of the exercise on the full amount of the spread
between the fair market value of $25 and the exercise cost of $15.
If the current trading price is lower than your exercise price
If you have net capital gains for the year, you can sell the shares and
realize a capital loss. As an example, assume the stock is currently
trading at $12 per share.
While you would only have a $3 per share
regular tax loss ($12 less your exercise cost of $15), your AMT loss
would be $13 per share ($12 less the $25 value when you exercised
the options). If you are in the AMT this year, your AMT loss on
the sale would be $130,000 ($13 per share times 10,000 shares),
creating a potential total savings of $27,140 in taxes ($130,000
times the 20% long-term capital gain rate plus $30,000 times
3.8% Medicare Contribution Tax on net investment income).
If the current trading price is higher than your exercise price
but lower than the trading price at the time you exercised
the grant
Assume the stock is currently trading at $19 per share. If you are
not in the AMT for the year, you will realize a gain of $4 per share
($19 less exercise cost of $15), resulting in a tax of $9,520 (23.8%
of 10,000 shares at $4 gain per share).
But you may actually save
taxes since you have an AMT credit available to offset your regular tax, if not already utilized. The AMT credit is $28,000 (28%
of 10,000 shares at an AMT spread of $10 per share). Your tax
10
ELIMINATE THE AMT
IF THE STOCK PRICE
DROPS AFTER AN
EXERCISE
A falling stock price can result in costly tax consequences if the sale
of stock purchased through exercising an incentive stock option is
not planned for properly.
Take the facts in Tax Tip 9 but assume
your exercise of 9,000 shares was earlier this year and the price
per share has fallen back to $20, your exercise price. As Tax Tip
9 demonstrates, your AMT tax on the exercise would be $25,200
($90,000 preference at 28%) if the AMT applies. You will have to
pay this tax even though the selling price of your shares is currently
equal to the price you paid for them.
What can you do? Sell the shares before the end of the year so
that you will have a disqualifying disposition.
You would not have
a regular tax liability since the selling price of $20 is now equal to
your exercise price. But you will eliminate the $25,200 AMT that
you would pay if you did nothing.
It may make sense to consider selling the shares even if the selling
price is greater than your exercise price. Let’s say the stock price
has dropped to $23 per share after exercise and you will be in the
AMT this year.
If you sell the stock before the end of the year, you
will realize ordinary income of $27,000 (9,000 shares at a gain of
$3 per share based on the selling price of $23 and your cost of $20
per share). However, the AMT liability on the disqualifying disposition will be $7,560 ($27,000 x AMT rate of 28%), which is less
than the $25,200 AMT that you would pay if you held the shares
(as computed above). Because the wash sale rule (as discussed in
the chapter on capital gains) does not apply to securities sold at
a gain (regardless of any AMT benefit you receive), you can then
repurchase the shares in the open market, even at a lower price, so
that you would still own the same number of shares.
.
45
11
Assume you exercised an ISO grant in 2007 and purchased 30,000 shares at the exercise price of $5 per share when the stock was selling
for $15 per share. Despite the tax preference amount of $300,000 (30,000 shares times the $10 per share spread) you did not have an
AMT liability that year because you had substantial ordinary income. You sell the shares in 2016 for $40 per share and you are in the AMT.
Regular tax
Long-term capital gain
Tax at 20%
Effective tax rate on sale
AMT
$ 1,050,000
$ 750,000
210,000
150,000
20%
14.29%
Please note this table does not include impact of the Medicare Contribution Tax on net investment income.
The long-term capital gain for regular tax purposes is $1,050,000 (proceeds of $1,200,000 less the $150,000 you paid to purchase the
shares). For AMT purposes, the gain is only $750,000 since your basis is $15 per share (fair market value at the time of the exercise, even
though you did not pay the AMT in that year).
The result of the sale is that you only pay a current federal effective tax rate of 14.29%
($150,000 tax on the actual gain of $1,050,000).
ISOs EXERCISED EARLIER IN THE CURRENT YEAR
If you exercised ISOs earlier in the year, you may want to consider
selling the shares in a disqualifying disposition if certain conditions
exist. Again, let’s assume an original exercise price of $15 per share
and a trading price of $25 per share at the time of exercise.
If the current trading price is less than the price you paid to
exercise the option
First, determine if the AMT preference amount of $10 per share
($25 trading price at the time of exercise less your cost of $15 per
share) will put you into the AMT or increase an already existing
AMT liability. If so, consider selling the stock to eliminate the AMT
that you will have to pay even though the stock price has dropped.
As Tax Tip 10 illustrates, you could end up with a substantial tax
without any funds to pay the tax.
Also, you can always buy back
the stock as long as you wait 30 days to avoid the wash sale rule
discussed in the chapter on capital gains and dividends. If the
AMT preference amount does not put you into the AMT, you can
choose to continue holding the shares if you believe the stock
will appreciate.
If the current trading price is higher than your exercise
price but lower than the trading price when you exercised
the option
If you sell the shares, you will have a disqualifying disposition and
the excess of the current trading price over your exercise price will
be taxable as compensation at ordinary income tax rates as high
as 39.6%. But if you expect to be in the AMT this year, the sale of
the shares will eliminate the AMT of $10 per share on phantom
appreciation that no longer exists.
As an example, let’s assume
the stock price has dropped to $18 per share. If you sell the shares,
you will have ordinary income of $3 per share for both regular tax
and AMT compared to $10 of income for AMT purposes had you
taken no action.
If the current trading price is higher than both your
exercise price and the trading price at the time of the
exercise
Once again, if you sell the shares you will have a
disqualifying disposition and the excess of the fair market value
on the exercise date over your exercise price will be taxable as
compensation at ordinary income tax rates. The additional
increase on the sale at the date of exercise will be taxed as a
short-term capital gain.
So if the stock is selling for $30 per
share, a sale of the shares would result in $15 of income per
share sold taxed at potentially 39.6% for regular tax purposes.
In addition $5 per share may be subject to the Medicare
Contribution Tax of 3.8%. Thus, if you are not subject to the
AMT during the year, it would not make sense to sell the stock
during the year. If you would have been in the AMT with or
without the ISO preference item it may make sense to sell
the shares by year-end.
This is because you may never get a
benefit for the AMT paid.
stock options, restricted stock and deferred compensation
tax tip
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EisnerAmper 2016 personal tax guide
NONQUALIFIED STOCK OPTIONS
FINANCING TECHNIQUES
Unlike ISOs, the exercise of NQSOs creates taxable ordinary income
in the year of exercise for both regular tax and AMT purposes. The
income is equal to the excess of the stock’s fair market value on the
date of exercise over the exercise price plus any amount that was
paid for the option, where applicable. The granting of an NQSO
does not result in taxable income unless the value of the option is
readily ascertainable, which generally is not the case. The income
recognized upon exercise will be taxed as compensation and will
be subject to both Social Security and Medicare taxes.
Unless you have sufficient available cash, it can be problematic
to come up with the funds to exercise your stock options.
You
can borrow money — sometimes from the company itself — but
there are other ways to finance your stock acquisition. Two such
techniques are a cashless exercise and a stock swap.
When you sell the stock after exercising, any appreciation/depreciation in the stock’s value will be taxed as capital gains/losses. The
holding period for the underlying stock starts when you acquire
the shares — it does not include the time you held the options.
For
long-term capital gain treatment, you must hold the shares for more
than one year after the exercise date.
Unlike ISOs, NQSOs are sometimes transferable. However the
employee (and not the transferee) will generally recognize income
for tax purposes upon the exercise of the options.
You are not allowed to receive in-the-money options without triggering substantial penalties under provisions of the Internal Revenue
Code restricting this type of deferred compensation (see below).
Tax Tip 12 illustrates the tax consequences of an exercise and sale
of shares received from the exercise of an NQSO grant.
A cashless exercise occurs when a broker lends you the cash
needed to exercise the options and then, usually on the same
day, helps you sell the stock. The broker recoups the funds you
borrowed as well as a small amount of interest and you keep the
excess funds.
Your cost for the transaction is only the small interest charge.
A stock swap occurs when you use previously acquired company
stock to pay for the options’ exercise cost. Some companies will
even grant you more options called “reloads” if you exercise an
option with a stock swap. The number of additional options granted
will be equal to the number of shares used to pay the exercise price.
RESTRICTED STOCK
The tax treatment of restricted stock differs considerably from
stock options.
If you receive compensation in the form of stock
subject to a substantial risk of forfeiture, you can defer the recognition of income until the stock is no longer subject to that risk or
you sell the stock. But you can elect, under Internal Revenue Code
tax tip
12
NQSO TAX CONSEQUENCES
If the 9,000 shares from exercise of the ISOs in Tax Tip 9 were from the exercise of NQSOs, you will recognize $90,000 of taxable compensation from the exercise (9,000 shares at $30 per share fair market value less the $20 exercise cost). When you sell the stock after holding it
for more than one year, from the exercise of NQSOs, you will have a long-term capital gain of $135,000 (9,000 shares at $45 less your basis
of $30 per share) at a maximum federal tax cost of $27,000 ($135,000 at 20%).
Your net cash benefit from the exercise and sale will be:
Proceeds from the sale
Cost to exercise the shares (9,000 shares at $20 per share)
$ 405,000
(180,000)
Tax on exercise of options ($90,000 at 39.6%)
(35.640)
Tax when you sell the shares ($135,000 at 20%)
(27,000)
Net cash benefit
Note: This example does not take into consideration Social Security and Medicare taxes.
 $ 162,360
. 47
• An additional tax of 20% on top of the ordinary income tax on
A Section 83(b) election can be extremely important if the income
taxable to you on the grant date is negligible. Why? Because the
election allows you to convert future stock appreciation from ordinary income into long-term capital gain income, which is therefore
eligible to be taxed at the much lower long-term capital gain tax
rate. If you do not make the election, you will pay tax at ordinary
income tax rates on the appreciation when the restrictions lift
regardless of whether or not you sell the stock and realize any
gain on the sale. See Tax Tip 13.
Note: ISOs are excluded from these provisions because their exercise
price must be equal to their value at the time of the grant.
The disadvantage of making a Section 83(b) election is that you
pay tax at ordinary income tax rates in the current year.
Plus, taxes
paid as a result of the election can’t be refunded if you eventually
forfeit the stock or the stock’s value decreases. You will have a
capital loss when you sell the stock, but not if you forfeit it.
the amount treated as compensation.
• An interest assessment based on the IRS underpayment rate
plus 1% on the tax liability resulting from the recognition of the
compensation.
ADDITIONAL REPORTING REQUIREMENTS
Every corporation that transferred to an employee a share of stock
related to that person’s exercise of an ISO during the current tax
year is required to file Form 3921 with the IRS for each transfer
made. Form 3921 includes the following information:
• The date the option was granted,
• The date the employee exercised the option,
• The number of shares of stock transferred to the employee,
DEFERRED COMPENSATION PLANS
• The fair-market value of the stock when the option was
exercised, and
The tax treatment of compensation received through a deferred
compensation plan depends on rules governing the initial election
to defer compensation and the ability to take distributions.
The
initial election to defer compensation must generally be made in
the calendar year prior to the year the income is earned.
• The exercise price of the stock.
• At scheduled times selected at the time of the deferral, based
The forms are not required for an employee who is a nonresident
alien. Employees must receive the Forms 3921 by January 31 following the end of the calendar year of reporting. The Form is also
required to be filed with the IRS with the corresponding Form 1096
by February 28 following the calendar year reported (March 31 if
filing electronically).
• At the termination of employment or service.
There are similar filing requirements for employee stock purchase
plans.
Distributions can only be made:
on either specific dates or the age of the participant.
• On the disability or death of the participant.
• To alleviate an unforeseen emergency.
• Following a change in the ownership or effective control of the
employer.
Failure to follow these rules will result in:
• Taxation of the compensation ‘deferred’ at the time it is deferred
or credited to the participant, or at the time it vests, whichever
is later.
stock options, restricted stock and deferred compensation
Section 83(b), to recognize ordinary income when you receive the
stock.
You must make this election within 30 days after receiving
the stock. However, before making the election, make sure your
company’s deferred compensation plan with respect to compensation received in the form of stock is in compliance with the
requirements discussed in the next section.
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EisnerAmper 2016 personal tax guide
tax tip
13
THE BENEFIT OF A SECTION 83(b) ELECTION FOR RESTRICTED STOCK
You receive 10,000 shares of restricted stock with a fair market value of $3 per share. In anticipation of an initial public offering (“IPO”), a
10 for 1 stock split gives you 100,000 shares. At the time of the IPO, the stock is offered at $6 per share and the risk of forfeiture is removed.
You sell the shares 2 years later at $8 per share.
If you make an Internal Revenue Code Section 83(b) election within 30 days after receiving the stock
• You have $30,000 of compensation in the current year (10,000 shares at $3 per share) with a maximum federal tax cost of $11,880
($30,000 at 39.6%).
• Your basis in the stock is $0.30 per share after the split ($30,000 of realized compensation divided by 100,000 shares).
• Your holding period begins on the day you receive the stock.
• You realize a long-term capital gain of $770,000 (100,000 shares at $8 per share less your basis of $0.30 per share) when you sell
the stock, at a maximum federal tax cost of $154,000 ($770,000 at 20%).
• You incur a Medicare Contribution Tax on net investment income of $29,260 ($770,000 at 3.8%).
• You defer the tax you would have to pay when the company goes public to the time when the stock is sold.
If you don’t make the election
• You don’t have any compensation income this year.
• You have compensation of $600,000 (100,000 shares at the IPO price of $6 per share) when the company goes public (and
the substantial risk of forfeiture no longer exists due to a change of control feature) at a maximum federal tax cost of $237,600
($600,000 at 39.6%).
• You have a long-term capital gain of $200,000 when you sell the stock (100,000 shares at $8 per share less your basis of $6 per
share) at a maximum federal tax cost of $47,600 ($200,000 at 23.8%).
Income Tax Comparison
If you don’t make the election
If you make the election
Tax savings by making the election
$ 285,200
195,140
$ 90,060
. small business
stock
Take advantage of preferential tax treatment available for
certain small business stock.
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EisnerAmper 2016 personal tax guide
SMALL BUSINESS STOCK TAX BENEFITS
REDUCED TAX RATES
Although usually a more speculative investment, qualified small
business (“QSB”) stock can qualify for preferential tax treatment,
including:
•
Rollovers of gain when the proceeds are used to buy other qualified small business stock,
Taxpayers that hold QSB stock for more than 5 years (based on
purchaser’s first date of ownership as a C corporation) may exclude
the gain on the sale of the QSB stock from gross income; the
amount of exclusion is staggered based on tax holding dates. The
tax holding date is the date computed under section 1223 which
includes your holding period prior to conversion to a C corporation.
•
Reduced tax rates, or
•
•
Ordinary loss rather than capital loss treatment, even if you have
held the property long-term.
100% of the gain if the stock has a tax holding date after
September 27, 2010. This provision has been made permanent
as a result of PATH.
•
75% of the gain if the tax holding date is after February 17, 2009
and before September 28, 2010.
•
50% of the gain if the tax holding date is before February 18,
2009.
QSB STOCK ROLLOVER
The gain from the sale of QSB stock is eligible for a rollover which
allows you to defer the tax on the gain. QSB stock is defined as
stock of a domestic corporation that:
•
Originally issued its shares after August 10, 1993,
The tax rate on the included gain is 28% meaning that the 50%
exclusion gives you an effective rate of 14% compared to the capital gains tax rate of 20% now in effect.
•
Did not have gross assets exceeding $50 million at any time
before or immediately after issuing the stock, and
Note: Rollovers into new QSB stock are still available as long as the
replacement period is observed (see above).
•
Is actively engaged in a qualifying trade or business.
Note: Eligible gain from a single issuer is subject to a cumulative limit
for any given year of the greater of (a) $10 million reduced by eligible
gain taken in prior years or (b) 10 times the cost of all qualified stock
of the issuer disposed of during the tax year.
Note: Businesses in certain industries, such as hospitality, financing,
professional services, and mining, do not qualify for this treatment.
Also, the rollover provision does not apply to stock of an S corporation.
To qualify for this rollover, you need to both own the stock for at
least 6 months and reinvest the proceeds within 60 days of sale
in other QSB stock.
The replacement stock you buy in the rollover
then qualifies for a future rollover under the same rules. The basis
in the replacement stock is reduced by the deferred gain from the
rollover and inherits the holding period of the stock you sold for
determining long-term capital gain treatment.
AMT ADJUSTMENTS
Although excludable for regular tax purposes, a portion of the
excluded gain on the sale of QSB stock is an AMT preference item.
The preference rates are also based on purchase dates:
•
No preference adjustment for stocks with a tax holding date
after September 27, 2010, resulting from the enactment of PATH.
This provision has been made permanent.
•
7% of the excluded amount for all other dates.
Note: There is no carryover of holding period for purposes of determining the “more-than-6-months” requirement.
If the stock is held by a pass-through entity of which you are a
partner or shareholder, the entity can buy replacement stock and
elect a tax-free rollover of the gain. Or it can notify you of the gain
and you can defer tax by buying the replacement stock directly.
The 60-day rule still applies, beginning on the day the entity sells
the QSB stock — not when they notify you of the sale.
The AMT preference that was originally scheduled to increase
from 7% to 42% after 2012 has been permanently extended at
7% by ATRA.
Caution: If you have net capital losses and take the exclusion, remember to consider that the AMT preference will cause you to utilize your
AMT capital losses.
.
51
5
SECTION 1202 TAX RATE SCHEDULE SALES
Year of purchase
Regular net tax rate*
AMT effective rate
Capital gain rate
Benefit if in AMT
Pre 2001-02/17/2009
15.9%
16.88%
23.8%
6.92%
02/18/2009-09/27/2010
7.95%
9.42%
23.8%
14.38%
0%
0%
23.8%
23.8%
Post 09/28/2010
Planning Tip: Qualified small business stock held for 5 years can result in additional savings.
*Including the Medicare Contribution tax of 3.8%. Savings assumes no deductions against net investment income.
CLAIM ORDINARY — NOT CAPITAL — LOSSES
If you sell qualifying small business stock at a loss, you can treat
up to $100,000 ($50,000 if married filing separately) of the loss
as an ordinary loss rather than a capital loss, even if you have held
the stock for more than 12 months. This loss is available toward
the computation of net operating losses.
To qualify for this treatment you must have bought the stock at
original issue and continuously held it until disposition. The issuing
corporation must have had an initial capitalization of $1 million
or less at the time the stock was issued and derived not more
than 50% of its income from investment activities (such as interest, dividends, royalties, rents, annuities, and sales or property
exchanges) during the preceding 5 years.
small business stock
chart
.
passive
and real estate
activities
If you are an owner of a trade or business in which you do not materially
participate, the passive activity rules can limit your ability to deduct losses.
And, if you hold rental real estate investments, the losses are passive even
if you materially participate, unless you qualify as a real estate professional.
Income from passive activities including rental real estate may also be
subject to the 3.8% Medicare Contribution Tax on net investment income.
. 53
CONVERT PASSIVE LOSSES
A passive loss is a loss from a business activity in which you do not
materially participate. The most common ways you are deemed
to materially participate in a business activity, and thereby avoid
the passive activity limitation rules, are if:
If you fail the material participation tests and you have passive
losses that are subject to a disallowance, there are things that you
can do to convert the disallowed losses into tax-saving deductible
losses:
• You participate more than 500 hours in the activity during the
Dispose of the activity
Sell any passive activity with current or suspended passive losses
through a bona fide sale to an unrelated party. The losses become
fully deductible when the activity is sold — including any loss on
the disposition (subject to capital loss limitations). Even if you
realize a gain on the sale, you can still save taxes as Tax Tip 14
illustrates.
But you must also be aware of the phantom income
trap discussed in Tax Tip 15.
year,
• Your participation constitutes substantially all of the participation in the activity,
• You work more than 100 hours per year in the activity and not
less than any other person, including non-owners, or
• You work more than 100 hours per year in each of several activities, totaling more than 500 hours per year in all such activities.
Passive activity losses are deductible only to the extent that you
have income from other passive activities to offset the losses, or
when you completely dispose of the activity. If you have passive
losses that you cannot deduct in the current year, you can carry
these losses forward to the following year, subject to the same
passive loss rules and limitations.
Taxpayers should keep detailed records as to the time they spend
on a particular activity, especially when they participate in several
activities. Moreover, there are specific rules as to what kind of work
qualifies as participation.
Increase your participation in loss activities
For an activity that is generating losses, consider increasing your
participation to meet one of the tests listed above, if possible, so
you will not be subject to a passive loss limitation for the activity
in that year.
Increase the hours you participate in real property trades or
businesses
If you are engaged in real estate activities, increase your hours to
meet the real estate professional test (discussed below).
If you
are a real estate professional, your real estate losses are no longer
treated as passive losses, allowing you to deduct them in full.
tax tip
14
USE PASSIVE ACTIVITY CAPITAL GAINS TO
RELEASE SUSPENDED ORDINARY LOSSES
If you have suspended passive activity losses, you may be able to
dispose of a passive activity at a gain and not have to pay any taxes.
In fact, you may actually reduce your taxes despite the gain.
As an example, assume you have suspended passive losses of
$300,000 from an activity that you have held for more than one
year. You dispose of the activity in 2016 and realize a capital gain
of $340,000. You would actually save federal taxes of $50,800 as
well as receiving the proceeds from the sale.
This very favorable result is due to the fact that the suspended losses
reduce your ordinary income at a 39.6% rate, whereas the long-term
capital gain from the sale would be taxed at no more than 20%.
The suspended loss would therefore reduce your tax by $118,800
(39.6% of $300,000) but the capital gain would only increase your
tax by $68,000 (20% of $340,000).
If you have a net capital loss
carryover that you might not be able to utilize, your savings would
even be greater since the gain could be offset by the carryover loss,
giving you the full tax benefit of the loss (but a reduced carryover).
The tax savings would be reduced by the 3.8% Medicare Contribution
Tax in the amount of $1,520 (3.8% of $40,000, which is the difference between the $340,000 capital gain and $300,000 ordinary
loss).
passive and real estate activities
WHAT ARE PASSIVE LOSSES?
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UTILIZE YOUR PASSIVE LOSSES
IDENTIFY YOUR ACTUAL PASSIVE LOSSES
If you have passive losses from activities that you cannot convert
into “material participation” activities as discussed above, you
should consider taking the following steps to utilize your passive
losses:
When identifying your net passive losses, take into account the
following:
Decrease your participation in income activities
For an activity in which you materially participate that is generating non-passive income, limit your participation to less than 500
hours, if feasible. Therefore, the activity may become passive and
you can use the income to offset your passive losses. However,
make sure that you are not still considered active under the other
tests. This may result in the additional 3.8% Medicare Contribution
Tax to the extent that the income is not fully offset by passive
losses.
If you or your spouse have been materially participating
in the activity for 5 out of the last 10 years, you will be deemed to
be materially participating in the current year, even if you do not
participate at all in the current year.
Invest in income-producing passive activities
Consider investing in an income-producing trade or business that
you will not materially participate in. This creates passive income
to you which can be offset until you utilize all of your passive
losses from other unrelated passive activities. This may result in
the additional 3.8% Medicare Contribution Tax to the extent that
the income is not fully offset by passive losses.
that only generate portfolio income, such as capital gains, interest and dividends, are not passive activities, even if you do not
participate in the activity.
Therefore, the investment income
cannot offset your passive losses.
• Interest expense on money borrowed to fund your investment
in a passive activity is treated as an additional passive activity
deduction, subject to the same disallowance rules.
• Portfolio income, such as interest and dividends, from a passive
activity cannot offset the passive losses from the activity.
LOSSES FROM LIMITED LIABILITY
COMPANIES (“LLCS”) AND LIMITED LIABILITY
PARTNERSHIPS (“LLPS”)
Generally, limited partners of an LLP are presumed to not be materially participating in the business, and thus these activities would
be considered passive. There is an exception to the presumption
of no material participation where an individual holds an interest
in a limited partnership as both a limited partner and a general
partner. In this case, such person can avoid the passive loss rules
with respect to the limited partnership interest.
The courts have addressed whether the rules that apply to limited
partnership interests also apply to members of an LLC.
Although
the IRS does not concur, recent cases have held that such members
are not limited partners for purposes of determining their material
participation in these activities. Rather, the facts and circumstances
must be examined to ascertain the nature and extent of the participation of the member.
tax tip
15
• Investment and trading partnerships, S corporations and LLCs
THE PHANTOM
INCOME TRAP
Income in excess of your net proceeds can be triggered upon the
disposition of real estate. This results from prior deductions based
on indebtedness.
Therefore, you may have deducted losses and/
or received cash distributions in prior years that were greater than
your actual investment in the property. This is sometimes referred
to as negative capital.
Phantom income to the extent of your negative capital can also
occur if you dispose of your interest in the pass-through activity,
even if the underlying property remains unsold. However, to the
extent your prior year’s passive losses were suspended, you would
have an ordinary loss to offset this income.
As Tax Tip 14 demonstrates, this can actually be a tax savings opportunity.
PASSIVE ACTIVITY CREDITS
Tax credits from passive activities, such as rehabilitation and
low-income housing credits, can reduce your regular tax liability.
However, for properties placed into service prior to 2008, these
credits are limited to the amount of your regular tax attributable
to your net passive income, and cannot be used to reduce your
AMT. For post-2007 investments, both the qualified Rehabilitation
Tax credit as well as the low-income housing credit can offset
both regular tax and AMT to the extent of your tax attributable to
passive activity income. If you have a net overall passive loss, the
disallowed credits are carried forward and can be used to offset
.
55
16
DEFER YOUR GAIN USING
THE INSTALLMENT SALE METHOD
In 2016, you sell a nonresidential building for $2,000,000, net of closing costs, which you bought in 1998 for $600,000 (including subsequent
improvements). At the time of the sale, you had accumulated depreciation of $400,000. Therefore your taxable capital gain is $1,800,000
($2,000,000 less the cost of $600,000 plus the accumulated depreciation of $400,000). You will receive a 20% down payment of $400,000
before the end of the year and receive a mortgage from the buyer for the balance, with the first payment due in January of 2017.
By using the
installment sale method, you will defer $290,000 of federal tax to future years as the mortgage is paid down by the buyer.
Full payment in current year
Installment sale method
$ 1,800,000
$ 360,000
380,000
90,000
Taxable gain in year of sale
Federal tax cost this year
Deferred tax
290,000
The taxable gain using the installment sale method is computed by multiplying the down payment of $400,000 by the gross profit ratio
of 90%. The gross profit ratio is the taxable gain of $1,800,000 divided by the total proceeds of $2,000,000.
Caution: You are subject to a tax rate of 25% on the portion of the gain that is attributable to previous non-accelerated depreciation deductions
on real property on a “first in first out” (FIFO) method. Also, this method may not be advantageous when the tax rates of future years’
installments are expected to increase.
Note: The 3.8% Medicare Contribution Tax on net investment income, which is not reflected in the above illustration, may apply to the gain
and related interest net investment income.
your taxes in future years.
If you have net passive income but the
credits are limited because of the AMT, you can carry the credits
forward to offset your regular tax in future years when you are
not in the AMT.
REAL ESTATE PROFESSIONAL RULES
REAL ESTATE ACTIVITIES
• Perform more than 50% of your personal services in real prop-
If you are a real estate professional, you can deduct rental real
estate losses in full since you are not subject to the passive loss
limitations. To qualify, you must annually:
erty trades or businesses in which you materially participate, and
Real estate activities are passive by definition, unless you qualify
as a real estate professional. Regardless of whether you are a real
estate professional or not, there are ways you can defer the tax from
the gain on the sale of real estate properties, as discussed below.
A separate rule allows you to deduct up to $25,000 of losses
each year if you actively participate in a rental real estate activity.
This special allowance is reduced, but not below zero, by 50% of
the amount by which the taxpayer’s AGI exceeds $100,000.
It is
completely phased out when AGI reaches $150,000.
• Have more than 750 hours of service in these businesses.
In addition, you must materially participate in the rental real estate
activity in order for that activity to be considered nonpassive. For
example, a real estate broker who owns one or two apartments
for rent might be a real estate professional but might not be considered to materially participate in the rental activity.
passive and real estate activities
tax tip
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In the case of a joint return, the real estate professional requirements are satisfied if, and only if, at least one of the spouses
separately satisfies both requirements. In regards to the material
participation test though, work performed by a taxpayer’s spouse
in a trade or business is treated as work performed by the taxpayer.
1250, or 751 is recognized immediately. Furthermore, when the deferred
gain on the sale of real estate is attributable to both unrecaptured section 1250 gain (maximum tax rate of 25%) and regular capital gain
(maximum tax rate of 20%), the unrecaptured section 1250 gain is
reported first upon the receipt of principal payments.
Real estate professionals are not subject to the 3.8% Medicare
Contribution Tax on net investment income, including capital
gains, from rental real estate activities in which they materially
participate.
LIKE-KIND EXCHANGES
Observation: If you fail either test and you have real estate losses, try
to increase your hours of service to meet the tests. For purposes of the
real estate professional test, a taxpayer can elect to aggregate all of
their real estate rental activities for purposes of determining material
participation.
Once the election is made, it continues unless the IRS
consents to its revocation.
INSTALLMENT SALE REPORTING BENEFITS
An installment sale can be a very tax-efficient method to defer a
gain on the sale of real estate for future years. If you are contemplating a sale of real estate, consider agreeing to receive one or
more payments after the year of the sale so that you are eligible
to report the gain on the installment sale method. By doing so, you
can defer much of the tax to future years.
The installment method allows you to report gain only as you
receive principal payments.
By simply deferring one payment until
next year, you can defer the tax on that portion of the sales price
by a full year (see Tax Tip 16). The gain you report in future years
retains the same character as when it was sold. Therefore, if property that is sold had a long-term holding period, the gain reported in
future years will also be long-term except for the interest element
if interest is not stated on the deferred payments.
You may also
be entitled to interest payments on seller-financed mortgages
or loans. The interest payments are taxable as ordinary income
when received. You can use the installment sale method even if
you owned the property through an entity in which you hold an
interest if the entity does not elect out of the installment method.
However, if the face amount of all installment receivables you
own at December 31 exceeds $5 million, an interest charge on the
deferred tax (assessed as an additional tax) will apply.
Caution: Even if no payments are received in the year of sale, any
recapture income under Internal Revenue Code (“IRC”) sections 1245,
If you exchange investment or business property for property of
a like-kind (same nature or character), you do not realize taxable
gain at the time of the exchange, except up to the amount of any
cash or other boot received (such as unlike property).
The like-kind
exchange rule gives you the opportunity to defer taxes until you
sell the property that you receive in the exchange.
Like-kind exchanges typically are used when selling real estate
and can yield substantial tax benefits. Even though the definition
of like-kind property allows for a certain amount of flexibility, such
as permitting an exchange of land for a building if both are held for
investment purposes, specific and complex rules govern like-kind
exchanges. These rules include a requirement that you cannot
directly receive any cash or other consideration and must identify
the replacement property with the qualified intermediary holding
the funds within 45 days after the sale.
Caution: Like-kind exchanges do not apply to the sale of stocks, bonds,
other securities and other intangible assets such as a partnership interest.
Also, the sale of your principal residence does not qualify for a
like-kind exchange.
Note: Like-kind exchange reporting is not elective. Consider not engaging
in a like-kind exchange if a taxable event is the better approach (e.g., when
you have expiring losses, or state tax considerations).
NEW LEGISLATION
Some 15 provisions of PATH specifically address a variety of technical and policy considerations of REITs. One such noteworthy
provision deals with tax-free spinoffs involving REITs.
The provision
provides that a spinoff involving a REIT will qualify as tax-free only
if immediately after the distribution both the distributing and the
controlled corporation are REITS. In addition, neither a distributing
nor controlled corporation in a tax-free spinoff transaction that is
not a REIT is permitted to elect to be treated as a REIT for 10 years
following the tax-free spinoff. The provision applies to distributions
made on or after December 7, 2015, but will not apply to any
distribution pursuant to a transaction described in a ruling request
initially submitted to the IRS on or before that date, which request
has not been withdrawn and with respect to which a ruling has not
been issued or decided in its entirety as of such date.
.
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17
LIKE-KIND EXCHANGES
FOR VACATION HOMES
Like-kind exchanges for vacation homes that are converted to
rental property are tricky, but can be worthwhile. It is possible for
you to do a like-kind exchange if you turn a vacation home into a
rental property. For example, if you stop using your vacation home,
rent it out for a substantial period of time and then exchange it
for other real estate and conduct the rental of that real estate as
a business, then you have converted it to an investment property.
This conversion could allow for a like-kind exchange. Of course, the
timing and facts must support such a conversion.
In addition, if the
property swapped for is intended to be a new second or primary
home, you are not allowed to move in immediately. In 2008 the
IRS issued Rev. Proc.
2008-16, which includes a safe harbor rule
under which it said it would not challenge whether a replacement
dwelling qualified as investment property for purposes of a likekind exchange. In order to meet this safe harbor, you must have
held the relinquished property for at least 24 months and in each
of the two 12-month periods immediately after the exchange: (1)
you must rent the dwelling unit to another person for a fair rental
for 14 days or more; and (2) your own personal use of the dwelling
unit cannot exceed the greater of 14 days or 10% of the number of
days during the 12-month period that the dwelling unit is rented at
a fair rental. In addition, after successfully swapping one vacation/
investment property for another, you cannot immediately convert
it to your primary home and take advantage of the $500,000
primary residence exclusion.
If you acquire property in the like-kind
exchange and later attempt to sell that property as your principal
residence, the exclusion will not apply during the 5-year period
beginning with the date the property was acquired in the 1031
like-kind exchange.
Your specific fact pattern must support a position in which your
vacation property or second home was in fact held for rental, investment, or business use and would therefore qualify for tax-deferred
exchange treatment. The more rental, investment or business
use activity, the stronger the facts will be that the property was
converted and held for rental or investment. The more you can
substantiate that the property was held, treated and reported as
rental or investment property, the better your position will be to
support tax-deferred exchange treatment.
passive and real estate activities
tax tip
.
principal
residence sale
and rental
A principal residence may be one of the most tax-efficient
investments you can own since you can exclude as much as
$500,000 of the gain on its sale.
. 59
structure for the rental or business use. Regardless, there will be
a taxable gain equal to the amount of depreciation previously
deducted and it will be taxed at the special 25% capital gain rate.
PASS THESE TESTS AND EXCLUDE UP TO
$500,000 OF YOUR GAIN
Many people mistakenly think that you can defer a gain from the
sale of a principal residence if they buy a new home that costs more
than the selling price of the old home. That law was repealed many
years ago (1997 to be exact). Under current law, you will have to
pay taxes to the extent the net gain exceeds the maximum exclusion amount.
Here is an example for a married couple, filing jointly:
To qualify for the full amount of the exclusion, you must have all
of the following:
• Owned your principal home for at least 2 years. Your principal
residence can be a house, houseboat, mobile home, cooperative
apartment or condominium. The 2-year rule may consist of 24
full months or 730 days.
If you are filing a joint return, only one
spouse need qualify in order for both spouses to benefit from
the exclusion.
• Used the home as your principal residence for at least 2 years,
in the aggregate, during the 5-year period ending on the sale
end date.
DO NOT ASSUME YOU CAN ALWAYS SELL
YOUR HOUSE TAX-FREE
Net proceeds on sale
$ 2,000,000
Tax basis (including capital improvements) 600,000
Net gain on sale of home 1,400,000
Allowable exclusion
(500,000)
Taxable gain 900,000
2015 federal tax at maximum 20% capital
gain rate and the 3.8% Medicare
Contribution Tax on net investment income
$
214,200
• Not have excluded the gain on a home sale within the last
Notes: This gain may be subject to state income taxes. See the chapter
on state tax issues.
• Did not acquire your home through a like-kind exchange (also
The taxable gain will also be subject to the 3.8% Medicare
Contribution tax on net investment income. The excludable gain
($250,000/500,000) is not subject to the tax.
2 years.
known as a 1031 exchange), during the past 5 years.
With regards to principal residence, occupancy of the residence
is required.
Short temporary absences, such as for vacation or
other seasonal absences, even if the property is rented during such
temporary absences, will be counted as periods of use.
A pro-rata exclusion is allowed if you fail the above tests as a
result of a hardship, which includes a change in employment,
health reasons, multiple births from the same pregnancy, divorce
or legal separation, or other unforeseen circumstances and natural
disasters. The pro-rata exclusion is generally equal to a fraction,
the numerator of which is the number of months you used and
owned the house as your principal residence within the past
2 years and the denominator is 24.
A reduction of the exclusion is required to the extent that any
depreciation was taken after May 6, 1997 in connection with the
rental or business use of the residence, unless there was a separate
NO EXCLUSION ALLOWED FOR NONQUALIFIED
USE OF PROPERTY
Beginning with sales or exchanges of your principal residence after
December 31, 2008, you will no longer be able to exclude gain
allocated to periods of nonqualified use of the property.
Generally, nonqualified use means any period after 2008 where
neither you nor your spouse used the property as a principal
residence. To figure the portion of the gain that is allocated to
the period of nonqualified use, multiply the gain by the following
fraction:
Total nonqualified use during period of ownership after 2008,
divided by total period of ownership.
principal residence sale and rental
The sale of your principal residence is eligible for an exclusion
that allows up to $500,000 of the gain to be tax free, if you file as
married jointly and meet the tests listed below (other taxpayers
can exclude up to $250,000 of the gain).
But any portion of the
gain attributable to a home office or rental use is not eligible for
the exclusion.
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A period of nonqualified use does not include:
KNOW YOUR TAX BASIS
• Any portion of the 5-year period ending on the date of the sale
To minimize your taxable gain, you will want to have the highest
tax basis possible, and have the documentation to substantiate
the basis calculation. So be sure to maintain accurate records,
including information on your original cost (including closing costs)
and subsequent capital improvements.
that is after the last date you (or your spouse) use the property
as a principal residence.
• Any period (not to exceed an aggregate period of 10 years)
during which you or your spouse are serving on qualified official extended duty as a member of the uniformed services or
foreign services of the United States, or as an employee of the
intelligence community.
Basis must be reduced by any pre-1988 deferrals of gain (i.e., when
the law allowed taxpayers to defer tax by buying a new principal
residence costing more than the net proceeds of their principal
residence).
• Any other period of temporary absence (not to exceed an aggre-
gate period of 2 years) due to change of employment, health
conditions, or such other unforeseen circumstances as may be
specified by the IRS.
SPECIAL CONSIDERATION FOR THOSE WHO
FILE JOINT RETURNS
If you are married filing jointly, things can get a little more complicated if you want to be eligible to exclude the maximum gain of
$500,000. While either you or your spouse can meet the 2-year
ownership test, the following rules apply to the use and prior 2-year
exclusion tests:
• Both you and your spouse must meet the 2-year use test. If only
one spouse meets the test, the exclusion is limited to $250,000.
• Both you and your spouse must meet the “no exclusion in prior
2 years” test.
This can be an issue if you sell your home, marry
a homeowner and then jointly sell that home within 2 years. If
the spouse meeting the test is the homeowner, he or she will
still be eligible for the $250,000 exemption, and the spouse
failing the test is not eligible for a pro-rated exemption, unless
the hardship rule applies, as discussed above.
SALE BY SURVIVING SPOUSE
A surviving spouse who has not remarried and sells a principal
residence within 2 years from the date his or her spouse died can
exclude $500,000 of gain rather than $250,000.
LOSS ON THE SALE OF YOUR HOME
Based on historical evidence, you would expect your home to
appreciate after you purchase it. However, if you only hold it for a
short time, or if unusual market conditions prevail, it is possible to
lose money on the sale of your principal residence, especially after
factoring in closing costs.
Since a loss on the sale of a personal
residence is not deductible, you do not gain a tax benefit from
the loss. But if part of your home was rented or was used for your
business, the loss attributable to that portion will be deductible,
subject to various limitations, since it is a business loss rather
than a personal loss.
RENTAL OF VACATION OR SECOND HOME
You should consider the tax consequences if you are planning to
rent out your vacation or second home. Proper planning can help
you maximize tax savings.
Tax-free rental income
If you rent your vacation home or principal residence for 14 days
or less during the year, the rental income is tax-free, regardless of
the amount of rent you receive.
Even though you do not have to
report this income, you can still deduct the full amount of qualifying
mortgage interest and real estate taxes as itemized deductions
on your tax return.
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Rental expenses limited by personal use
If you personally use your vacation home for more than the greater
of 14 days or 10% of the total number of days it is rented (or
available for rental, under a Tax Court case), it is considered a
personal residence and your deductions may be limited, as follows:
• Qualifying mortgage interest and real estate taxes are deductible
as rental expenses based on the number of days rented divided
by the total number of days in the year.
• The balance of the real estate taxes and mortgage interest are
deductible as itemized deductions.
• Other rental expenses, including depreciation, utilities and
repairs, are deductible based on a ratio of the days the property
was rented over the total number of days the property was used
for rental and personal purposes.
• Expenses directly attributable to the rental activity itself (such as
broker commissions on the rental income or advertising costs)
are deductible in full.
• Net overall losses from the rental of a personal use residence are
not currently allowable but are carried forward and available for
use against income from the property in future years, including
a gain on the sale.
To the extent that the property qualifies as rental real estate
(personal use less than 10% or 14 days) losses may be subject to
the passive loss rules. See the chapter on passive and real estate
activities for more information.
LIKE-KIND EXCHANGES FOR VACATION
HOMES
See Tax Tip 17 in the passive and real estate activities chapter for
information on a planning opportunity using like-kind exchanges
for vacation homes.
REPORTING REQUIREMENTS
You would typically report the sale of your principal residence
on Schedule D of your personal income tax return. However, you
do not have to report the sale of your principal residence on your
income tax return unless:
• You have a gain on the sale. You would typically show the entire
gain on the Schedule D of your tax return and then reduce your
gains by the excludible portion.
• You have a loss and you received Form 1099-S.
Since the IRS
matches all Forms 1099 to the return, you would want to show
the sales proceeds on the return and that there is no gain on the
sale. Remember personal losses are not deductible.
principal residence sale and rental
Rental expenses deductible in full
If you personally use your vacation home (including family
members) for no more than the greater of 14 days a year or 10%
of the total number of days it is actually rented out, the property
is considered to be a rental property rather than a personal
residence. As rental property, all ordinary and necessary expenses
of maintaining the home are deductible against the rental income
you receive.
However, if your expenses exceed your income,
your deductible loss may be limited since the rental activity is
considered to be a passive activity. See the chapter on passive and
real estate activities for a more detailed discussion.
. charitable
contributions
Your ability to control when and how you make charitable
contributions can lower your income tax bill, effectively reducing
the actual cost of any gift you make, while fulfilling your
philanthropic objectives.
. 63
You can save substantial taxes by simply:
• Using long-term appreciated property to fund your charitable
contributions.
• Timing your contributions so that they are made in a year when
your tax bracket will be higher.
More sophisticated planning techniques are discussed in this
chapter, including using donor-advised funds, private foundations,
and charitable trusts, to help you combine tax planning with your
charitable goals.
For 2015, the benefit of the charitable contribution deduction may be
reduced due to the itemized deduction limitation (“Pease” provision)
that applies when AGI exceeds $258,250 ($309,900 for joint filers).
For 2016, the thresholds increase to 259,400 ($311,300 for joint
filers). Your itemized deduction limitation will be the lesser of (a)
3% of AGI above the applicable amount, or (b) 80% of the amount
of the itemized deductions. Other limitations also apply (see Chart
6). Therefore, careful planning must be done to determine the true
tax benefit of charitable contributions being considered.
Multi-year
income tax projections should be included as part of the charitable
planning process.
significant charitable contributions. You should also consider using
other eligible appreciated property, such as artwork, that you can
give to a museum. By doing so, you can get the double tax benefit
of receiving a deduction equal to the full fair market value of the
security or property (as if you contributed cash) and avoid paying
capital gains tax on the appreciation (see Tax Tip 18).
There are limitations on the amount of contributions that you can
deduct in a given year based on your AGI, as Chart 6 indicates.
While
a contribution of long-term appreciated property is generally limited
to 30% of your AGI rather than the 50% limit that applies to cash,
this is still usually a high ceiling and any disallowed contributions
can be carried forward for the next 5 years.
TIME YOUR CONTRIBUTIONS
Always consider your tax rate for this year and future years before
deciding when to make your contributions. Your tax rate may vary
significantly in a year of unusual financial events, but more common is the impact that the AMT will have on your contributions.
If possible, make your charitable contributions in a year that you
are not likely to be in the AMT. In 2015, as a result of ATRA, the
difference between the maximum regular tax rate of 39.6% and the
AMT rate of 28% is 11.6%.
USE LONG-TERM APPRECIATED PROPERTY
If you expect your maximum tax rate to be the same next year, prepay your charitable contributions this year (if feasible and desired)
to gain the advantage of accelerating the tax deduction.
You should always use appreciated publicly traded securities that
you have held for more than one year, rather than cash, to fund
The year that you can take the deduction is the year the charity
actually receives the property.
Therefore, make sure that you satisfy
tax tip
18
A stock that you have owned for many years has appreciated to $100,000 from its original purchase price of $60,000. You have decided that
it may have very little future growth potential. Instead of selling the stock, you donate it to your favorite charity.
Your tax savings by donating
the stock rather than cash would be:
Cash Donation from Proceeds
Tax savings on contribution ($100,000 at 39.6% in 2015)
Capital gains tax if stock was sold ($40,000 at 23.8%*in 2015)
Net federal tax savings
*Includes 3.8% Medicare Contribution Tax on net investment income.
Stock Donation
 $ 39,600
 $ 39,600
(9,520)
0
 $ 30,080
 $ 39,600
charitable contributions
BASIC PLANNING IDEAS
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the legal transfer requirements for contributions of securities or
other property that you make prior to year-end. One way to do this
is by having the securities transferred directly from your brokerage
account to the charity’s brokerage account before year-end, thereby
accelerating the process.
CONTRIBUTIONS DEDUCTIBLE ONLY AT COST
RATHER THAN FAIR MARKET VALUE
Certain types of property will not avail you of a charitable deduction
equal to the appreciated fair market value of the property. So, before
contributing property, consider its eligibility and other options available to fund your charitable contributions. These types of property
include:
Securities held for 12 months or less
If you contribute securities that you have held for 12 months or less,
your charitable deduction is equal to the lesser of the fair market
value or your basis in the stock.
Therefore, you lose the deduction
for any of the appreciation of the security.
Securities with a fair market value less than your cost
Never use these securities to fund your contributions since your
deduction will be limited to the lower fair market value of the stock
and you will permanently lose the benefit that you would have
received had you sold these securities at a capital loss.
Other ordinary income property
The charitable deduction for ordinary income property is limited
to the lesser of the fair market value or your basis in the property,
even if you have held the property more than 12 months. Ordinary
income property includes inventory items and property subject to
depreciation recapture.
Tangible personal property
To get the property’s full fair market value as a deduction, the
appreciated property must qualify for long-term capital gain treatment had it been sold and the charitable organization must use
this property in its exempt function (such as a painting given to a
museum). Otherwise, your deduction will be limited to the lesser
of your basis or the property’s fair market value.
Furthermore, if the
charitable organization disposes of the property within 3 years, the
donor will be required to include as ordinary income for the year
of the disposition the difference between the charitable deduction
and the donor’s basis. However, if the organization certifies to the
IRS, in writing, that the property’s use was, or was intended to be,
related to its exempt purpose or function, this rule would not apply.
Vehicles
If the charitable organization does not use the vehicle in its exempt
function, but instead sells the vehicle (for over $500), your charitable
deduction will be limited to the gross proceeds received from the
sale by the charity, not the appraised value.
Fractional interest
A fractional interest contribution consists of a gift of an undivided
portion of property to a charity that uses the property in connection with its exempt purposes (e.g., an interest in artwork that is
contributed to a museum). In this situation, your initial charitable
deduction will be the fair market value of the property multiplied
by the fractional interest contributed.
As an example, let’s say you donate the use of a painting valued at
$400,000 to a museum for 3 months and you retain the painting
for the remaining 9 months.
Your charitable deduction would be
$100,000 based on 25% of the value of the painting at the time
of the contribution (3 months of the year). If you gift the use of
the same painting next year for 6 months (additional 3 months
or additional 25%) and the fair market value of the painting has
increased to $440,000, your contribution would not be $110,000
based on 25% of additional contribution multiplied by the value of
the painting when contributed. Instead, it would be $100,000 since
a subsequent fractional interest donation of the same property is
limited to the lesser of the value at the time of the initial fractional
contribution or the value on the additional contribution date.
Beware that “recapture” will occur if you make an initial fractional
contribution of artwork, then fail to contribute all of your remaining
interest in the artwork to the same donee on or before the earlier of
the date that’s 10 years from the initial fractional contribution or the
date of your demise (“specified period”).
Recapture consists of an
income inclusion in the year in which the specified period falls and
is in the amount that was previously deducted plus interest running
from the due date of the return for the year of the deduction until
paid and a penalty of 10% of the amount of the income inclusion.
Remainder Interest in Real Property
The owner of real estate, such as a vacation home, can have full
use of the property throughout his or her life and leave a remainder
interest to a charitable organization. You will receive a charitable
deduction based on the present value of the remainder interest in
the property in the year that the remainder interest is contractually
conveyed, not when the charity actually takes title to the property.
Therefore, you receive a current deduction even though the charity
does not receive the property until the condition of the conveyance
occurs (death of the donor).
Conservation Easement
A conservation easement is a contribution of a real property interest
to a charitable organization that uses the easement exclusively for
conservation purposes. A real property interest for this purpose
includes a perpetual restriction on the use of the real property.
The
donor does not give up ownership, control, or enjoyment of the land.
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Under a temporary provision that had terminated for contributions
made in taxable years beginning after December 31, 2014, the 30%
contribution base limitation on deductions or capital gain property
by individuals did not apply to ‘qualified conservation contributions.’
Rather, the 50% contribution base limitation and 5-year carryover
applies. PATH reinstates and makes permanent these provisions.
Unreimbursed expenses
Although you cannot get a charitable deduction for services performed on behalf of a charitable organization, you may deduct
incidental unreimbursed expenses incurred while performing these
services. Travel expenses to and from the place where the services
are performed are deductible. You can deduct expenses of operating
your car including tolls and parking fees but not expenses connected
with maintenance of the car such as depreciation, repairs or car
insurance.
Alternatively, you can deduct 14¢ per mile. Reasonable
expenses for meals and lodging while “away from home” in performing charitable services are deductible as well. Expenses that are
considered personal and not specifically incurred in the performance
of services on behalf of a charitable organization are not deductible.
IRA DISTRIBUTIONS AS CHARITABLE
CONTRIBUTIONS
The provision for qualified charitable distributions, which allows IRA
and inherited IRA owners age 701/2 or older to transfer portions of
their accounts to qualifying charities tax-free while satisfying all or
a portion of their required minimum distributions, has been made
permanent as a result of PATH.
According to the provision, if you are age 701/2 or older, you can
make tax-free distributions to charity from an IRA of up to $100,000
per year.
These distributions must be made directly to the charity
and are neither includible as income nor deductible as an itemized
deduction on your tax returns.
In order to qualify, the charitable distribution must be made to a
public charity. Payments to a donor-advised fund, supporting organization or private foundation do not qualify.
This technique has additional benefits since, unlike a taxable distribution, the distribution is not included in AGI. This may therefore
impact the Medicare Contribution Tax on net investment income, the
3% reduction of itemized deductions, and the limitation of personal
exemptions.
HOW TO ACCELERATE THE TAX BENEFIT
OF FUTURE CONTRIBUTIONS AND MEET
PHILANTHROPIC GOALS
Certain charitable vehicles allow you to accelerate the tax benefit of
future contributions into the current year while retaining practical
control over when such contributions are actually made to your
intended charity.
The most common charitable planning vehicles
include:
• Donor-Advised Funds
• Private Foundations
• Charitable Trusts
DONOR-ADVISED FUNDS VS. PRIVATE
FOUNDATIONS
Contributing to either a donor-advised fund or a private foundation
offers a tax deduction (subject to different limitations), but they
have their differences. The donor-advised fund is the simpler and
less costly alternative.
Using a private foundation requires you to
create a legal entity with annual tax filings, subject to an excise tax
on net investment income and other potential excise taxes (see the
discussion below). Yet, despite these disadvantages, the private
foundation can still be a preferable alternative if substantial amounts
are involved, so consider the following similarities and differences
when evaluating either of these options:
Obtain a large charitable deduction in the current year
Both a donor-advised fund and a private foundation allow you the
ability to avoid paying capital gains tax on appreciated marketable
securities held more than one year when such property is donated.
However, a private foundation is subject to an excise tax of 2% on
its net investment income, including capital gains on the appreciated property you contributed. The excise tax can be reduced to 1%
depending on the foundation’s level of granting in a given year.
An
income tax will be assessed on a foundation’s unrelated business
income as well as an onerous excise tax if the foundation is involved
in various acts of self-dealing or other prohibited transactions.
Retain control of the timing, amount and payment of future charitable contributions
The donor-advised fund permits you to make your contributions
charitable contributions
The easement only restricts what can be done on or to the land.
In the typical case, a perpetual conservation easement is given to
a qualified conservation organization. The charitable deduction is
equal to the difference in the fair market value of the property with
and without the easement and requires a qualified appraisal. This
type of charitable contribution often gives the IRS cause to scrutinize
the valuation on which the deduction is based.
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EisnerAmper 2016 personal tax guide
to a public charity that will retain them in an account (which can
bear your name) for future charitable distributions. Typically, the
fund will follow your charitable preferences, though it is not legally
obligated to do so. The private foundation generally gives you more
direct control, which can sometimes make it easier to achieve your
investment goals and ensure that your charitable objectives are
accomplished.
not always, the actual earnings and appreciation of the assets in the
foundation are greater than the 5% minimum distribution. Donoradvised funds do not have a minimum grant distributions rule.
CHARITABLE TRUSTS
A charitable trust can provide the following benefits:
Maintain management control of the private foundation’s
investments
This can be one of the major advantages of the private foundation.
You retain full control over all investment decisions, allowing you
to use your investment expertise and resources to maximize the
assets in the foundation.
Involve family members
A private foundation can provide intangible benefits by involving
family members in a collaborative philanthropic effort.
Your family
can benefit from having the responsibility of making management
decisions and formulating a mission statement to satisfy the family’s
overall charitable desires. The management responsibilities of the
foundation can be passed down from one generation to another,
perpetually keeping it in your family’s name. It is also possible to
give your children the ability to recommend charitable distributions
for your donor-advised fund.
Make minimum distributions
A private foundation is subject to a rule which requires an annual
distribution to charities equal to at least 5% of the average value
of its assets.
Excise taxes will be assessed on foundations that fail
to distribute the required minimum distribution. Typically, although
• Convert appreciated property into an annuity.
• Diversify your portfolio and defer capital gains tax.
• Obtain a current-year charitable deduction for the present value of
a remainder interest left to charities by using a charitable remainder trust. However, with the present low interest rate environment
this deduction is lower than in the past.
• Pass appreciation on to your beneficiaries by using a charitable
lead trust.
There are two types of charitable trusts — charitable remainder
trusts (“CRTs”) and charitable lead trusts (“CLTs”).
You can set up
either as an annuity trust or a unitrust. The annuity trust pays a fixed
dollar annuity that is based on a fixed percentage of the initial trust
value. The unitrust pays an annuity that will vary since it is based
on a fixed percentage of the trust’s annual fair market value, which
necessitates annual valuations.
tax tip
19
As an original shareholder in a company that went public, you now own stock that is worth $1,000,000 with a tax basis of only $400,000.
You would like to diversify your portfolio but you have been reluctant to do so because of the capital gains tax.
One option you might want to consider is establishing a charitable remainder annuity trust (“CRAT”).
By doing so, you can combine your
desire to diversify your portfolio with your charitable giving intentions. The trust can sell the stock and pay no tax on the $600,000 gain at
the time of the sale since the trust is a nontaxable entity. The trust can then use the proceeds from the sale to purchase other investments
which, in turn, diversifies your overall portfolio allocation since you retain an annuity interest in the trust.
Assuming you choose a 10% payout rate, you will receive an annuity of $100,000 for the term of the trust, much of which will be eligible
for the net long-term capital gains tax rate of 23.8% (inclusive of the Medicare Contribution Tax on net investment income) based on the
undistributed gain of $600,000.
You will also receive a current-year charitable contribution for the present value of the remainder interest
going to charities. Remember, though, that the family loses the remainder value since it will pass to charities at the end of the trust’s term.
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designated charities.
A CRT can help you diversify your portfolio and increase your
annual income stream while satisfying charitable desires (see Tax
Tip 19). If you contribute highly appreciated securities to a CRT,
such as a concentrated position in low basis stock, the CRT can
sell them without incurring a current capital gains tax. You will not
only diversify your portfolio and reduce market risk, but you will
also receive an annuity based on the securities’ fair market value.
You will be taxed as you receive annuity payments, as discussed
below. The annuity you receive will probably exceed the income
you are currently receiving from the contributed securities (but
you will be foregoing future appreciation in excess of the annuity).
You can choose to have the annuity paid to your beneficiaries
instead of yourself, but you must consider gift tax consequences
since you will have made a gift to your beneficiaries equal to the
annuity’s present value.
The gift amount is set at the date of the
transfer to the CRT. Typically, this may result in lower overall gift
and estate taxes if the IRS tables used for determining the present
value of the annuity payouts are at a rate that is lower than the
actual growth rate experienced by the CRT. You can also reduce
overall family income taxes if the beneficiary’s tax rates are lower
than your tax rates.
To qualify as a CRT, the trust must satisfy the following rules:
The CRT’s assets grow tax-deferred because it is not subject to tax
and you only pay tax on the annuity payouts as you receive them.
Therefore, the CRT can immediately sell the appreciated stock
that you contributed and spread out the tax on the gain over the
life of the annuity (you may never actually pay the full tax).
The
taxable nature of the annuity is based on the trust’s undistributed
accumulated income at year-end, subject to the ordering rules.
The assets remaining at the end of the trust’s term go to your
• The term of the trust cannot exceed 20 years and the trust
must be irrevocable.
• The annual annuity income payout to the beneficiary must be at
least 5%, but not greater than 50% of either the initial amount
transferred to an annuity trust or the annual year-end fair market
value of the assets for a unitrust.
chart
6
CHARITABLE CONTRIBUTION LIMITATIONS BASED ON
ADJUSTED GROSS INCOME
The maximum deduction you are allowed for your charitable contributions is subject to a limitation based on your AGI, as noted below.
However, see the discussion above and notes below for ways to increase some of the limitation amounts. To the extent that your
deduction is limited, you can carry the disallowed contributions forward for 5 years, subject to the same annual percentage limitations.
Contributions Made To
AGI Limitation
Cash and Ordinary
Property Income
Appreciated Capital
Gain Property
Public Charities*
50%
30%
Nonoperating Private Foundations
30%
20%
Private Operating Foundations**
50%
30%
These ceiling amounts can be increased in the following ways:
• If a nonoperating private foundation makes qualifying distributions out of its corpus within 2 /2 months after the end of its taxable year equal to 100%
1
of the contributions it received during that year, the 30% limitation for cash and ordinary income property increases to 50% and the 20% limitation
for appreciated capital gain property increases to 30%.
• The 30% limitation for appreciated capital gain property donated to public charities and private operating foundations can be
increased to 50% by electing to reduce your contribution to the property’s cost. This is only advisable if your contributions would
otherwise be limited and it is unlikely that you will benefit from the carryover in the future.
* onor-advised funds are treated as public charities.
D
** Private operating foundations are nonpublicly supported organizations that devote most of their earnings and assets to the conduct of their
own tax-exempt purposes.
charitable contributions
CHARITABLE REMAINDER TRUSTS
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• The value of the remainder interest to the charity must be at
least 10% of the trust’s initial fair market value.
CHARITABLE LEAD TRUSTS
The CLT is basically the reverse of the CRT. The annuity is paid to
the charity and you or your beneficiaries receive the remainder
interest at the end of the trust’s term. But the income tax implications are complex because you are only allowed a charitable
deduction if the CLT is structured as a grantor trust (with you
reporting the annual income and charitable deduction). If the
trust is set up as a nongrantor trust, you don’t receive a charitable
deduction but you are also not taxed on the income the trust earns.
Despite these complexities, a CLT can be an effective gift and
estate tax planning tool because you are subject to gift tax only
on the present value of the remainder interest you are giving away.
This allows you to gift a much greater interest in assets, such as
stock in an early stage company, and pay little or no gift taxes.
If
the stock value grows significantly, your beneficiaries will enjoy
the excess appreciation since the growth will be greater than the
earnings rate in the IRS tables for valuing the present value of the
remainder interest, which has recently been very low. However,
they will have to wait until the trust term ends in order to receive
the remaining assets.
SUBSTANTIATE YOUR CASH CHARITABLE
CONTRIBUTIONS
Regardless of the amount of the contribution, cash donations to
charitable organizations must be substantiated with a bank record
or written communication from the donee organization showing
the name of the donee organization, the date the contribution
was made, the amount of the contribution and the value of any
benefit to you, if any. Therefore, you must make sure to obtain the
necessary documentation to support your cash charitable donations.
A cancelled check is no longer sufficient substantiation if
the contribution is $250 or more. The written acknowledgement
must explicitly state whether any goods or services were received
in connection with the donation. This rule eliminates your ability
to deduct weekly cash contributions made at religious gatherings
unless you can meet the substantiation rules.
NONCASH CONTRIBUTION APPRAISAL
REQUIREMENTS AND LIMITATIONS
If you contribute property worth more than $5,000, you are
required to obtain a qualified appraisal.
Also, you must complete and attach Form 8283, Noncash Charitable Contributions
Appraisal Summary, to your tax return. This form must include
the following:
• The qualified appraiser’s signature, and
• An authorized person from the charitable organization must
complete, sign and date the appropriate section of the form,
indicating the date of the contribution and whether the property
is being used for the charity’s exempt purpose.
A complete copy of the signed appraisal must be attached to your
tax return if you contribute any of the following:
• Artwork appraised at $20,000 or more.
• Any item, or group of similar items, for which you are claiming
a charitable deduction greater than $500,000.
• Easements on buildings in historic districts.
Caution: A qualified appraisal must meet certain criteria to be
acceptable:
• The appraisal must be made not earlier than 60 days before the
date you contribute the property and before the due date (including
extensions) of your tax return on which the deduction is claimed.
• The appraiser must be an individual who has either earned an
appraisal designation from a recognized professional appraisal
organization, has met certain minimum education and experience
requirements, regularly prepares appraisals for which he or she is
paid, or demonstrates verifiable education and experience in valuing
the type of property being appraised.
Contributions of similar items of property with an aggregate
value exceeding $5,000 are subject to the same requirements.
For example, if you contribute clothing valued at $3,000 to one
charity and your spouse contributes clothing valued at $2,500 to
another charity, you would need to obtain qualified appraisals for
both contributions. The appraisal requirements do not apply to
contributions of cash, publicly traded securities or non-publicly
traded stock worth less than $10,000.
.
69
Medicare Contribution Tax on net investment income
Charitable gifts are not deductible for purpose of calculating
3.8% Medicare Contribution Tax on net investment income of
high income taxpayers.
charitable contributions
If these requirements are not satisfied, no charitable deduction is
allowed, even if the charity received the property and the value
is not in dispute.
. interest
expense
Interest expense may reduce your tax liability, but deductibility
depends on how the proceeds from the debt are used.
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interest expense
INTEREST DEDUCTIBILITY
QUALIFIED RESIDENCE
Your ability to deduct interest payments is subject to many rules
and limitations. Deductibility of interest expense depends on how
you used the debt proceeds. Before incurring any new debt, you
should consider the options available to you to get the best tax
result from the interest you will pay on the debt. Also, periodically review your debt to determine whether you can replace debt
generating nondeductible interest with other debt so that you can
lower your taxes.
Interest paid on mortgage debt used to acquire or improve your
home is deductible as qualified residence interest, subject to limitations.
The two types of qualified mortgage debt are:
Acquisition debt
This is debt incurred on the acquisition, construction or substantial
improvement of your principal residence and your second home
(a so-called vacation home if used for personal purposes). The
debt must be secured by the residence and is limited in total to $1
million ($500,000 if married filing separately). Acquisition debt
also includes debt from a refinancing of an existing acquisition
debt, but only up to the principal of that debt at the time of the
refinancing plus any proceeds used to substantially improve your
residence.
A home equity loan that is used to substantially improve
your residence qualifies as acquisition debt. Qualified residence
interest does not include interest paid on loans from individuals,
such as your parents, if your home is not security for the debt and
the debt is not recorded at the appropriate government agency
(for example, the county clerk’s office).
Once deductible, there are also rules that categorize whether the
interest is deductible against your AGI (also known as “above-the
-line” deductions) or as an itemized deduction. Generally, above
-the-line interest deductions will yield a better tax result.
This
difference can especially be significant in reducing your state and
local income tax bill, since many states do not allow itemized
deductions (or severely limit them). Chart 7 summarizes the nature
of the different types of interest deductions.
chart
7
INTEREST EXPENSE DEDUCTION
Nature Of Debt
Nature of Deduction
Not
Deductible
•
•
Taxable investments
Tax-exempt investments
Above-the-Line
Deduction
•
Qualified residence (including a second home)
Personal or consumer
Itemized
Deduction
•
Trading activities
•
Business activities
•
Passive activities
•
Education loans
•
Note: Other rules may limit your ability to deduct the interest expense in full.
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EisnerAmper 2016 personal tax guide
Mortgage insurance premiums
PATH extends through 2016 the treatment of qualified mortgage
insurance premiums as interest for purposes of the mortgage interest deduction. This deduction phases out ratably for a taxpayer
with AGI or $100,000 to $110,000.
Home equity debt
In addition to acquisition debt, you can deduct mortgage interest
on a home equity debt up to $100,000 ($50,000 if married filing
separately) as long as the debt is secured by a qualified principal
residence and does not exceed the equity in your house. Combined
with acquisition debt, it allows you to deduct interest on qualifying debt up to $1,100,000. Interest on home equity debt up to
$100,000 is deductible as qualified mortgage interest regardless of
how you use the proceeds (except if used to purchase tax-exempt
bonds).
However, interest on home equity debt not used to substantially improve your residence is not allowable as a deduction
against the AMT thereby effectively increasing your interest rate
if you are in the AMT.
Points
Points may be fully deductible in the year paid, or they may be
deducted over the life of the loan. In order to be deductible in the
year paid, the following are some criteria that must be met:
tax tip
20
CONVERT NONDEDUCTIBLE
DEBT INTO DEDUCTIBLE
MARGIN DEBT
You can reduce or eliminate your personal debt by converting it
into deductible margin debt. Rather than using the proceeds from
the sale of securities to buy other securities, use the proceeds
to pay off your personal debt.
You can then use margin debt, to
the extent available, to buy new securities. Your total debt and
your total stock portfolio remain the same, but you will have converted nondeductible interest into deductible investment interest
(assuming no other limitations apply). And the interest rate on
margin debt is typically lower than the rate on consumer debt.
Caution: Keep loan proceeds totally separate from other funds
whenever possible.
This can avoid reallocation by the IRS, and may
save important tax deductions
• The amount is clearly shown in closing statement as points.
is nondeductible. This type of debt includes interest paid on debt
used to pay personal expenses, buy consumer goods (including
cars), or satisfy tax liabilities. The simplest way to convert this
nondeductible interest into deductible interest is to take out a
home equity loan to pay off your personal debt.
Remember, you
can use up to $100,000 of home equity debt for any purpose,
including paying off personal and credit card debt. In addition to
making the interest deductible, you’ll benefit from the generally
lower interest rate on this type of debt. If you have already utilized
your home equity line, see Tax Tip 20 for a method to convert
personal debt into investment debt.
If the loan is to refinance your principal residence or a second
home, points must be deducted over the life of the loan.
If the loan
is paid off early, you may deduct any points not already deducted
in the year in which the loan is paid off.
If you have interest expense arising from a passive activity that is
being limited because you have excess passive losses, consider
replacing this debt with home equity debt or investment debt in
the same manner as discussed in Tax Tip 20.
• Your loan is secured by your principal residence.
• You use the loan to buy or build your principal residence.
• The points were stated as a percentage of the indebtedness.
For 2015, the benefit of the mortgage interest deduction may be
reduced due to the itemized deduction limitation that applies when
AGI for single filers exceeds $258,250 ($309.900 for joint filers).
Your itemized deduction limitation will be the lesser of (a) 3% of
the AGI above the applicable amount, or (b) 80% of the amount
of the itemized deductions. The 2016 threshold amounts are
$311,300 for married filing jointly, $285,350 for head of household,
$259,400 for single filers, and $155,650 for married individuals
filing a separate return.
PERSONAL OR CONSUMER DEBT
Interest expense from personal (or consumer) interest expense
INVESTMENT INTEREST
Investment interest is interest on debt used to buy assets that are
held for investment. Margin debt used to buy securities is the most
common example of investment debt.
Another typical source of
investment debt is the pro rata share of investment debt incurred
by a pass-through entity (partnership, LLC, or S corporation). The
investment interest expense on this debt is treated in the same
manner as if you personally paid the interest.
Interest on debt used to buy securities which generate tax-exempt
income, such as municipal bonds, is not tax-deductible. But be
careful, since this rule can reach further than you would expect.
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73
Investment interest expense is only deductible up to the amount
of your net investment income. Generally, this includes taxable
interest, nonqualifying dividends (as discussed below) and net
short-term capital gains (but not net long-term capital gains). Your
investment income is reduced by deductible investment expenses
(other than interest) directly connected with the production of
investment income (e.g., investment advisory fees) but only to the
extent they exceed 2% of your AGI. If you are in the AMT, your net
investment income will generally be higher because it does not get
reduced by investment expenses since you did not receive a tax
benefit for these deductions.
As a result, your deductible investment interest can be greater for AMT purposes. Any disallowed
interest for the regular tax or AMT is carried forward and can be
deducted in a later year, to the extent that there is adequate net
investment income.
For 2015, qualified dividend income that is eligible for the 15%
(20% if AGI exceeds $413,200 for single filers ($415,050 in 2016),
$232,425 for married filed separately ($233,475 in 2016), and
$464,850 for married filed jointly ($466,950 in 2016)) preferential
tax rate is not treated as investment income for purposes of the
investment interest expense limitation. However, dividends not
qualifying for this rate, including dividends received from money
market mutual funds and bonds funds, are subject to ordinary
income tax rates and therefore qualify as investment income.
If you have an investment interest expense limitation, an election
is available to allow you to treat any portion of your net long-term
capital gains and qualifying dividend income as investment income.
Generally, this election should only be used if you do not expect
to be able to utilize any of the investment interest carryover in the
near future.
This election can increase the amount of investment
interest expense that you can deduct in the current year. By making this election, you lose the favorable lower capital gains and
qualified dividend tax rate of 15% or 20%, but you get to reduce
your taxable income by the increased investment interest expense
you deduct at the higher ordinary income tax rates.
As an example, assume in 2015 you are subject to the maximum
tax rate of 39.6% and you have $100,000 of investment interest
expense in excess of your net investment income. You also have net
long-term capital gains of $500,000.
By electing to treat $100,000
of the $500,000 long-term capital gains as ordinary income, you
pay an extra $19,600 of tax on the capital gains ($100,000 of
elected gains taxed at 39.6% rather than 20%). However, you
save $39,600 of tax since your taxable income is lower by the
additional investment interest expense ($100,000 at 39.6%).
Therefore, your net tax drops by $20,000. Plus, you will save state
taxes if your state of residency allows you to reduce your income
by all, or some, of your itemized deductions.
Additionally, the investment interest expense deduction can help
reduce the 3.8% Medicare Contribution Tax on net investment
income.
ABOVE-THE-LINE DEDUCTIONS
Interest expense deductible “above-the-line” against your AGI
gives you a greater tax benefit than interest treated as an itemized
deduction.
This is because the interest expense reduces your AGI,
which in turn reduces the 2% phase-out of your miscellaneous
itemized deductions, and, if applicable, the limitation on deductible
medical expenses, charitable deductions and other items affected
by AGI. For 2015 and beyond, it will also impact the overall limitation on your itemized deductions and personal exemptions. But
even more beneficial for most taxpayers is that the interest will be
deductible against your state income, rather than nondeductible if
you live in a state that does not allow itemized deductions (such
as Connecticut, Pennsylvania and New Jersey), or limited in a state
that disallows a portion of your itemized deductions (such as New
York and California).
Interest expense eligible for this favorable treatment includes:
Trading interest
This is interest incurred on borrowings against taxable securities
if you are actively engaged in the business of trading personal
tax tip
21
INDIRECT TAX-EXEMPT
DEBT CAN LIMIT YOUR
DEDUCTIBLE INTEREST
It is common to have one investment account that holds mostly
tax-exempt municipal bonds and a separate account that holds
mostly taxable investments (such as stock in publicly traded
companies).
Assume that you want to use your available margin
in the account holding taxable investments to purchase additional
stock. Even though you are not using margin in your tax-exempt
account, your interest deduction will be limited because of an
IRS ruling that requires you to allocate a portion of the debt to
your tax-exempt holdings based on the ratio of your tax-exempt
investments to your total investments. This ruling was designed
to prevent a taxpayer from reaping a double tax benefit, and thus
treats your accounts as one account and deems you to have indirectly borrowed some of the debt to maintain your tax-exempt
account.
Therefore, before you borrow against your securities,
consider the real after-tax cost of the interest you will be paying.
interest expense
As Tax Tip 21 illustrates, you are required to allocate interest
expense to the tax-exempt income, rendering a portion of the
interest expense as nondeductible.
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EisnerAmper 2016 personal tax guide
property (securities), rather than simply as an investor. This interest commonly passes through a trading partnership or LLC. The
interest will be classified as trading interest to you even if you
have no involvement in the management of the entity, so long as
the entity meets the tests for actively engaging in the business of
trading personal property. However, in such a case, the trading
interest is still subject to the investment interest expense limitation discussed above.
Business interest
This is interest on debt traced to your business expenditures,
including debt used to finance the capital requirements of a partnership, S corporation, or LLC involved in a trade or business in
which you materially participate.
This also includes items that you
purchase for your business (as an owner) using your credit card.
These purchases are treated as additional loans to the business,
subject to tracing rules that allow you to deduct the portion of
the finance charges that relate to the business items purchased.
Interest on education loans
A qualified education loan is any debt incurred solely to pay the
qualified higher education expenses of the taxpayer, the taxpayer’s
spouse, or an individual who was the taxpayer’s dependent at the
time the debt was incurred.
For 2015 and 2016, the maximum deductible amount for educational loan interest is $2,500. The student loan interest begins
to phase-out for taxpayers whose MAGI exceeds $65,000
($130,000 for joint returns) and is completely eliminated when
MAGI is $80,000 ($160,000 for joint returns).
Passive activity interest expense
Passive interest expense is interest on debt incurred to fund passive
activity expenditures, whether paid by you directly or indirectly
through the capital requirements of a pass-through business entity.
The interest is an additional deduction against the income or loss
of the activity, thereby deductible against AGI. However, since
the interest expense becomes part of your overall passive activity
income or loss, it is subject to the passive activity loss limitations.
See the chapter on passive and real estate activities.
.
retirement
plans
Contributing to retirement plans can provide you with financial
security as well as reducing and/or deferring your taxes. However,
there are complex rules that govern the type of plans available to
you, the amount you can contribute, whether contributions need
to benefit your employees, and the requirements for taking funds
out of the plan. Failure to adhere to these rules can have severe
adverse tax consequences.
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RETIREMENT PLAN BENEFITS
AVAILABLE RETIREMENT PLANS
Retirement plans (other than Roth IRAs and plans offering Roth
401(k) plans) offer these tax saving advantages:
There are many different types of retirement plans available with
different contribution and distribution rules. The specific plan(s)
you can contribute to depends on a variety of factors, including
your income, whether you are an employee or self-employed, and
whether or not you contribute to or participate in other retirement
plans.
• Your contributions grow tax-deferred until withdrawn.
• Your contributions are tax deductible, thereby reducing your
current year’s taxes.
Roth IRAs and Roth 401(k) plans offer different tax savings
opportunities by providing for tax-free growth and withdrawals
in the future, but there is no current-year tax deduction for your
contributions.
chart
RETIREMENT PLANS
8
Retirement plans available to self-employed
individuals include:
• Simplified Employee Pension (SEP) Plans
• SIMPLE IRA or SIMPLE 401(k) Plans
• Defined Contribution Plans including 401(k) Plans
• Defined Benefit Plans
Employer-sponsored salary deferral plans available to employees include:
• 401(k) Plans
• 403(b) Plans for Employees of Public Schools or
Tax-Exempt Educational, Charitable and Religious
Organizations
• 457(b) Plans for Employees of Government
Organizations
• SIMPLE Plans for Companies with 100 or Fewer
Employees
Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs) available to
all individuals, subject to income limitations:
• Roth
• Traditional
• Education
Self-employed individuals have more flexibility to choose plans
to maximize contributions. Employees are more limited since
they will have to make contributions based on the type of plan
their employer offers, but may gain the advantage of having their
employer match some or all of their contributions. Employees may
also be eligible to make contributions to other plans in addition
to the ones offered by their employer, if they have earned income
from a self-employment activity (such as consulting or directors’
fees).
Employees or self-employed individuals and their spouses
may also be eligible to contribute to a traditional or Roth IRA.
Chart 8 shows the different types of retirement plans that you may
be eligible to participate in. Chart 9 shows the maximum annual
contributions that you can make for 2015 and 2016.
Special Note — IRS Uniform Policy Regarding Same-Sex Spouses
— Impact on Retirement Plans
On June 26, 2015 the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Obergefell v.
Hodges that states cannot ban same-sex marriages in the U.S.
On
October 21, 2015, the IRS released proposed regulations under
IRC section 7701.
The proposed regulations clarify and strengthen the guidance the
IRS provided under Revenue Ruling 2013-17. As a result of the
decisions in Windsor and Obergefell, the IRS has determined that
for federal tax purposes marriages of same-sex couples should
be treated the same as marriages of opposite-sex couples. The
proposed regulations would amend the terms ‘husband,’ ‘wife,’
and ‘spouse’ under IRC section 7701 to be interpreted in a neutral
manner meaning an individual lawfully married to another
individual and ‘husband and wife’ mean two individuals lawfully
married to each other.
These definitions apply regardless of the
individual’s sex.
Similar to Revenue Ruling 2013-7, the proposed regulations provide
that the marriage of two individuals will be recognized for federal
tax purposes, which includes qualified retirement plans, SEPs,
SIMPLEs, and IRAs, if their marriage is recognized by any state,
possession, or territory of the U.S. A marriage performed in a
foreign jurisdiction will be recognized for federal tax purposes if it
is recognized by at least one state, possession or territory of the
. 77
SIMPLIFIED EMPLOYEE PENSION PLAN
A SEP plan allows you, in your capacity as employer, to make
contributions to your own IRA and to eligible employees’ IRAs. If
you do not have employees, the plan is a single participant plan
for your benefit. If you have eligible employees, you must also
make contributions on their behalf. The maximum allowable annual
contribution to a SEP is $53,000 for 2015 and 2016.
However, the
contribution on behalf of a self-employed individual cannot exceed
25% of his or her eligible compensation (net of the deduction
for the contribution). The contribution limit for common law
employees covered by a SEP is the lesser of 100% of their eligible
compensation or $53,000 for 2015 and 2016.
There are several advantages of a SEP compared to a qualified
defined contribution plan (e.g., a profit-sharing plan). Unlike a
defined contribution plan, which must be established by December
31, a SEP plan can be set up any time prior to the due date of the
tax return for the current year of the sponsoring entity (including
extensions as late as October 15) and you can still deduct
contributions on your prior year’s tax return, even though made
in the next year.
Another advantage is that SEPs do not require the
same documentation as defined contribution plans, nor is Form
5500 required to be filed annually.
QUALIFIED DEFINED CONTRIBUTION AND
BENEFIT PLANS
A qualified defined contribution plan can be a profit-sharing plan,
a money purchase pension plan, or a target benefit pension plan.
The maximum contribution to a defined contribution plan for each
employee is the lesser of $53,000 in 2015 and 2016 or 100% of his
or her compensation. For self-employed individuals, the maximum
contribution will generally be limited in the same manner as for
SEPs unless 401(k) provisions are included in the plan.
chart
9
RETIREMENT PLAN MAXIMUM ANNUAL CONTRIBUTION LIMITS
Maximum Annual Contribution
Type of Plan
2015
2016
$ 18,000
$ 18,000
53,000
53,000
210,000
210,000
5,500
5,500
SEP Plans
53,000
53,000
457(b) salary deferrals to state and local government and tax-exempt organization plans
18,000
18,000
SIMPLE plans (Savings incentive match plan for employees)
12,500
12,500
Catch-up contributions for individuals age 50 or older
• 401(k), 403(b) and 457(b) plans
• Traditional and Roth IRAs
• SIMPLEs
6,000
1,000
3,000
6,000
1,000
3,000
401(k), 403(b), salary deferrals
Defined-contribution plan including salary deferral amounts above
Defined-benefit plan*
Traditional and Roth IRAs
* This is the maximum annual benefit that can be provided for by the plan, based on actuarial computations.
retirement plans
U.S. The proposed regulations do not treat registered domestic
partnerships, civil unions, or similar arrangements not considered
marriages under state law as a marriage for federal tax purposes.
.
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EisnerAmper 2016 personal tax guide
chart
A qualified defined benefit plan sets a future annual pension benefit
and then actuarially calculates the contributions needed to attain
that benefit. Because the plan is actuarially driven, the annual
contribution may exceed those allowable for other types of plans,
and is based on the employee’s age, average annual income and
annual desired benefit (limited to the maximum allowable annual
benefit). The maximum allowable annual benefit is the lesser of
$210,000 in 2015 and 2016 or 100% of earned income.
Whether you choose a defined contribution or a defined benefit
plan, your plan must be in place by December 31 of the year for
which you want to make tax deductible contributions to the plan.
As long as the plan is in existence on that date, you can make
tax deductible plan contributions to a defined contribution plan
as late as the due date of that year’s income tax return, including
extensions (as late as October 15, or September 15 for sole
proprietors, partnerships, LLCs or corporations). For calendar yeardefined benefit plans, contributions must be made by September
15, regardless of an extension to file until October 15.
In-Plan Roth conversions
The Small Business Jobs Tax Relief Act of 2010 included two retirement plan provisions.
The first provides a special Roth conversion
opportunity that a plan sponsor may (but is not required to) offer
to plan participants under its 401(k) or 403(b) plan. The second
provision allows governmental 457(b) plans to offer a Roth feature
and the Roth conversion feature.
Employees can elect under certain conditions to convert some or
all of certain amounts that were contributed to a plan on a pre-tax
basis into a Roth after-tax account inside of the plan. This is known
as an “in-plan” Roth conversion.
Both 401(k) plans and 403(b)
plans may permit such a conversion, but the plan documents must
provide for the in-plan conversion.
ATRA further expanded this provision by lifting conditions which
essentially allow an in-plan conversion for all plan participants.
There is no recharacterization option for an in-plan Roth conversion,
so once a conversion is made it is irrevocable.
Application to plans and participants
Any current or former plan participant who has an account
balance in the plan and who is eligible to receive an eligible rollover
distribution (“ERD”) can make the Roth conversion election. The
election is available to surviving spouses, but not non-spouse
beneficiaries. There is no income limit or filing status restriction
for this election.
The conversion may be applied to any type of
vested contributions (and earnings thereon) that are currently
distributable and would be treated as an ERD. Contribution types
that would be eligible for conversion are: pre-tax 401(k), 403(b),
and 457(b) deferrals, matching contributions, and profit sharing
10
UNIFORM LIFE TABLE
If you are either unmarried, or married, but your spouse is
either not the sole beneficiary or is not more than 10 years
younger than yourself, you can compute your required minimum distribution by using this table. Assuming you are 73
years old and your qualified retirement plans, in the aggregate,
were valued at $2,000,000 at the end of 2015, you would be
required to take a minimum distribution of $80,972 in 2016
($2,000,000 divided by a distribution period of 24.7).
Age
Distribution
Period
Age
Distribution
Period
70
27.4
85
14.8
71
26.5
86
14.1
72
25.6
87
13.4
73
24.7
88
12.7
74
23.8
89
12.0
75
22.9
90
11.4
76
22.0
91
10.8
77
21.2
92
10.2
78
20.3
93
9.6
79
19.5
94
9.1
80
18.7
95
8.6
81
17.9
96
8.1
82
17.1
97
7.6
83
16.3
98
7.1
84
15.5
99
6.7
.
79
SALARY DEFERRAL PLANS (401(K), 403(B)
AND 457(B) PLANS)
A 401(k) plan is a profit sharing plan that allows participants to
elect to have a portion of their compensation contributed to the
plan. The maximum employee elective contribution that can be
made for 2015 and 2016 is $18,000 ($24,000 for taxpayers age
50 and over). This annual limit applies to your total contributions
even if you have more than one employer or salary deferral plan.
Similar provisions apply for 403(b) and 457(b) plans.
SIMPLE PLANS
INDIVIDUAL RETIREMENT ACCOUNTS (IRAs)
Reminder: Beginning in 2015, you can make only one rollover from
an IRA to another (or the same) IRA in any 12-month period,
regardless of the number of IRAs you own. The one-rollover-peryear limitation is applied by aggregating all of an individual’s IRAs,
including SEP and SIMPLE IRAs, as well as traditional and Roth
IRAs, effectively treating them as one IRA for purposes of the limit.
Please note that the following rollovers are exempted from this rule:
• Trustee-to-trustee transfers between IRAs are not limited
because you do not receive a physical check from the originating IRA to deposit to the new IRA.
Therefore, the transfer is
not considered a rollover by the IRS. The assets and/or cash
are electronically transferred from the old IRA trustee to the
new IRA trustee.
• Rollovers from traditional to Roth IRAs (“conversions”) are not
limited (because they generate tax revenue).
An employer that had no more than 100 employees who earned
$5,000 or more of compensation in the preceding year, can
establish a SIMPLE plan as long as the employer doesn’t maintain
any other employer-sponsored retirement plan. A SIMPLE plan
can take the form of an IRA or a 401(k) plan.
Both plans allow
employees to contribute up to $12,500 for 2015 and 2016 ($15,500
for taxpayers age 50 and over) with the employer generally
required to match employee contributions at a maximum of 3%
of the employee’s compensation. For a SIMPLE IRA, the employer
may choose to reduce the matching contribution to less than 3%
but no less than 1% in 2 out of every 5 years.
Example: If you have three traditional IRAs, (IRA-1, IRA-2 and IRA-3),
and you took a distribution from IRA-1 on January 1, 2016 (received a
check) and rolled it over into IRA-2 the same day (must be within 60
days), you could not roll over any other 2016 IRA distribution unless
the rollover meets one of the above exceptions or the transition rule
discussed below.
Caveat: The benefit of a SIMPLE plan is that it is not subject to nondiscrimination and other qualification rules, including the top-heavy
rules, which are generally applicable to qualified plans. The downside is
that you cannot contribute to any other employer-sponsored retirement
plan and the elective contribution limit is lower than for other types of
plans.
For the employee, the mandatory employer matching requirement
can be attractive, though limited. For the employer, the contributions
are not discretionary.
The 2 most common types of IRAs are Roth IRAs and traditional
IRAs. While there are significant differences between these IRAs,
there are also common rules that apply to both of them.
You can
contribute up to $5,500 for 2015 and 2016 ($6,500 if at least age
50) to either IRA account, or both combined. To be deductible as
a contribution for a traditional IRA (Roth contributions are not tax
deductible) in the current year, you must make the contribution on
or before April 15 of the following year. An extension to file your
tax return does not extend this date.
To be eligible to contribute
to either IRA, you must have earned income equal to or greater
than the IRA contribution amount. Taxable alimony is considered
earned income for IRA purposes.
New for 2016: PATH allows a taxpayer to roll over amounts from
an employer-sponsored retirement plan (e.g., a 401(k) plan) to a
SIMPLE plan, provided that the plan has existed for at least 2 years.
TRADITIONAL IRA: CURRENT TAX
DEDUCTION
A traditional IRA allows a current tax deduction for your contributions and the earnings grow tax-deferred. The contributions
lower your current year’s taxes, but future distributions will be
fully taxable as ordinary income, subject to ordinary income tax
rates at the time of distribution.
Also, once you reach age 701/2,
you can no longer make contributions in that year or future years.
You can only make tax deductible contributions to a traditional
IRA if you (or your spouse, if married) do not actively participate
in an employer-sponsored retirement plan for any part of the
retirement plans
contributions. In addition, certain after-tax contributions may be
rolled over to an in-plan Roth account.
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EisnerAmper 2016 personal tax guide
year. However, you can still make contributions to an employersponsored plan and deduct your own IRA contributions if you meet
one of these exceptions:
• Your contributions can continue to be made to the plan after you
• You are single and your MAGI does not exceed $61,000 in 2015
• Contributions to a Roth IRA can be made even if your MAGI
and 2016. A partially deductible IRA contribution is allowed until
your MAGI reaches $71,000 in 2015 and 2016.
• You are married, but only one of you actively participates in an
employer-sponsored plan and your combined MAGI doesn’t
exceed $183,000 in 2015 ($184,000 in 2016). Only the nonactive participant can make a deductible IRA contribution.
A
partially deductible contribution can be made until the combined
MAGI reaches $193,000 in 2015 ($194,000 in 2016).
• Both you and your spouse (if filing jointly) participate in
employer-sponsored plans, but your combined MAGI does not
exceed $98,000 in 2015 and in 2016. You can make a partially
deductible IRA contribution until your MAGI reaches $118,000
in 2015 and in 2016.
• You can always make a nondeductible contribution irrespective
of the income limitations or participation in an employer-sponsored plan up until the year you attain age 701/2.
ROTH IRA: NO TAXES ON DISTRIBUTIONS
A Roth IRA differs from a traditional IRA primarily because your
contributions are made on an after-tax basis, but your withdrawals
are generally tax free. A Roth IRA offers these advantages over a
traditional IRA:
• You never pay any income tax on the earnings if you take only
qualified distributions.
To qualify as a tax-free distribution,
the Roth IRA must have been opened more than 5 years ago
and the distribution must be made after age 591/2 (with a few
exceptions).
• Distributions before reaching age 591/2 (and other nonqualified
distributions) are first treated as a nontaxable return of your
contributions. To the extent these distributions do not exceed
your contributions, they are not taxed. This gives you more
flexibility to withdraw funds to cover financial emergencies.
However, amounts that exceed your accumulated contributions
are subject to regular income tax, plus an additional 10% penalty
as nonqualified distributions.
• Original account owners and their spouses who are designated
beneficiaries are not required to take distributions beginning at
age 701/2 — or ever.
reach age 701/2, as long as you have sufficient earned income
and/or alimony.
is too high for a traditional IRA or you are covered by an
employer-sponsored plan.
The AGI limits for making Roth IRA
contributions are $183,000 in 2015 ($184,000 in 2016) if you
are married filing jointly, or $116,000 in 2015 ($117,000 in 2016)
if you are single or head of household (with partial contributions
permitted until your AGI reaches $193,000 in 2015 ($194,000
in 2016), if married filing jointly and $131,000 in 2015 ($132,000
in 2016) if single or head of household).
If you already have a traditional IRA in place, you may want to
consider rolling part or all of the balance into a Roth IRA. The
advantage of this rollover is that you convert tax-deferred future
growth into tax-free growth. The disadvantage is that the amount of
the rollover from the traditional IRA is taxable, as if you received the
distribution.
Before you roll over anything, evaluate the potential
benefit of the tax-free growth compared to the lost earnings on
the tax you pay because of the rollover.
• Who should make a conversion to a Roth IRA? Those individuals who have many years to go before retirement and who should
be able to recover the tax dollars lost on the conversion may
benefit from a conversion. Others who may benefit are those
who anticipate being in a higher tax bracket in the future and
those able to pay the tax on the conversion from non-retirement
account assets.
• What are some planning ideas for high-income taxpayers?
High-income individuals can make nondeductible contributions to
a traditional IRA this year and in future years so that the amounts
can be converted to Roth IRAs. However, to the extent an individual also has a traditional IRA funded with pre-tax contributions,
the conversion is deemed to be made pro rata from each IRA.
High income individuals whose spouses are much younger and
who do not anticipate the need to take distributions should
consider a conversion to a Roth since the spouse may take the
Roth IRA as her own and distributions will not be required until
the second spouse passes.
.
81
You must generally start taking RMDs from your qualified retirement plan or traditional IRA by April 1 of the year following the
year in which you reach age 701/2. For each year thereafter, the
RMD amount must be taken by December 31 of that year. If you
are a participant in a qualified retirement plan of your current
employer, you should refer to the plan document or consult with
your employer regarding when you must begin receiving RMDs
from the plan as some plans do not require you to take RMDs
until you terminate your employment even if you have already
reached age 701/2 before leaving your employer. For example, if
you own 5% or less of the employer and are still employed by the
employer at 701/2, the plan document may allow you to defer taking
distributions from the plan until you actually retire.
This exception
does not apply to SEPs or SIMPLE IRAs.
Note: If you turned or will turn 701/2 during the year, you can either take
a distribution in that year or defer the distribution until the following
year. If you elect to defer, you must take 2 distributions the following
year (the first by April 1 and the second by December 31).
Generally, if you fail to take an RMD from your qualified retirement
plan or traditional IRA after you reach 701/2, you are subject to a
50% penalty on the shortfall. If you are subject to the penalty,
you do not have to take a catch-up distribution since the penalty
effectively covers the income tax that you would have had to pay
on the distribution, as well as a penalty.
The RMD is computed
by taking the aggregate value of all your qualified retirement
plans at December 31 of the prior year and dividing that sum by
a distribution period determined by the IRS. There are two tables
for determining the distribution period. One is called the Uniform
Lifetime Table and is used by unmarried individuals, or a married
individual if the individual’s spouse is either not the sole beneficiary
or is not more than 10 years younger than the individual.
The other
table is the Joint Life and Last Survivor Expectancy Table and is
used when the spouse is the sole beneficiary and is more than
ten years younger than the individual. The Uniform Lifetime Table,
the more commonly used table, is reproduced in Chart 10 with an
example of how to compute your RMD.
AVOID EARLY WITHDRAWAL PENALTIES
Generally, withdrawals from employer-sponsored qualified plans
and IRA accounts are taxed at your ordinary income tax rate. If
taken before reaching age 591/2, you are also subject to a 10%
early withdrawal penalty unless you meet one of the following
exceptions:
• You take distributions because of job separation (such as
early retirement) and you are at least 55 years old at the time
you terminate your employment with the employer.
These
distributions must be made as part of a series of substantially
equal periodic payments (made at least annually) for the
individual’s life (or life expectancy) or the joint lives (or
joint life expectancies) of the individual and the designated
beneficiary(ies). If early distributions are from an employee
plan, payments must begin after separation of service.
Note: This exception does not apply to IRA accounts.
• You receive distributions under a qualified domestic relations
order (pertaining to a court-ordered separation or divorce).
• You have a qualifying disability.
• You are the beneficiary on the account of a deceased participant.
• You use distributions for medical expenses, limited to the
amount not otherwise deductible.
• You take distributions in the form of substantially equal periodic
or annuity payments for a period of at least 5 years and the last
payment is received in a year after you reach age 591/2.
• You use the distribution to make a first-time home purchase
(limited to $10,000).
• You use the distribution to pay for qualified higher educa-
tion expenses for you, your spouse, your children or your
grandchildren.
DISTRIBUTIONS BETWEEN AGE 591/2
AND 701/2
Even though you are not required to take distributions between
the ages of 591/2 and 701/2, you may need to take them to meet
expenses or you may want to take them if your tax bracket is
low. Though you are not subject to the early withdrawal penalties,
the distributions are taxable in the year withdrawn.
If you take
distributions to take advantage of a low tax bracket, make sure you
compare the benefit of the reduced rate against the loss of the taxdeferred growth had the funds been left in the retirement account.
LUMP-SUM (OR OTHER ELIGIBLE)
DISTRIBUTIONS
Amounts distributed from a qualified retirement plan can be rolled
over tax-free into an IRA or another qualified plan as long as the
retirement plans
REQUIRED MINIMUM DISTRIBUTION (“RMD”)
RULES
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EisnerAmper 2016 personal tax guide
transfer is done directly from trustee to trustee. If you personally
receive the funds, 20% of the distribution is required to be withheld
for federal income taxes (some states also require state income
tax withholding). If you fail to roll over the full amount of the
distribution (before any withholding tax) within 60 days to another
IRA or qualified retirement plan, you will also be subject to income
tax and possibly early withdrawal penalties on the distribution if
you are under age 591/2.
Special Planning Note: Distributions from qualified plans that are not
made from a designated Roth account may be rolled over directly to a
Roth IRA. Under these rules, you will be required to pay income taxes
in the year of the distribution, but will not be subject to the mandatory
20% tax withholding or the 10% early distribution penalty if you are
younger than age 591/2.
Previously, only distributions from designated
Roth accounts of qualified plans could be directly rolled over to a Roth
IRA without being subject to the income limitation.
SURVIVING SPOUSE DISTRIBUTION RULES
Upon the death of a participant/owner of a qualified retirement
plan or IRA, a surviving spouse can make an eligible rollover
distribution into his or her own plan or IRA. Distributions from
the surviving spouse’s plan or IRA would not be required until he
or she reached age 701/2. At that time, the RMD rules discussed
above would apply.
NONSPOUSE BENEFICIARIES
If allowed under the terms of the plan document, distributions from
a deceased participant’s qualified retirement plan are permitted
to be rolled over into an IRA for a beneficiary who is not the
decedent’s spouse, such as a child of the deceased.
The rollover
must be in the form of a direct trustee-to-trustee transfer to an IRA
for the benefit of the beneficiary. The IRA is treated as an inherited
IRA so the beneficiary will not have the ability to roll over the IRA
to another IRA in the future. However, the beneficiary will now
be allowed to take funds out of the inherited IRA over his or her
life expectancy, beginning in the year after the decedent’s death,
rather than fully within 5 years (as noted below).
If the plan document governing your plan does not provide for nonspouse rollovers to an inherited IRA, then non-spouse beneficiaries
such as children of the deceased are not eligible to roll over a
decedent’s qualified plan balance into their own plan or IRA.
They
must take distributions based on the minimum distribution method
used by the decedent if he or she had already reached 701/2 , or
within 5 years after the decedent’s death if the decedent had not
yet begun taking required minimum distributions.
A non-spouse beneficiary of a decedent’s IRA will have to
commence taking RMDs beginning in the year following the year
of the IRA account holder’s death based on the life expectancy
of the oldest beneficiary (if more than one primary beneficiary is
named). This is true whether the IRA account holder was already
taking RMDs or died before his or her required beginning date.
Alternatively, if the IRA account holder died before his or her
required beginning date, the beneficiary(ies) have the option of
still using the 5-year rule, which does not require any distributions
from the account until the year containing the fifth anniversary of
the IRA account holder’s death. However, in that year, the entire
account must be distributed.
.
estate and gift
tax planning
On January 1, 2013, Congress enacted ATRA. This law created certainty and
provides for planning opportunities to reduce tax cost of transferring your
assets to your beneficiaries.
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ESTATE, GIFT AND GENERATION-SKIPPING TAXES
Background
The Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001
(“EGTRRA”) provided, among other provisions, a phased reduction
in the maximum rate of estate and generation-skipping taxes during
the years 2002 through 2009, elimination of these taxes for 2010,
and a reinstatement of these taxes after 2010 at the tax rates (and
with the exclusions) in effect in 2001. Almost everybody believed
that Congress would act to either permanently repeal the estate and
generation-skipping taxes or, more likely, enact a modified regime
for these taxes to begin in 2010 (or earlier).
In December 2010, Congress enacted the 2010 Tax Relief Act— a
temporary, 2-year reprieve from the sunset provisions of EGTRRA.
This Act extended and modified the federal estate, gift, and
generation-skipping tax provisions through December 31, 2012.
These provisions allowed estates of married couples whose assets
were $10 million or less to avoid federal transfer taxes in 2011. For
2012, an inflation adjustment made this $5.12 million per person
($10.24 million for a married couple).
On January 1, 2013, the final compromise was reached and ATRA
permanently extended and modified federal estate, gift, and generation-skipping tax provisions. For 2014 and 2015, due to inflation
adjustment, the exclusion amount increased to $5.34 million (or
$10.68 million per couple) and $5.43 million per person (or $10.86
million per couple), respectively.
For 2016, the exclusion has been
increased to $5.45 million per person or $10.9 million per couple.
As a result of ATRA, the $5 million exclusion, adjusted for inflation,
has been made permanent with a maximum tax rate of 40%. This
rate was a compromise between 35% and 55% marginal tax rates
of previously enacted estate and gift tax provisions.
chart
11
MAXIMUM GIFT, ESTATE, AND GST TAX RATES AND EXEMPTIONS
The following chart shows the rates and exemptions for the tax years 2010 through 2016 and thereafter:
Exemptions
(Cumulative Tax-Free Transfers)
Maximum Rates
State Tax
Credit
Year
Gift, Estate and GST
Tax
Gift
Estate
GST
2010*
35%
$1,000,000
$5,000,000
$5,000,000
NO
2011
35%
$5,000,000
$5,000,000
$5,000,000
NO
2012
35%
$5,120,000
$5,120,000
$5,120,000
NO
2013
40%
$5,250,000
$5,250,000
$5,250,000
NO
2014
40%
$5,340,000
$5,340,000
$5,340,000
NO
2015
40%
$5,430,000
$5,430,000
$5,430,000
NO
2016 and
thereafter**
40%
$5,450,000
$5,450,000
$5,450,000
NO
*Unless carryover basis and no estate tax is chosen.
**Adjusted for inflation for later years.
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Where do you begin?
Estate planning will help you to maximize the wealth that can be
transferred to your beneficiaries.
Here are some effective strategies that you should consider to
reduce the eventual estate tax on your assets:
Make annual gifts
For 2015, the annual gift exclusion allows you to make tax-free gifts
up to $14,000 per individual (or $28,000 if you are married). The
annual gift exclusion remains at $14,000 for 2016. By making gifts
annually to any number of your relatives or friends, you could end
up transferring substantial amounts out of your estate without using
any of your lifetime gift tax exclusion.
Use your lifetime exclusion
Also consider utilizing your 2015 lifetime gift tax exclusion of $5.43
million (adjusted each year for inflation and for any exclusion
previously utilized). If married, this gives you and your spouse
the ability to transfer up to $10.86 million (adjusted annually for
inflation) tax-free during your lifetimes.
This is in addition to your
annual gift exclusions mentioned previously. See Chart 11 for the
rates and exemptions for 2010 through 2016. Also, see Tax Tip 22.
Consider portability of the lifetime exclusion
Prior to the 2010 Tax Relief Act, married couples had to do careful
planning and maintain separately owned assets in order to exclude
$7 million (each had a $3.5 million estate tax exclusion) of their
assets from federal transfer taxes imposed on their estates after
both died.
Commencing in 2011, married couples could exclude
$10 million ($10.86 million for 2015 and 10.9 million for 2016) of
their assets from federal transfer taxes. This is accomplished by a
concept known as “portability.”
The executors of estates of decedents dying on or after January 1, 2011
may elect to transfer any unused exclusion to the surviving spouse.
The amount received by the surviving spouse is called the Deceased
Spousal Unused Exclusion (“DSUE”) amount. If the executor of the
decedent’s estate elects transfer, or portability, of the DSUE amount,
the surviving spouse can apply the DSUE amount received from the
estate of his or her last-deceased spouse against any tax liability
arising from subsequent lifetime gifts and transfers at death.
As an example, assume that one spouse dies in calendar year 2016
with a taxable estate of $8 million and leaves it all outright to the
surviving spouse (who has $4 million of his or her own assets).
No
federal estate tax would be due from the estate of the first to die
because the surviving spouse receives all of the assets and there is
an unlimited marital deduction, and none of the deceased spouse’s
22
USE YOUR LIFETIME GIFT
TAX EXCLUSION NOW
You should consider using your lifetime gift tax exclusion immediately if you haven’t already done so. Otherwise, the transferred assets may remain in your estate with all future income
and appreciation thereon subject to estate tax, either at your
death, or, if married, typically at your surviving spouse’s death.
As a result of ATRA, if you and your spouse have not yet used
your exclusions, you can make gifts of $10.86 million in 2015
or $10.9 million in 2016 (in addition to the annual exclusion
gifts of $14,000 to each donee from each of you).
The benefit of utilizing your lifetime gift tax exclusion is as follows (assuming a 5% compounded annually after-tax growth
rate):
If you transfer $10.9 million in 2016, the $10.9 million will
grow to $28,920,945 in 20 years, which will be available to
your beneficiaries free of gift and estate taxes. If the appreciated assets pass to your beneficiaries through your estates,
assuming you and your spouse will have a combined estate in
excess of the estate tax exclusion at the time of your surviving
spouse’s death, the estate tax on the assets that you did not
transfer during your lifetime may be as high as $7,208,378
($28,920,945 less the $10.9 million exclusion still available at
an assumed tax rate of 40%).
Your beneficiaries will receive
the net balance of $21,712,567, rather than the $28,920,945
had you transferred the assets now.
$5.45 million exclusion would be used. If the deceased spouse’s
executor elects to transfer the unused $5.45 million, the surviving
spouse will have a $10.9 million exclusion (disregarding the inflation
indexing) from federal transfer taxes. If the surviving spouse has
$12 million of assets on his or her death, only $1.1 million will be
subject to the federal estate tax (assuming the surviving spouse
dies prior to January 1, 2017).
As a result of ATRA, portability has
been made permanent.
Although portability of the exclusion simplifies estate tax planning
for many couples, there are still significant advantages to using
the exclusion in the estate of the first spouse to die, which often
necessitates the creation of a “bypass trust.” These include:
• Removal of future income and appreciation from transfer taxes.
• Protection of the assets from potential creditors.
• Preservation of the assets for children and grandchildren (e.g., in
a situation where the surviving spouse remarries).
estate and gift tax planning
tax tip
For estates in excess of exclusion amounts, there are still opportunities to decrease tax cost of transferring assets to beneficiaries.
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Make taxable gifts
Although there is a reluctance to pay gift taxes, for those people
who have used up their available exclusion and can afford to
transfer additional assets, paying gift taxes will often increase the
amount available for your beneficiaries. For example, assume that
you have previously used your available exclusion amount and you
have another $5 million that you wish to gift. If you have a large
estate, assuming the 40% estate tax rate effective for 2016, your
beneficiaries will only receive $3,000,000. However, if you make
a net gift of $3,571,429, which is the $5 million amount less gift
taxes of $1,428,571 ($3,571,429 at the 40% rate) and survive for 3
years, your beneficiaries will receive an extra $571,429 ($3,571,429
less $3,000,000).
(This example ignores the time value of money.)
This difference arises because the estate tax is “tax inclusive,” which
means that the tax is on the amount of total assets and not the
amount actually going to the heirs. Furthermore, if the grantor
survives 3 years, the taxes are removed from his or her estate.
Gifts to minors
One of the common methods of making gifts to children and
grandchildren under the age of 21 is to arrange for ownership of the
assets to be held by an individual as custodian for the minor under
a state’s Uniform Transfers to Minors Act (“UTMA”). This type of
ownership was previously under the Uniform Gifts to Minors Act
(“UGMA”).
Under the UTMA, the custodian is required to transfer
the property to the minor upon the minor attaining age 21, or to
the minor’s estate upon the minor’s death before age 21. However,
it is possible for the custodianship to terminate at age 18 if the
designation of ownership contains, in substance, the phrase “until
age 18.”
It is important to make sure that the person who gifts the property
does not serve as a custodian under the UTMA for the minor with
respect to that property. If the donor is serving as a custodian and
dies before the UTMA status terminates (e.g., before the minor
reaches the age of 21), the property held under the UTMA will
be included in the donor’s taxable estate for estate tax purposes.
Fortunately, this result can be avoided with proper advance planning.
For example, if a spouse transfers his or her property for the
benefit of his or her child and his or her spouse serves as custodian under the UTMA, the property would not be included in the
deceased spouse’s taxable estate should he or she die before the
UTMA status terminates.
Other methods for transferring assets to minors (or for their benefit
of) include:
tax tip
23
TRANSFER APPRECIATION WITH A GRAT FREE OF GIFT TAXES
You transfer securities in a company that has great potential to a 3-year grantor retained annuity trust (“GRAT”). The securities are
currently valued at $1,000,000 (200,000 shares at $5 per share). As an example, based on a 2.0% IRS rate (for November 2015) you
could set the annuity at 34.81045% to zero out the remainder interest and pay no gift tax on the transfer.
You would receive an annuity
payment of $348,105 per year ($1,000,000 times 34.81045%), totaling $1,044,315. Assume the stock appreciates to $8 per share at
the end of the first year, $9 at the end of the second year, and $10 at the end of the third year. Since the GRAT does not hold any liquid
assets, you will need to use the stock to pay your annuity, as follows:
Shares transferred to GRAT
200,000
Shares used to pay annuities:
Year 1 ($348,105 divided by $8 per share)
(43,513)
Year 2 ($348,105 divided by $9 per share)
(38,678)
Year 3 ($348,105 divided by $10 per share)
(34,811)
Shares remaining at the end of the GRAT’s term
82,998  
Value of shares transferred to beneficiaries ($10 per share)
$ 829,980
.
87
Section 529 college savings accounts,
•
•
Section 2503(c) trusts for the benefit of persons under 21 years
of age,
•
Life insurance trusts,
•
These rates are low by historical standards and provide an excellent
opportunity to use loans to your beneficiaries as a technique for
transferring wealth free of gift and estate taxes. However, you need
to make sure that the loan is bona fide (i.e., you intend for it to be
repaid) and properly documented.
Discretionary trusts,
•
Direct payment of educational and medical expenses to the
qualified educational institution or the medical provider, and
•
2.57% if the term is 9 years or longer (long-term).
Note: Connecticut is the only state which imposes gift taxes.
Totten trust (pay-on-death) bank/securities accounts.
Pay medical and education costs
You can directly pay unlimited tuition and medical expenses for any
person free of gift taxes. This exclusion is in addition to the annual
gift exclusion. Payments can include health insurance premiums
and tuition for elementary school through graduate school.
You
must make these payments directly to the qualifying educational
organization or medical provider.
Use loans rather than gifts
Lending money to your beneficiaries is a viable option to avoid
current gift taxes or the use of your lifetime gift exclusion. You can
then use your annual gift tax exclusion to enable your beneficiary
to pay the interest due and/or part of the debt principal each year.
For the month of November 2015, the minimum interest rates
required by the Internal Revenue Service to be charged on loans
with interest to be compounded annually, referred to as applicable
federal rates (AFR), are:
•
1.59% if the term is more than 3 years and less than 9 years
(mid-term).
•
GRAT: A GRAT pays you an annuity at a fixed rate in exchange
for the assets transferred to the GRAT. If the transferred assets
appreciate in excess of the interest rate used by the IRS (2.0%
in November 2015), the excess appreciation will pass tax-free to
your beneficiaries.
With the IRS rates relatively low, the GRAT is
an attractive option (see Tax Tip 23).
•
Family limited partnerships and LLCs: Family limited partnerships (“FLPs”) and family limited liability companies (“FLLCs”)
can be very effective gift and estate tax planning vehicles
(though not without some complications and risks). These entities allow you to transfer assets to your beneficiaries, typically
at a discounted value, while you retain control of investment
decisions and the timing and amount of distributions to the
partners (typically family members) (see Tax Tip 24).
•
Personal residence trust: This is a form of a GRIT (which is a
grantor retained interest trust) that uses your principal residence
as the asset contributed to the trust with your right to live in the
house for a period of time as the annuity payment.
•
Irrevocable life insurance trust (“ILIT”): An ILIT can remove
life insurance proceeds from your estate, thereby transferring
0.49% if the term of the loan is 3 years or less (short-term).
•
Use trusts and other family entities
Entities and trusts that should be considered for transferring future
appreciation out of your estate at minimal or no gift tax include:
tax tip
24
THE ADVANTAGES OF AN FLP OR FLLC
Let’s assume in 2016 you and your spouse have not yet used any of your lifetime gift exclusions of $10.9 million ($5.45 million each).
You can transfer assets valued at $15,571,429 to an FLP or FLLC, in addition to your annual exclusion gifts, free of gift taxes (based on the
assumption that you can sustain a 30% minority and marketability discount on the value of the limited interests).
How much will your beneficiaries receive? The value of their limited partnership interests could grow, free of gift or estate taxes, to
$41,315,637 in 20 years from the initial amount of $15,571,429 using a 5% after-tax growth rate. By comparison, if the assets were left to
accumulate in your estate, the estate tax could be as high as $12,166,255 (net of the $10.9 million exclusion assuming a maximum rate
of 40%), leaving $29,149,382 to your beneficiaries.
Thus, there is a potential savings of $12,166,255.
estate and gift tax planning
•
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EisnerAmper 2016 personal tax guide
substantial wealth to your beneficiaries. However, payment of
premiums and gift taxes on the premiums may reduce the
tax benefits.
•
Charitable trust: A charitable trust can help you diversify your
portfolio and combine estate planning with your charitable desires.
See the chapter on charitable contributions for a more detailed
discussion.
•
Bypass trust: This trust can help you divide your assets properly,
so that the future income and appreciation on the assets in the
bypass trust escape estate tax when the second spouse dies.
However, in states that only allow an exclusion that is less than
the federal exclusion, it may be appropriate to limit the amount
going into a bypass trust.
Utilize your generation-skipping transfer tax exemption
If you transfer assets directly to your children and they eventually
pass the assets down to their children, 2 levels of estate tax will
be paid (assuming both estates are in excess of the exemption
amounts). If you make transfers directly to your grandchildren, or
for their eventual benefit, through a trust or other entity, or to other
“skip persons” (individuals 2 or more generations lower than you),
you will be subject to the GST tax (at a 40% estate tax rate under
current law) in addition to gift or estate taxes.
The GST exemption allows you to transfer up to $5.43 million free
of the GST tax in 2015 (increasing to $5.45 million in 2016). If you
have not yet used the full amount of your gift tax exemption, consider
making gifts to your grandchildren (or to a trust for their benefit)
up to the amount of your remaining GST tax exemptions, if you
can afford to do so.
There is no portability between spouses for the
GST exemption.
GRANTOR RETAINED ANNUITY TRUST
When you create a GRAT, you (as a grantor) have made a gift equal
to the fair market value of the assets transferred to the GRAT less
the present value of the annuity payments you will receive from the
trust during the trust’s term. The annuity payments are calculated
at the IRS prescribed rate so there is no gift tax on transfer to the
GRAT (“zero-out” GRAT) and theoretically no assets should be left
at the end of the trust term.
The success of the GRAT depends on the amount of income earned
and appreciation on the assets during the GRAT term. Income and
asset appreciation in excess of the IRS rate (for example 2.0% used
for November 2015 transfers) will cover annuity payments during the
term of the trust and remaining assets will pass to your beneficiaries
gift tax-free (see Tax Tip 23).
All income earned by the GRAT is taxable to you, so the trust’s assets
are not depleted by income taxes.
Note: If you should die before the expiration of the GRAT’s term, the
assets would be brought back into your taxable estate, subject to certain
limitations.
FAMILY LIMITED PARTNERSHIPS AND LIMITED
LIABILITY COMPANIES
As Tax Tip 24 illustrates, FLPs or FLLCs can be very beneficial
estate planning tools.
You can contribute assets to such an entity
in exchange for general partnership and limited partnership interests
(or member interest if an FLLC). You and/or your spouse typically
keep the general partner interest (or remain the managing member
of a limited liability company). This interest allows you to retain
management control of the investment and distribution decisions
(though this control must be set up carefully).
You would typically
gift only the limited partnership interests, but not in excess of your
available annual and lifetime exclusions, thereby avoiding gift tax.
Because the limited interests are minority interests subject to
lack of marketability and lack of control, the value of the gift can
be discounted and the corresponding tax-free amount of the gift
can be increased. You should obtain an appraisal to substantiate
the discounted value. Care must be exercised to be sure that the
control does not result in the FLP’s entire assets being included in
the grantor’s estate.
An even more effective way to use an FLP or FLLC is to create trusts
to hold the limited partnership interests for your beneficiaries.
These
trusts can be grantor trusts for tax purposes, requiring you, as grantor,
to include all of the income of the trust on your tax return. You pay
all the taxes on the income earned by the FLP or FLLC, allowing
the trust to grow tax-free. In effect, you are making an additional
tax-free gift.
Before doing this, you should make sure your financial
position will allow you to continue paying all the income taxes even
though you cannot take any cash distributions from the FLP or FLLC.
Rather than gifting the limited partnership interests, another way
to transfer the interests to your beneficiaries is to sell the interests
to a grantor trust for their benefit. Since such a trust usually has
limited funds to purchase the interests, the sale would be done
on an installment basis (subject to a rule requiring the trust to be
adequately capitalized). The installment payments that you are
required to receive would come from distributions to the trust
from the partnership, typically from the annual income.
By using
this grantor trust method, the trust can receive the income free of
taxes, thereby increasing the annual cash to fund payment of the
installment note.
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QUALIFIED PERSONAL RESIDENCE TRUST
A qualified personal residence trust (“QPRT”) is a form of a GRIT that
allows you to transfer your personal residence to a trust (typically
for your children’s benefit) even though you continue to live in the
home during the trust’s term (e.g., 10 years). You hold an income
interest in the home based on the present value of your right to
live there during the term of the trust. Gift tax applies to the fair
market value of the house reduced by the retained income interest
(as actuarially computed using IRS interest rates).
The value of the house at the end of the QPRT’s term will go to your
beneficiaries free of additional gift or estate taxes. When the QPRT
term expires, your children (or a trust for their benefit) will own the
residence.
They must charge you a fair market value rent to allow you
to continue using the residence, and the rent you pay will decrease
your taxable estate. If you do not intend to live in the home and your
beneficiaries do not want to live there, the trust can sell the house
and reinvest the funds in other investments. In either case, there
is no additional gift tax when the QPRT terminates.
However, the
benefits are lost if you die before the QPRT term ends.
LIFE INSURANCE
Life insurance can serve an important function in your estate plan
because it can provide your beneficiaries liquidity to pay estate
taxes, especially if the value of your business (or other non-liquid
assets) represents a significant portion of your estate. Life insurance
can also provide immediate funds to help your family maintain their
standard of living and for other purposes. But if the proceeds are
left in your taxable estate, the federal estate tax could reduce the
proceeds by as much as 40% for 2015 and beyond.
To avoid this tax,
you must ensure that the proceeds of your life insurance policies are
not payable to either you or your spouse’s estate, and that neither
of you possess any incidence of ownership in the policy at death.
A properly structured irrevocable life insurance trust (ILIT) can remove
life insurance proceeds from your estate, if the trust is both the policy’s
owner and beneficiary. The trust can also provide income to your
surviving spouse and principal to your children (or other beneficiaries)
upon your spouse’s death. In addition, the trustee can properly
manage and invest the insurance proceeds for future growth.
If you use any of the following funding methods, you can make the
trust the owner of the insurance policy without being deemed to
chart
12
2015 STATE ESTATE TAX RATES AND EXEMPTIONS
State
Maximum Estate Tax Rate
Maximum Gift Tax Rate
Exemption
New York
16%
None
$2,062,500/$3,125,000*
New Jersey
16%
None
$675,000
Connecticut
12%
12%
$2,000,000
Pennsylvania
(a)
None
None
(a) An inheritance tax of 4.5% is imposed on transfers to direct descendants and lineal heirs, 12% on transfers to siblings and 15% on other
taxable transfers.
*The exemption amount changed on April 1, 2015 and the new amount is applicable through March 31, 2016.
The amount from April 1, 2016 through
March 31, 2017will be $4,187,500.
Note: California and Florida have no estate tax. In Florida, there may be a need to file other forms to remove the automatic Florida estate tax lien.
estate and gift tax planning
While FLPs and FLLCs can be effective estate planning vehicles,
they must be carefully structured, fully implemented substantially
before death occurs, and have a bona fide, nontax purpose. In addition, the proper tax and accounting records should be maintained,
income and gift tax returns should be carefully prepared and all
transactions should conform to the legal documents.
Unless these
precautions are taken, the arrangement may not be upheld in the
event of a challenge by the Internal Revenue Service.
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EisnerAmper 2016 personal tax guide
have any incidence of ownership:
• Gift sufficient funds to the trust so it can buy the insurance policy
and pay all current and future premiums.
• Assign a current policy to the trust and gift future premiums.
However, the transfer must be completed at least 3 years before
your death to avoid inclusion in your taxable estate.
• Gift to the trust the annual premiums on a policy owned by the
trust either by paying them directly or first depositing them in a
trust account.
• Sale of the policy to the trust.
Be careful of gift tax issues to the extent you gift funds to purchase
the policy, pay premiums or transfer an existing policy that has value.
You will only incur a gift tax if the amount exceeds the available
annual exclusion and any remaining lifetime gift tax exemption. The
government’s position is that the annual exclusion is only available
if the trust document includes a withdrawal (Crummey) power and
the beneficiaries are notified in writing of their right of withdrawal. It
is important to properly comply with this administrative requirement.
There are some disadvantages to life insurance trusts, but they can
be minimized with proper planning. There will be some additional
costs: You will incur legal fees since a carefully drafted trust
instrument is needed to satisfy specific rules, and there may be
trustee commissions.
Also, income tax returns may be required if the
trust has assets generating taxable income. These are almost always
grantor trusts. However, if the trust only holds the life insurance
policy and you pay the annual premiums through gifts, income tax
returns will generally not be required.
If you have a life insurance policy that has been in force for at least 3
years, it may prove beneficial to review the policy to see if premiums
can be lowered and/or the death benefit can be increased.
It is
sometimes possible to find a more favorable policy and obtain it in
exchange for your old policy on a tax-free basis.
STATE ESTATE TAX CONSIDERATIONS
You should keep in mind that many states also impose an estate
or inheritance tax on persons who are domiciled in the state or
have property located in the state. Some of these states continue
to impose their estate or inheritance tax even if there is no federal
estate tax. Others (e.g., Florida) impose no such tax when there is
no federal estate tax credit for taxes paid to a state.
Changes to estate taxes in New York
On April 1, 2014, New York State passed new legislation known
as the Budget Legislation with the new estate tax rates and estate
exclusion amounts.
The new estate tax provisions are in effect for
decedents dying on or after April 1, 2014.
Prior to this new legislation, New York estates above $1 million in
assets were subject to New York estate taxes. Under the Budget
Legislation, the estate exclusion amount will be gradually increased
and by April 1, 2017 it will reach the 2013 federal estate tax exclusion
of $5.25 million. After January 1, 2019 the basic exclusion amount
will equal the federal exclusion amount and will be indexed for
inflation in the same manner as the federal exclusion.
Below are
the basic exclusion amounts (“BEAs”) for decedents dying on or
after the following dates:
• April 1, 2014 and before April 1, 2015:
$2,062,500.
• April 1, 2015 and before April 1, 2016:
$3,125,000.
• April 1, 2016 and before April 1, 2017:
$4,187,500.
• April 1, 2017 and before Jan. 1, 2019:
$5,250,000.
• January 1, 2019 and beyond:
federal exclusion amount
indexed for inflation.
Unfortunately, the above basic exclusion amounts start to phase
out once the estate’s taxable value exceeds the BEA in effect at that
time. Furthermore, the estate’s exclusion amount is fully phased out
once the estate’s taxable amount is over 105% of the current BEA.
The new legislation also provides for inclusion of taxable gifts “not
otherwise included” in the federal gross estate if the gift was made
after March 31, 2014 and before January 1, 2019 and the gift was
made within 3 years of the donor’s death.
Annual exclusion gifts do
not get pulled back into the New York taxable estate.
NEW LEGISLATION
As a result of PATH, the gift tax will not apply to the transfer of
money or other property to a tax-exempt organization described
in IRC section 501(c)(4) (generally, social welfare organizations) or
IRC section 501(c)(6) (generally, trade associations and business
leagues).
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There are many non-tax reasons to review your estate plan and the
related documents.
It is advisable to periodically review your estate plan to make sure
it is in conformity with your current wishes and the current state of
the law. This review should include nontax considerations, such as:
• Who are your executors and trustees?
• Do you have a power-of-attorney and is it current?
• Is your health care proxy and/or living will current?
• Have you provided for long-term care for your spouse and
yourself?
• Are the beneficiaries on your qualified plans and life insurance
policies in accordance with your present desires?
• Does your estate plan include new children, grandchildren, etc.?
• Have you named appropriate guardians for your minor children
should both parents be deceased while the children remain
minors?
• Has anyone mentioned in your will died?
• Will your assets be preserved for your family in the case of a
divorce?
• Do you have adequate creditor protections included in your
planning?
• At what age do you want your children, grandchildren or other
beneficiaries to have full access to inherited assets?
• Do you have a beneficiary with special needs that you want to
provide for?
• Do you wish to leave a legacy to a charitable or educational
organization?
• If there is a family business, are you satisfied with the beneficiaries
who will receive that interest? Has a succession plan for the
business been put into place? Do you need to equalize amongst
your children where only children working in the business are
receiving interests in the business?
estate and gift tax planning
NONTAX CONSIDERATIONS
. tax credits
There are many credits available to reduce your federal tax
liability, but all are subject to complex limitations based on
income and whether or not you are subject to the alternative
minimum tax.
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The following is a discussion of the credits that impact most
taxpayers:
Foreign Tax Credit
The U.S. taxes its residents on their worldwide income including
foreign-sourced income which may be also subject to tax in foreign
jurisdictions. To avoid double taxation, subject to certain limitations,
the U.S. allows its residents either a credit or deduction for taxes
imposed by foreign countries and possessions of the U.S.
In general,
a credit is more advantageous as it is a dollar-for-dollar offset
to the taxpayer’s U.S. income tax liability, whereas a deduction
is a reduction to income subject to tax. There are limits on the
amount of foreign tax credits an individual may be able to take in a
particular year.
There is a separate calculation of foreign tax credits
allowed each year which could result in a difference between your
regular and AMT foreign tax credit allowed. Any foreign tax credits
not fully utilized in the current year due to limitations may be
carried back one year and forward 10 years. The most common
forms of income that result in the payment of foreign taxes include
dividends paid by foreign corporations and business income earned
by foreign pass-through entities.
It is very common to incur foreign
taxes through securities that are held in your investment accounts
or from an underlying ownership interest in a partnership or other
pass-through entity that has an investment in a foreign entity.
Child Tax Credit
A nonrefundable child tax credit of $1,000 per qualifying child is
available to offset your tax liability.
Qualifying children are defined as:
• A son, daughter, stepson, stepdaughter, or a descendant of such
child; a brother, sister, stepbrother, stepsister, or a descendant
of such relative.
• A child who has not attained the age of 17 by the end of the tax
year and who is either a U.S. citizen or national, or a resident
of the U.S.
However, the child tax credit is not available to many taxpayers
since it begins to phase out when MAGI reaches $110,000 for
joint filers, $55,000 for married filing separately and $75,000 for
unmarried individuals, head of household and qualifying widowers.
The credit is reduced by $50 for every $1,000, or fraction thereof,
of MAGI above the threshold amount.
The earned income limitation is set at $3,000. For taxpayers with
3 or more qualifying children, the refundable credit will be equal
to the lesser of the credit that would have been allowed without
the tax limit and the excess of the taxpayer’s social security taxes
for the year over the taxpayer’s earned income credit for the year.
The credit is allowed up to the $1,000 per child credit amount, if
the allowable child tax credit exceeds the total tax liability, taking
into account the AMT.
The earned income threshold of $3,000 is made permanent by
PATH.
Child and Dependent Care Credit
If you pay someone to take care of your children or other qualifying
persons so that you and your spouse can work or go to school, then
you qualify to take the credit for child and dependent care expenses.
Qualifying expenses include expenses paid for household services
and for the care of a qualifying individual.
A qualifying individual
can include a dependent who was under age 13 at the close of the
tax year or a dependent who was physically or mentally incapable
of self-care and who had lived with you for more than half of the
year.
The maximum amount of dependent care expense on which you
can calculate the credit is $3,000 for one qualifying individual or
$6,000 for 2 or more qualifying individuals. The amount of the
dependent care expenses eligible for a credit must be reduced by
any payments received through an employer-provided dependent
care assistance program. The amount of the allowable credit is
based on your AGI, with the applicable credit percentage ranging
from 20% to 35%.
The 35% credit is for lower income taxpayers.
Once your AGI exceeds $43,000, the maximum rate allowed is
20%. These percentages entitle you to a credit of $600/$1,200
and $1,050/$2,100, respectively, based on the number of qualifying
individuals.
American Opportunity and Lifetime Learning Credits
There are two education-related credits: the American Opportunity
Credit (“AOC”), which is a modified Hope Credit, and the Lifetime
Learning Credit. These credits are available to individuals who
incurred tuition expenses pursuing college or graduate degrees
or vocational training.
The AOC allows taxpayers a maximum
credit per eligible student of $2,500. The Lifetime Learning Credit
allows a taxpayer to take a maximum credit of $2,000 per taxpayer.
A more detailed discussion of these credits can be found in the
chapter on education incentives.
PATH has made the American Opportunity tax credit permanent.
Should the credit be disallowed, an additional child tax credit may
be allowed. Individuals are eligible for a refundable child tax credit
equal to the lesser of the unclaimed portion of the nonrefundable
credit amount or 15% of their earned income in excess of $3,000.
tax credits
TAX CREDIT OVERVIEW
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Adoption Credit
For 2015, a nonrefundable credit of up to $13,400 may be claimed
for qualified adoption expenses. The credit is phased out ratably for
taxpayers with MAGI over $201,010 and no credit is allowed for
taxpayers with MAGI over $241,010 or higher. Qualified adoption
expenses include reasonable and necessary adoption fees, court
costs, attorney fees and other expenses which are directly related
to the legal adoption of an eligible child. An eligible child is an
individual who has not attained the age of 18 at the time of the
adoption or who is physically or mentally incapable of caring for
himself or herself.
A credit for the adoption of a special needs child
is allowed regardless of the actual qualified expenses.
For U.S. adoptions, you may be able to claim the credit before the
adoption is finalized and if you adopt a special needs child you
may qualify for the full amount of the credit.
For 2016, the credit allowed is $13,460 and phased out ratably
for taxpayers with MAGI over $201,920 and completely phased
out at $241,920.
Residential Energy Property Credit
The tax credit allowed for the cost of qualifying improvements
that meet certain energy efficient standards had been extended
through December 31, 2016 as a result of PATH.
A tax credit was allowed for the cost of qualifying improvements
that met certain energy efficient standards. The credit is equal to
the sum of:
•
10% of amounts paid or incurred for energy efficient building
envelope components plus
• Specified dollar amounts for the purchase of residential energy
property.
The credit is limited to $500 ($200 for windows) minus the credits
claimed in previous years.
Residential Energy Efficient Property Credit
A tax credit is allowed up to 30% of the cost of qualified energy
property and the credit for each half kilowatt of capacity of fuel
cell property is limited to $500 This credit applies to expenditures
for the following qualified energy equipment installed before 2017:
• Solar electric property expenditure, such as for photovoltaic cells,
• Solar water heaters,
• Small wind energy property,
• Geothermal heat pump property, and
• Fuel cell property.
Qualified Plug-In Electric Drive Motor Vehicle Credit
The maximum tax credit allowed for individuals who purchase
plug-in electric vehicles is $7,500, and if the vehicle did not have
battery capacity of at least 5 kilowatt hours, the minimum credit
of $2,500 applied.
To qualify as a plug-in electric drive vehicle, the vehicle must:
• be made by a manufacturer,
• be acquired for use or lease but not resale,
• have its original use commencing with the taxpayer,
• be treated as a motor vehicle for purposes of Title II of the
Clean Air Act,
• have a gross vehicle weight rating of not more than 14,000
pounds,
• be propelled to a significant degree by an electric motor that
draws electricity from a battery with a capacity of not less than
4 kilowatt hours and that is capable of being recharged from an
external source of electricity.
Qualified Research Credit
This is a credit for expenditures paid or incurred for research that
was technological in nature and whose application was for use in
developing a new or improved business component.
This credit
is made permanent as a result of PATH. In general, the credit was
equal to 14% of the qualified research expenditures incurred that
exceeds 50% of the average qualified research expenses for the 3
prior years. In addition, for taxable years beginning after December
31, 2015, eligible small businesses ($50 million or less in gross
receipts) may claim the credit against AMT liability, and the credit
can be utilized by certain small businesses against the employer’s
payroll tax liability.
AMT Credit
If you pay the AMT in one year, you may be entitled to a tax credit
against your regular tax in a subsequent year.
You qualify for an
AMT credit if any of your AMT liability is derived from “deferral
items” such as depreciation adjustments and the tax preference
on the exercise of ISOs. See the chapter on the AMT for a more
detailed discussion.
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PATH also extends the credit beginning in 2016 to apply to
employers who hire qualified long-term unemployed individuals
(those unemployed for 27 weeks or more).
tax credits
Work Opportunity Credit
The work opportunity tax credit, a federal tax credit available to
employers for hiring individuals from certain target groups who
have consistently faced significant barriers to employment through
taxable years beginning on or before December 21, 2019, as a
result of PATH. The credit is based on qualified wages paid to the
employee for the first year of employment. In general, qualified
wages are capped at $6,000. The credit is 25% of the qualified
first-year wages for those employed at least 120 hours but fewer
than 400 hours and 40% for those employed 400 hours or more.
.
education
incentives
Tuition funding programs, tax credits and education expense
deductions are available to help many families fund the cost of
college and certain other educational expenses.
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• Age and income restrictions do not apply to the account owner
or beneficiary, unlike other tax incentive education plans.
There are education incentives that provide tax benefits to assist
you in funding the cost of a college education for your family
members, but some of them are subject to phase outs based on
AGI, thereby limiting the incentives that may be available to you.
See the state tax issues chapter for additional incentives.
• You are not limited to just the plans offered by the state you
live in. In addition, you can change your choice of plan every
12 months and roll over plan funds to a new plan. This gives
you more investment options and possibly higher contribution
ceilings.
The tax incentives available to help pay college costs include:
• Section 529 plans.
• American Opportunity credit and Lifetime Learning credit.
• Education deductions, including student loan interest.
529 PLANS
Probably the most popular tax incentive college funding method is
a Section 529 plan (qualified tuition program) since it is available
to all taxpayers, regardless of their income. These plans offer the
following benefits:
Funds deposited into a Section 529 plan for the benefit of another
person are considered a gift for gift tax purposes.
Although the
plan’s assets are excluded from your estate, there are gift tax
considerations. However, to the extent you used your annual gift
exclusion to fund a 529 plan, you will have to limit other tax-free
gifts to stay within the annual exclusion amount of $14,000 per
donee. For 2015 and 2016, you may elect to treat up to $70,000
($140,000 if married) of the contribution for an individual as if you
had made it ratably over a 5-year period.
The election allows you
to apply the annual exclusion to a portion of the contribution in
each of the 5 years, beginning with the year of contribution. Also,
if your state of residence allows a deduction for the contributions
to the plan, you will generally only be allowed to take the deduction
for one year’s amount in the initial year that you fund the plan.
• Although the contributions to the 529 plans are not currently
Private institutions can offer a prepaid tuition program if they
satisfy Section 529 requirements. Distributions from these private
plans used for qualified education expenses will also be tax-free.
• Distributions are tax-free if used to pay qualified education
Section 529 plans also have their disadvantages.
Investment
options are limited to the plan’s choices of investment vehicles.
Also, even though you can withdraw funds for uses other than
qualified higher education expenses, you’ll have to pay a 10%
penalty on the earnings, similar to a premature distribution from
a retirement account.
tax deductible on the federal level, the earnings from the plan
are tax deferred for federal and state taxes.
expenses at any accredited college, university, or graduate
school and most community colleges and certified technical
training schools in the United States as well as many schools
abroad.
• Distributions can be used to pay for tuition, certain room
and board expenses, books, supplies, a computer, computer
software and even internet expenses, so long as the computer
is used for college work. Allowable computer software must be
predominantly educational in nature, so software designed for
games, sports or hobbies is excluded.
• Control of the funds remains in the hands of the account owner
(not the beneficiary), even after the beneficiary reaches legal
age, permitting the account owner to change beneficiaries at
any time and for any reason. You may change the beneficiary to
another child if the original beneficiary does not go to college,
or excess funds remain in one child’s account after college.
You can also change the beneficiary to yourself if a financial
emergency requires you to have access to the funds.
However,
any distributions representing income earned within the plan will
be taxable if not used for qualified education purposes.
Observation: The Tax Increase Prevention Act of 2014 (“TIPA”)
included the Achieving a Better Life Experience (“ABLE”) Act, which
allows states to establish and operate an ABLE program. Severely
disabled individuals (under age 26) would be able to open a section
529 savings account and make annual contributions up to the gift tax
exclusion limit of $14,000 for 2015 (also $14,000 for 2016), adjusted
annually for inflation. The account may be used to meet qualifying
disability expenses of a designated beneficiary.
Any distribution that
exceeds qualified disability expenses is included in gross income and
subject to an additional tax of 10%.
NEW LEGISLATION
PATH modifies section 529 account rules to treat any distribution
from a section 529 account as coming from that account (rather
education incentives
EDUCATION INCENTIVES AVAILABLE
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than aggregating), even if the individual making the distribution
operates more than one account. Also, the provision treats a
refund of tuition paid with amounts distributed from a section 529
account as a qualified expense if those amounts are re-contributed
to a section 520 account within 60 days.
AMERICAN OPPORTUNITY AND LIFETIME
LEARNING CREDITS
The American Opportunity credit (“AOC”) and Lifetime Learning
credit are available if you pay qualified tuition and related education
expenses, which includes course materials such as books, supplies
and equipment. Room and board expenses do not qualify for either
credit.
However, these credits have income limitations which phase out
the available credits. The AOC is phased out ratably with MAGI
between $80,000 and $90,000 if single or head of household
and $160,000 to $180,000 if married filing jointly.
The Lifetime
Learning credit is phased out ratably with MAGI between $55,000
and $65,000 for 2015 ($55,000 to $65,000 for 2016) if single
or head of household and $110,000 to $130,000 for 2015 (there
is no change for 2016) if married filing jointly.
• American Opportunity credit. A $2,500 annual credit per
student is available for the first 4 years of post-secondary
education with enrollment on at least a half-time basis in a
program leading to a degree. Generally, you can receive up to
$1,000 as a refundable credit even if you owe no taxes.
However,
the refundable credit will not be allowed to an individual if he or
she is subject to the kiddie tax and other limitations.
• Lifetime Learning credit. A $2,000 annual credit per taxpayer
is available for an unlimited number of years of post-secondary,
graduate, or certain other courses to acquire or improve your job
skills. The credit is equal to 20% of the first $10,000 of qualified
expenses, up to the maximum amount of $2,000.
EMPLOYER-PROVIDED EDUCATIONAL
ASSISTANCE
Under a qualified educational assistance plan, up to $5,250 of the
benefits will not be included in the gross income of the employee.
There is no requirement that educational assistance be job-related.
Educational expenses include tuition, fees and similar payments,
books, supplies and equipment.
However employer-provided
tools or supplies that the employee may retain after completing
25
AGI TOO HIGH TO
CLAIM A CREDIT? HAVE
YOUR CHILD TAKE IT
If you pay qualified expenses for your children but income limitations
prevent you from taking the American Opportunity credit or Lifetime
Learning credit, you may have your children claim the credit on their
tax returns instead. However, you must forego claiming the dependency exemption that you are otherwise entitled to. The maximum
federal tax benefit you will lose in 2015 is $1,400 ($4,000 exemption times the maximum rate of 35%*).
If your child can claim the
full amount of the lifetime learning credit to reduce his or her own
tax liability, you will save a maximum of $600. This savings could
increase up to $2,000 if you are in the AMT as no personal exemptions are allowed in computing your income subject to AMT. If you
are not in AMT and your AGI is above certain threshold amounts, your
personal exemption deduction may also be disallowed.
This benefit
may be reduced when considering the state income tax impact.
*Although the maximum federal income tax rate is at 39.6%, the
maximum rate that can be applied for education credit is at 35%,
because that is the rate where the personal exemptions are fully
phased out.
Please note that a child under age 24 cannot claim the refundable
portion of American Opportunity credit as long as one of parents
is alive.
a course of instruction are includible in gross income. Further, you
cannot use any of the tax-free education expenses paid for by your
employer under this plan as the basis for any other deduction or
credit, including the American Opportunity credit and Lifetime
Learning credit.
INTEREST ON EDUCATION LOAN
Certain education expenses are deductible in computing against
your federal AGI, subject to income limitations, including interest
on education loans. You can take the above-the-line deduction
of up to $2,500 of interest paid on qualified education loans
annually, subject to a phase out that eliminates the deduction.
The maximum deduction is reduced when your MAGI reaches
$130,000 if married filing jointly and $65,000 for other taxpayers.
The deduction is completely phased out when MAGI is $160,000
if married filing jointly and $80,000 for other taxpayers.
For more
on this topic please see the chapter on interest expense.
. planning for
same-sex
couples
Until Obergefell, the recognition of same-sex marriages was dependent on the laws
of each particular state and the decisions of federal or state courts in that state or
Federal Circuit. Federally, same-sex marriages were recognized for some, but not all,
provisions of federal law.
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OVERVIEW
On June 26, 2015 the U.S. Supreme Court, in Obergefell v. Hodges,
ruled that same-sex couples are entitled to equal dignity under
the law and have the right to marry under the U.S. Constitution.
The court ruled that no state can ban same-sex marriages and that
states must recognize same-sex marriages legally performed in
out-of-state jurisdictions.
Legally married same–sex couples are
now treated as married for all federal purposes.
PLACE OF CEREMONY
On August 29, 2013, the IRS issued Revenue Ruling 2013-17, which
applied the place of ceremony rule for married same-sex couples
for federal income tax purposes retroactively for all open tax years.
This means as long as the marriage was legal in the state where
the marriage occurred, it will be considered a marriage regardless
of the state in which the couple resides.
On October 21, 2015, the IRS reversed this policy and ruled that
a couple in a same-sex marriage, regardless of which state they
were married in, would be recognized as married for tax purposes.
This puts the IRS in line with the U.S. Supreme Court’s June 2015
ruling. This should not have significant impact at the federal level
since the 2013 ruling treated legally married same-sex couples
as married for federal tax purposes regardless of the state of
residence.
Couples who were residing in states which did not
recognize these marriages may be able to benefit from these
changes in the law by filing amended returns at the state level to
reflect married filing jointly status.
Under current case law and IRS rulings, the term “marriage” does
not apply to registered domestic partnerships, civil unions or “other
similar formal relationships.”
One of the most significant impacts of partial recognition of samesex marriages for federal purposes was for Social Security purposes
which determined marital status based on the law of the state of
residence. This meant that a couple legally married in a state which
recognized their marriage who retired in a non-recognition state
were denied spousal benefits under Social Security.
TAX CONSEQUENCES OF SUPREME COURT
AND IRS RULINGS
The right/requirement to file a joint federal tax return for
residents of all 50 states
The state where the ceremony was performed is no longer a factor. Married filing separately is the only other filing status option.
A return using the single filing status is no longer an option for
married same-sex couples.
Cost of health insurance premiums
An employee’s premiums paid by the employer for coverage of a
same-sex spouse can now be excluded from income.
The spouse
can pay health coverage premiums for the same-sex spouse on
a pre-tax basis.
Continuation of health coverage for same-sex spouses can be
obtained under COBRA if a qualifying event occurs.
Same-sex spouses now have the rights of married spouses in
retirement plans
Surviving spouses can rollover inherited IRAs and delay taking
distributions until they are age 701/2. This can be particularly
helpful if there are significant age differences between the spouses.
The beneficiary designation is presumed to be the spouse. A
spousal consent is needed if there is a non-spouse beneficiary.
Please see the chapter on retirement plans for more information.
Social Security spousal benefits
One-earner couples can receive a benefit of an extra 50% of the
working spouse’s retirement benefit.
For 2-earner couples, the
lower earning spouse can receive his/her benefit plus a spousal
benefit to bring the total benefit up to 50% of the higher earning
spouse’s total benefit.
TAX PLANNING FOR MARRIED SAME-SEX
COUPLES
2015 and beyond
Married same-sex couples are required to file as married filing joint
or married filing separately. The single filing status is no longer an
option! This applies at the state as well as the federal level.
Because the combined income of both parties is considered,
there can be significant tax consequences and opportunities for
a couple who is now required to file a joint return (or married filing
separately). The consequences are a result of the changes due to
limitations, phase-outs and increased tax brackets that are based
on the total taxable income.
The following are a few examples of
income tax provisions that should be considered when preparing
to file a joint tax return:
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OPPORTUNITY TO CLAIM REFUNDS
• Dependent care credit, elderly and disabled credit, adoption
There may be an opportunity to file amended returns claiming joint
(or married filing separately) status for the any open tax years to
receive refunds of taxes if married filing jointly would reduce the
tax paid as single filers. Amended returns must be filed within 3
years after the original due date, or if extended, within 3 years after
the date the return was filed for federal taxes. Each state has its
own statute of limitations. Keep in mind that amendment of prior
year returns by spouses now permitted to file jointly may result
in a “marriage bonus” for some couples, but others may incur a
“marriage penalty,” depending upon the couple’s specific situation.
expense credit
• Earned income credit
• AMT exemption and brackets
• Standard deduction
• Level at which itemized deductions begin to phase out
• Social Security inclusion
• Amounts received from health plans and contributions made
If a couple decides to amend a tax return for a previous year, they
can choose to amend 1 year, 2 years or all open years.
They can
cherry pick which returns they wish to amend.
• Exclusion of gain from sale of principal residence
GIFT TAX CONSIDERATIONS
• Dependent care programs
Before the repeal of DOMA in 2013, the excludable amount was
$14,000 for 2014 and 2015. Any additional gifts to a same-sex
spouse would utilize the transferor’s available lifetime exemption.
Since the repeal of DOMA, same-sex married couples are entitled
to the unlimited marital deduction. This means they can make
tax-free transfers to their same-sex spouse without any gift tax
consequences.
to a health plan
• Statutory fringe benefits
• Exclusion from certain savings bonds used for education
• Charitable contributions
• Medical expense deduction
• Deductions for contributions to an IRA
Transfers to non-U.S.
citizen same-sex spouses do not qualify
for the unlimited marital deduction. However, such transfers are
eligible for an increased annual exclusion amount ($147,000 for
2015 and $148,000 for 2016).
• Various provisions of retirement plans, including survivor
annuities
•
GIFT SPLITTING
Definition of dependent
• Attribution of participation in connection with passive activities
• Limitation on capital losses
• Gains on sales of depreciable property to a related taxpayer
• Persons required to file income tax returns
• Failure to pay estimated tax
Gift splitting allows a married couple to split all gifts made by one
spouse and treat the total as if the gift was made one-half by each
spouse. Prior to the repeal of DOMA, same-sex couples could
not split gifts to take advantage of the double annual exclusion
($14,000 per person, per donee or $28,000 per married couple,
per donee for 2015 and 2016).
The overturning of section 3 of
DOMA meant that same-sex married couples could split a gift
and treat as if half was made by each spouse.
There may be an opportunity to file amended gift tax returns for
the prior years in order to increase the amount of life-time gift tax
exemption available for future years. In order to file an amended
gift tax return, Form 843 should be filed with the IRS. This should
be considered for any open years where a gift tax return was filed
and gifts between married parties were treated as taxable gifts.
planning for same-sex couples
• Filing status, tax rate schedules and brackets
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ESTATE TAX CONSIDERATIONS
The estate tax exemption increased from $5,430,000 for 2015
to $5,450,000 for 2016.
An estate will not incur an estate tax for any assets passing outright
or in trust for the benefit of a surviving spouse. This defers the
payment of any estate tax on these assets until the death of the
surviving spouse. The surviving spouse must be a U.S. citizen.
Under DOMA, the assets in excess of the estate tax exemption
left to a same-sex spouse were includible in the first estate.
This
unfairly “double taxed” the assets, as they would be taxed again
if the surviving spouse’s estate were in excess of the estate tax
exemption.
This basically outlines the case of United States v Windsor, which
addressed the “differential treatment compared to other similarly
situated couples without justification.” The U.S. Supreme Court
held that Section 3 of DOMA was unconstitutional in requiring
this differential treatment and same-sex couples can now leave
assets to their spouse without incurring a federal estate tax liability.
There is an opportunity to file refund claims and get back any
excess estate taxes. The IRS has stated that amended estate tax
returns can be filed using Form 843.
PORTABILITY
The American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012 (ATRA) permanently
extended the concept of portability for 2011 and beyond.
This
provision is now available to same-sex couples.
Portability allows a decedent who does not use all of his/her estate
tax exemption ($5,430,000 for 2015 and $5,450,000 in 2016)
at their death to transfer the unused portion of their estate tax
exemption to the surviving spouse so that the unused exemption
amount can be added to the second spouse’s estate tax exemption.
Portability applies to the unused exclusion amount of the LAST
pre-deceased spouse only.
Example: In 2015, a decedent has $3.43 million of assets at his/her
death. Since the estate tax exemption is $5.43 million for 2015, there
is $2 million of unused estate tax exemption. This amount can be
transferred to the spouse, leaving the survivor with $7.43 million ($2
million plus the surviving spouse’s own 2015 applicable exclusion of
$5.43 million).
For more information on estate and gift tax planning techniques,
please see the chapter on gift and estate tax overview.
CONCLUSION
There are many factors that should be considered by same-sex
couples when deciding if amended returns are necessary.
In
addition, tax planning is very important for a newly married couple,
as their tax liability could be significantly higher than prior years,
when single returns were filed. Same-sex couples should have
their income and estate tax plans reviewed as well as their overall
financial situation so as to maximize savings.
. international
tax planning
and reporting
requirements
Foreign earned income exclusions and foreign tax credits can
significantly reduce the U.S. taxes you pay on foreign-sourced income
and help you avoid double taxation. Complex reporting is required for
U.S. persons owning foreign assets including bank and other financial
investments.
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NEW FOR 2016:
The Fixing America’s Surface Transportation (“FAST”) Act, enacted
in December 2015, allows the IRS to communicate with the
Department of State regarding taxpayers who have an assessed
tax debt of more than $50,000 and for which a notice of lien has
been filed. [Exceptions could apply if a payment schedule has been
worked out, if innocent spouse relief has been requested or pending, etc.] Absent an exception, this could result in the Department
of State revoking the delinquent taxpayer’s U.S. passport. The
$50,000 threshold will be indexed for inflation for years after 2016.
FOREIGN TAX ISSUES
Multinational clients with cross-border income from employment
and investments are in today’s mainstream.
Many taxpayers are
discovering that they are subject to taxation and/or reporting in
both U.S. and foreign jurisdictions. Not all U.S.
citizens and resident aliens are aware of their obligation to report their worldwide
income to the IRS. As a result, the U.S. continues to pursue U.S.
persons who fail to report income and file certain tax forms.
These
complex issues not only impact you if you are on an overseas
assignment or retired abroad, but have broad-reaching implications even if you have never left the U.S. For instance, these issues
arise if you invest in hedge funds, private equity funds, and other
entities that own interests in foreign operating businesses or invest
in foreign securities or have foreign retirement plans. Even holding
cash in a foreign bank can trigger a reporting requirement.
This chapter is intended to provide an overview of the income
exclusions, foreign tax credits, reporting requirements, and elections involving foreign employment and investments.
Significant legislation enacted in 2010 (the “HIRE Act”) imposed
a new U.S.
withholding regime for U.S. income earned by non-U.S.
persons and tightened the reporting requirements for offshore
accounts and entities set up in foreign jurisdictions. This provision
of the HIRE act is the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act, also
known as FATCA.
FATCA requires that certain foreign financial
institutions play a key role in providing U.S. tax authorities greater
access into U.S. taxpayers’ foreign financial account information.
See FATCA section below.
Through the creation of the FATCA regime the U.S.
has inspired a
movement towards greater global tax transparency; similar to the
FATCA compliance regime, banks and other investment institutions of foreign nations will have significant additional reporting
responsibilities.
tax tip
26
TAX BENEFITS OF THE FOREIGN EARNED
INCOME AND HOUSING EXCLUSIONS
Your company sent you to work in Dubai in 2015 for several years,
so you qualify as a bona fide resident of the UAE in 2015. Assume
you earn $500,000 per year and your company reimburses you for
$125,000 of housing costs which are taxable to you. You would be
able to exclude the following income from your U.S.
income tax return:
•
•
$100,800 of your salary.
$41,046 of the housing expense reimbursements.
Dubai is considered to be an expensive city to live in, so the annual
housing exclusion amount is $57,174. Of this amount, you are not eligible to exclude $44.186 per day, or $16,128 for a full year. Therefore,
your 2015 housing exclusion will be $41,046 ($57,174 - $16,128).
When added to your foreign earned income exclusion of $100,800,
you can exclude a total of $141,846.
Therefore, you will be taxed in the U.S.
on $483,154 related to your
employment in Dubai ($500,000 compensation plus $125,000 housing cost reimbursements less the exclusions of $141,846).
The maximum 2015 foreign earned income exclusion is $100,800,
regardless of which foreign country you are working in. The housing
exclusion is based on which country and city you are living in (see
Chart 13 for some of the more common foreign cities).
Note: Although the UAE does not impose an income tax, in this example, if you paid income tax to a country that imposes a tax, you may also be
eligible to receive a foreign tax credit against the U.S. tax imposed on the remaining income.
However, only 77.30% of these taxes will be allowable
as a foreign tax credit that can offset your U.S. income tax (i.e., only $483,154 of the total $625,000 of income will be subject to tax: $483,154
divided by $625,000 is 77.30%).
As you can see in Tax Tip 26, your foreign housing exclusion might be limited depending on where you live. In order to see the differences in limits
for housing deductions in 2015, see Chart 13 on the next page.
.
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13
FOREIGN HOUSING EXCLUSIONS
The amount of foreign housing exclusions costs that you can exclude from your 2015 U.S. income tax return depends on both the country and city
you are living in. Below are listed the maximum amounts you can exclude for some common foreign cities, before the adjustment for the daily living
cost of $44.186 per day, or $16,128 for a full year.
Maximum Annual
Housing Exclusion
Country
City
Canada
Toronto
China
Hong Kong
Beijing
114,300
71,200
France
Paris
78,300
Germany
Berlin
46,900
India
New Delhi
56,124
Italy
Rome
52,100
Japan
Tokyo
83,500
Russia
Moscow
Switzerland
Zurich
39,219
United Arab Emirates
Dubai
57,174
United Kingdom
London
85,300
$ 49,700
108,000
FOREIGN EARNED INCOME EXCLUSION AND
FOREIGN HOUSING EXCLUSION/DEDUCTION
• In general, the worldwide income of a U.S. citizen or resident • Claim a foreign tax credit against your U.S.
tax liability for income
who is working abroad is subject to the same income tax and
return filing requirements that apply to U.S. citizens or residents
living in the U.S. However, if you are working abroad, you may
qualify for one or more special tax benefits:
taxes you pay or accrue to a foreign country, or if more beneficial,
take an itemized deduction for the taxes paid.
• Reduce your overall tax liability under tax treaties that the U.S.
has with foreign countries.
•
Exclude up to $100,800 of foreign earned income in 2015 and
$101,300 in 2016.
•
Either (a) exclude part, or all, of any housing income reimbursements you receive or (b) deduct part, or all, of any housing
costs paid (i.e., for taxpayers having salary or self-employment
earnings).
• If eligible, claim exemption from paying social security tax in the
foreign country, based on a Totalization Agreement the U.S.
has
with the foreign country. Totalization Agreements are essentially
“treaties that cover social security taxes” designed to eliminate
dual coverage for the same work. You will be required to pay U.S.
Social Security and Medicare tax on such income.
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chart
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To qualify for the foreign earned income and the foreign housing
exclusions, you must establish a tax home in a foreign country
and meet either the bona fide residence or physical presence test,
defined below:
for either the 3.8% Medicare Contribution Tax on net investment income
or the .9% Additional Medicare Tax on earned income.
FOREIGN TAX CREDIT
Bona fide residence test
To qualify under this test, you must establish residency in a foreign
country for an uninterrupted period that includes an entire calendar
year. Brief trips outside the foreign country will not risk your status
as a bona fide resident, as long as the trips are brief, and there is
intent to return to the foreign country.
Physical presence test
This test requires you to be physically present in a foreign country
for at least 330 full days in a consecutive 12-month period, but not
necessarily a calendar-year period.
Planning Tip: If you pay no foreign tax or the effective tax rate in the
foreign jurisdiction is lower than the U.S. effective tax rate, claiming the
exclusion will generally lower the U.S. income tax liability.
On the other hand, if the foreign jurisdiction imposes tax at a higher
effective rate than the U.S., it is likely that the U.S.
tax on the foreign
earned income will be completely offset by the foreign tax credit regardless of whether the exclusion is claimed.
You should consider whether foregoing the exclusion may result in a
lower utilization of foreign tax credits in the current year so that a
larger amount of foreign tax credits can be carried back or forward
for utilization in other years. You should also consider whether the
foreign earned income exclusion and housing exclusion election will
mitigate your state tax burden to the extent that you remain taxable
on worldwide income in the state of residency.
Otherwise, in certain circumstances, it may be more beneficial to forego
the exclusion in favor of claiming only a greater foreign tax credit.
Claiming the exclusion is a binding election. Once you have claimed the
exclusion, you will be required to continue to claim it in all future years.
If you revoke the election, you will not be allowed to claim the exclusion
again until the sixth tax year after the year of revocation unless you
receive permission from the IRS.
If you have claimed the exclusion in
the past, the benefit of revoking the exclusion must be weighed against
the possible ramifications of being unable to re-elect the exclusion for
5 years. There is no downside of forgoing the exclusion if you have never
claimed it in the past.
Note: For Americans residing overseas, the foreign earned income
exclusion is not considered when calculating the applicable thresholds
A foreign tax credit may be claimed by U.S. citizens, resident aliens,
and in certain cases by nonresident aliens.
Typically states do not
allow foreign taxes to offset state income tax liabilities. An exception to this includes New York State, which allows a credit for
certain Canadian provincial income taxes. Unlike the exclusions
discussed above, you do not need to live or work in a foreign
country in order to claim the foreign tax credit.
You may be eligible
for the credit if you paid or accrued foreign taxes in the tax year.
Common examples of foreign-sourced income that may generate
foreign tax credits include dividends paid by foreign corporations,
including those paid on your behalf through a mutual fund, and
foreign business income earned by a flow-through entity.
You are entitled to claim either a tax credit or an itemized deduction
for taxes paid to foreign countries. Though not always the case,
the tax credit is typically more beneficial since it can reduce your
U.S. federal tax liability on a dollar-for-dollar basis.
Generally, only foreign income taxes qualify for the foreign tax
credit.
Other taxes, such as foreign real and personal property taxes,
do not qualify. However, these other taxes may still be deductible
as itemized deductions on your U.S. income tax return.
There are other situations which may prevent you from taking a
foreign tax credit:
• Taxes paid on income excluded from U.S.
gross income (e.g.,
foreign earned income exclusion).
• Taxes paid to the countries that participate in certain international boycotts.
• Taxes of U.S. persons controlling foreign corporations and partnerships if certain annual international returns are not filed.
• Certain taxes paid on foreign oil-related, mineral, and oil and
gas extraction income.
Your ability to claim a credit for the full amount of foreign taxes
paid or accrued is limited based on a ratio of your foreign-sourced
taxable income to your total taxable income. This ratio is applied
to your actual tax (excluding the 3.8% Medicare Contribution
Tax on net investment income) before the credit to determine the
maximum amount of the credit that you can claim.
If you are not
able to claim the full amount of the credit in the current year, you
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The credit is calculated for each separate type of foreign-sourced
income. In other words, foreign taxes paid on dividends are subject
to a separate limitation than foreign taxes paid on income from
salary or an active trade or business. Foreign-sourced income is
generally classified into two different baskets for determining the
allowable credit:
• Passive income: This category includes dividends, interest, rents,
• Had average annual net income tax liability for the 5 years ending before the date of expatriation or termination of residency
in excess of an annual ceiling, which is $160,000 for 2015 and
$161,000 for 2016;
• Had a net worth of $2 million or more when citizenship or residency ended; or
• Failed to certify compliance under penalties of perjury on Form
8854, Initial and Annual Expatriation Statement, with all U.S.
federal tax obligations for the 5 tax years preceding the date
of expatriation.
royalties, and annuities.
•
General limitation income: This category includes income from
foreign sources which does not fall into the passive separate
limitation category and generally is income earned from salary,
pensions or an active trade or business.
In addition you are required to maintain a separate foreign tax
credit limitation basket for each country in which income is
resourced under an income tax treaty. This provision applies to
income classified as U.S.-sourced income under U.S.
tax law, but
treated as foreign-sourced under an income tax treaty.
EXPATRIATION EXIT TAX
If you plan on giving up your U.S. citizenship or relinquishing your
U.S. legal permanent residency status (“green card”) and are considered a “covered expatriate,” you will pay an income tax at the
capital gains rate as though you had sold all of your assets at their
fair market value on the day before the expatriation date.
The 3.8%
additional Medicare Contribution Tax on net investment income
may apply in the case of a “covered expatriate” who is subject to
the exit tax. Any gain on the deemed sale in excess of a floor of
$690,000 for 2015 ($693,000 for 2016), is immediately taxed
(“mark-to-market tax”). Losses are taken into account and the
wash sale rules do not apply.
An election can be made to defer
the tax on the deemed sale until the asset is actually sold (or the
taxpayer’s death, if sooner) provided a bond or other security is
given to the IRS. Deferred compensation items and interests in
non-grantor trusts are not subject to the tax but are generally
subject to a 30% withholding tax on distributions to the expatriate.
Individual Retirement Accounts and certain other tax-deferred
accounts are treated as if they were completely distributed on
the day before the expatriation date (early distribution penalties
do not apply).
Former long-term residents who held a U.S. green card for anytime
during 8 out of the last 15 years and all U.S.
citizens are subject to
the expatriation regime if they:
A U.S. citizen or resident will have to pay tax on a gift or bequest
received from an individual who had expatriated after June 17,
2008. The tax does not apply to the extent that the gift or bequest
during the year is within the annual gift tax exclusion ($14,000
for both 2015 and 2016).
The tax does not apply if the transfer is
reported on a timely filed gift tax return or estate tax return or to
transfers that qualify for the marital or charitable deductions. The
value of a transfer not covered by an exception is taxable to the
recipient at the highest rate on taxable gifts, which is currently
45%.
U.S. INCOME TAXATION OF NONRESIDENT
INDIVIDUALS
Residents are taxed differently than nonresidents.
Resident aliens
are taxed on worldwide income at graduated tax rates much the
same as a U.S. citizen. A nonresident alien, however, is taxed at
graduated rates only on income that is effectively connected with
a U.S.
trade or business or at a flat 30% rate on U.S.-sourced
income that is not effectively connected with a U.S. trade or business (unless a lower income tax treaty rate applies). Nonresident
taxpayers are specifically exempt from the 3.8% Medicare
Contribution Tax on net investment income.
A foreign national is generally deemed a resident alien of the U.S.
if one of the 2 following tests is met:
• Lawful permanent residence (green card test); or
• Substantial presence test.
If an individual is physically present in the U.S.
for at least 31 days
during 2016 and has spent at least 183 days during the period of
2016, 2015, and 2014 counting all of the days of physical presence
in 2016, but only 1/3 of the days of presence in 2015, and only 1/6
of the number of days in 2014, the individual will be deemed a
resident for U.S. tax purposes.
international tax planning and reporting requirements
can carry the excess back to the immediately preceding tax year,
or forward for the next 10 tax years, subject to a similar limitation
in those years.
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Except as noted below, you are treated as being present in the U.S.
on any day that you are physically present in the country at any
time during the day. Exceptions include days spent in the U.S. for
the following circumstances:
1. Days you regularly commute to work in the U.S. from a
residence in Canada or Mexico.
2. Days you were in the U.S.
for less than 24 hours when you
were traveling between 2 places outside the U.S.
IRS Form 8840, Closer Connection Exception Statement for Aliens,
will need to be submitted with your U.S. nonresident income tax
return for the year in which you meet the substantial presence
test and you are exempt from it because you also meet the closer
connection test.
Alternatively, you may be considered a nonresident if you also
would qualify as a resident of your home jurisdiction under the tie
breaker clause of an income tax treaty with the U.S.
3. Days you were temporarily in the U.S. as a regular crew member of a foreign vessel engaged in transportation between the
U.S.
and a foreign country or a possession of the U.S. unless
you otherwise engaged in trade or business on such a day.
U.S. REPORTING REQUIREMENTS FOR
NONRESIDENT ALIENS
4. Days you were unable to leave the U.S.
because of a medical
condition or medical problem that arose while you were in
the U.S.
This form is used by nonresident aliens of the U.S. to annually
report U.S.-sourced income and the payments of U.S. tax, made
either through withholding by the payor or through estimated tax
payments.
The U.S. tax liability for the year is computed and any
tax due in excess of payments made during the year is remitted to
the U.S. Treasury.
A U.S. nonresident may also be subject to state
income tax on the income earned in one or more states.
5. Days you were an exempt individual (e.g., foreign government-related individual, teacher or trainee, student or a
professional athlete competing in a charitable sporting event).
Note: If you qualify to exclude days of presence in the U.S. because you
were an exempt individual (other than a foreign government-related
individual) or because of a medical condition or medical problem, you
must file Form 8843, Statement for Exempt Individuals and Individuals
with a Medical Condition.
In addition, there are certain elections available to nonresidents who move to the U.S. that could minimize global
taxation.
Even though you may otherwise meet the substantial presence
test, you will not be treated as a U.S. resident for 2016 if you do
not have a green card and:
• You were present in the U.S.
for fewer than 183 days during the
calendar year in question,
• You establish that during the calendar year, you had a tax home
Form 1040NR/1040NR-EZ
Foreign nationals, nonresident aliens and other taxpayers who have
filing or payment obligations under U.S. law and are not eligible
for a social security number are required to obtain an Individual
Taxpayer Identification Number (“ITIN”). The IRS will only issue
ITINs when applications include original documentation (e.g.,
passports and birth certificates) or copies of these documents
that have been certified by the issuing agency.
There are certain
exceptions for families of military personnel and for persons who
have certain types of income subject to withholding (e.g., pensions). ITINs issued after 2012 may have a 5 year expiration period.
Note: When reporting as a U.S. nonresident, residents of another
country under the provision of a treaty will be required to file Form
1040NR/1040NR-EZ and include applicable forms to report interests
in foreign entities, (e.g., Forms 8621, 5471, and 8865) and financial
accounts (see below).
in a foreign country, and
Form 1042-S
• You establish that during the calendar year, you had a closer
connection to one foreign country in which you had a tax home
than to the U.S., unless you had a closer connection to 2 foreign
countries.
You will be considered to have a closer connection to a foreign
country other than to the U.S.
if you or the IRS establishes that
you have maintained more significant contacts with the foreign
country than with the U.S.
If you are a nonresident of the U.S. and receive income from U.S.
sources, you will receive Form 1042-S. This is the annual information return prepared by the payor to report your name, address,
amount and type of income paid and any taxes withheld.
This form is normally distributed no later than March 15 of the following year.
If the recipient of the income is a U.S. person, a Form
1099 would be issued instead; Forms 1099 are generally due to be
received by U.S. persons no later than January 31 of the following
.
109
• Form 3520-A, Annual Information Return of Foreign Trust With
Form W-8 BEN
• Form 8891, U.S. Information Return for Beneficiaries of Certain
a U.S. Owner.
Canadian Registered Retirement Plans.
This form is provided by a nonresident alien to a payor to certify the
recipient’s residency status as beneficial owner of the income. If
applicable, this form should also be completed to claim the benefits
of an income tax treaty.
Form W-8 BEN-E
This form is provided by a foreign entity to document its foreign
status to a payor to certify the recipient’s status as beneficial owner
of the income.
If applicable, this form should also be completed
to claim the benefits of an income tax treaty.
Caution: If you give the payor the wrong form you will likely receive
unnecessary (and avoidable) correspondence from the IRS.
FOREIGN REPORTING REQUIREMENTS FOR
U.S. CITIZENS AND RESIDENTS
There are many IRS tax forms that must be completed and attached
to your tax return to disclose foreign holdings and to make elections
that could prove valuable to you. As more and more individuals
invest in foreign companies, whether held directly by you or through
a pass-through entity such as an investment partnership or hedge
fund, your reporting requirements increase.
These requirements
place an additional burden on the amount of information you must
include with your U.S. income tax return. Failure to do so could result
in substantial penalties and the loss of beneficial tax elections.
Some
of the most common of these forms are:
• Form 114 (formerly TDF 90-22.1), Report of Foreign Bank and
Financial Accounts.
• Form 8621, Return by a Shareholder of a Passive Foreign
Investment Company (PFIC) or Qualified Electing Fund (QEF).
• Form 926, Return by a U.S. Transferor of Property to a Foreign
Corporation.
• Form 8865, Return of U.S. Persons With Respect to Certain
Foreign Partnerships.
• Form 5471, Information Return of U.S.
Persons With Respect To
Certain Foreign Corporations.
• Form 3520, Annual Return To Report Transactions With Foreign
Trusts and Receipt of Certain Foreign Gifts.
• Form 8938, Statement of Foreign Financial Assets.
FORM 114 (FORMERLY TDF 90-22.1) —
REPORT OF FOREIGN BANK AND FINANCIAL
ACCOUNTS (“FBAR”)
If you are a U.S. person (including a corporation, partnership,
exempt organization, trust or estate) and have a financial interest in or signature authority over a foreign financial account, you
may be subject to FBAR reporting.
The FBAR must be filed on an annual basis if you have a financial interest in or signature authority over one or more financial
accounts in a foreign country with an aggregate value exceeding
$10,000 at any time during the year. The 2015 FBAR is due on
June 30, 2016.
There are no extensions available for filing the 2015
form and it must be filed electronically. Beginning with the 2016
FBAR and forward, the due date for this form will be April 15 of
the following year instead of June 30 and filers will be able to seek
a 6-month extension of this deadline.
Note: U.S. citizens residing abroad will receive an automatic extension of time to file the FBAR until June 15 of the following year and
an additional four month extension will be granted upon request.
The
requirement for submission of both new and amended filings for all years
must be done online and CPAs can file FBAR forms on behalf of their
clients as long as they have a document granting them that authority.
Financial accounts include bank, securities, derivatives, foreign
mutual funds or other financial accounts (including any savings,
demand, checking, deposit, annuity, or life insurance contract other
than term insurance or other account maintained with a financial
institution). The IRS continues to suspend the reporting of offshore
commingled funds, such as hedge funds and private equity funds.
A financial interest in an account includes being the owner of
record or having legal title, even if acting as an agent, nominee,
or in some other capacity on behalf of a U.S. person.
Taxpayers
who have signatory authority over accounts owned by others (e.g.,
minor children, parents, etc.) are also reportable. A financial interest also includes an account held by a corporation in which you
own, directly or indirectly, more than 50% of the total voting power
or value of shares; a partnership in which you own an interest of
more than 50% in the capital or profits; or a trust as to which
you or any other U.S. person has a present beneficial interest in
international tax planning and reporting requirements
year.
Information on Form 1042-S may also be reported to the tax
authorities in the recipients’ country of residence.
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EisnerAmper 2016 personal tax guide
more than 50% of the assets or receives more than 50% of the
current income.
In the case of a non-willful failure to file the FBAR, the IRS may
impose a maximum penalty of $10,000 per account. New procedures issued by the IRS in 2015 limit the maximum penalty
imposed where there is willfulness. The memo specifically instructs
examiners to calculate a single penalty for all years combined
and then allocate it to each year. The single penalty is 50% of the
highest aggregate balance in any of the years under examination.
Criminal penalties could also be assessed for willful violations.
Note: In previous years the maximum penalty was the greater of
$100,000 or 50% of the highest balance in the account during the year.
OFFSHORE VOLUNTARY DISCLOSURE
PROGRAMS
Since 2009 the IRS has offered various programs designed for taxpayers to voluntary disclose previously unreported foreign income
or assets.
Two of the programs which focus on disclosure of foreign
assets are the Offshore Voluntary Disclosure Program (“OVDP”)
and the Streamlined Filing Compliance Procedure (“SFCP”). Both
programs provide an opportunity for taxpayers to come forward
and disclose unreported foreign income and file information returns
while paying a reduced penalty or, in some cases, no penalty at all.
In the case of the OVDP, the individual may also avoid criminal
prosecution. In 2014 the IRS announced important changes to both
programs.
Specifically, the IRS imposed stricter requirements and
potentially higher penalties for taxpayers participating in the OVDP,
and expanded the original SFCP program in taxpayer friendly ways
to include taxpayers residing both in the U.S. and abroad.
Note: There is no set application deadline for these programs and the
IRS can change the terms, increase penalties or decide to end them
altogether at any time. Thus, taxpayers who can benefit from participating in these programs should act promptly.
FORM 8621, RETURN BY A SHAREHOLDER OF A
PASSIVE FOREIGN INVESTMENT COMPANY OR
QUALIFIED ELECTING FUND
U.S.
persons who invest in a foreign corporation which is a PFIC are
subject to the harsh PFIC regime. Unless a qualified electing fund
(“QEF”) election or mark-to-market (“MTM”) election is made
they will pay tax on gains from the sale of the investment or on
certain distributions from the PFIC (“excess distribution”). Also if
neither of these 2 elections is made, upon disposition of all or some
of the PFIC stock or certain distributions (“excess distributions”)
the harsh PFIC rules will also apply.
These rules require a ratable
allocation of any gain over the years during which the shares were
held and that gain is taxed at the highest rate on ordinary income
in effect for each of the years involved, rather than the beneficial
long-term capital gains rate in the year of disposition. An interest
charge is also imposed on the tax, and begins running from the
period to which such gain is allocated. In certain situations, this
tax can exceed 100% of the gain (ergo, “harsh”).
Classification as a PFIC occurs when 75% or more of the corporation’s income is passive or when more than 50% of the
corporation’s assets generate passive income.
Passive income
includes, but is not limited to, interest, dividends, and capital gains.
U.S. shareholders who make the QEF election on Form 8621 are
required to annually include in income the pro rata share of the
ordinary earnings and net capital gains of the corporation, whether
or not distributed, thus avoiding the onerous PFIC tax.
Alternatively, a shareholder of a PFIC may make a mark-to-market
election on Form 8621 for marketable PFIC stock. If the election
is made, the shareholder includes in income each year an amount
equal to the excess, if any, of the fair market value of the PFIC stock
as of the close of the tax year over the shareholder’s adjusted
basis in the stock; or deducts the excess of the PFIC’s adjusted
basis over its fair market value at the close of the tax year (the
deduction is limited to cumulative income that was included in
previous years).
If the election is made, the PFIC rules do not apply.
Amounts included in income or deducted under the MTM election,
as well as gain or loss on the actual sale or other disposition of the
PFIC stock, are treated as ordinary income or loss.
U.S. persons (i.e., individuals, corporations, partnerships, trusts,
and estates) owning PFICs are required to file Form 8621 regardless of whether an excess distribution has occurred or an election
has been made. This applies to U.S.
shareholders who own shares
directly and indirectly who are at the lowest tier of a chain of
companies.
Ownership of PFIC stock through another U.S. taxpayer may also
trigger reporting in certain instances. U.S.
persons who are required
to include an amount in income under the QEF or MTM regimes
for PFIC stock held through another U.S. taxpayer are not required
to file if another shareholder through which the U.S. person holds
the PFIC stock timely files.
The filing applies to domestic estates,
non-grantor trusts and U.S. owners of domestic or foreign grantor
trusts that own PFIC stock.
U.S. persons who are beneficiaries of foreign estates and foreign
non-grantor trusts that have made QEF or MTM elections are
required to file, while those beneficiaries of domestic estates or
trusts are only required to file if the estate or trust fails to file the
form.
U.S. beneficiaries are required to report in any case in which
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There are 4 categories which define who is required to file the form
and how much information must be provided. The categories are:
A limited filing exception applies for certain shareholders with
respect to an interest owned in a PFIC for which the shareholder
is subject to PFIC tax where no QEF or MTM election is in effect.
The exception applies only if the shareholder is not subject to
PFIC tax with respect to any excess distributions or gains treated
as excess distributions and either (A) the aggregate value of all
PFIC stock owned by the shareholder at the end of the tax year
of the shareholder does not exceed $25,000 ($50,000 for joint
filers), or (B) the PFIC stock is owned by the shareholder through
another PFIC, and the value of the shareholder’s proportionate
share of the upper-tier PFIC interest in the lower-tier PFIC does
not exceed $5,000.
• Category 1: A U.S. person who owned more than a 50% interest
FORM 926, RETURN BY A U.S. TRANSFEROR OF
PROPERTY TO A FOREIGN CORPORATION
Form 926 is used to report certain transfers of tangible or intangible property to a foreign corporation.
While there are certain
exceptions to the filing, generally the following special rules apply
to reportable transfers:
• If the transferor is a partnership, the U.S. partners of the partnership, not the partnership itself, are required to report the transfer
on Form 926 based on the partner’s proportionate share of the
transferred property.
• If the transfer includes cash, the transfer is reportable on Form
926 if immediately after the transfer the person holds, directly or
indirectly, at least 10% of the total voting power or the total value
of the foreign corporation, or the amount of cash transferred by
the person to the foreign corporation during the 12-month period
ending on the date the transfer exceeds $100,000.
The penalty for failure to comply with the reporting requirements
is 10% of the fair market value of the property at the time of the
transfer, limited to $100,000 if the failure to comply was not due
to intentional disregard.
FORM 8865, RETURN OF U.S. PERSONS WITH
RESPECT TO CERTAIN FOREIGN PARTNERSHIPS
Form 8865 is required to report information with respect to controlled foreign partnerships, transfers to foreign partnerships, or
acquisitions, dispositions, and changes in foreign partnership ownership.
A separate Form 8865, along with the applicable schedules,
is required for each foreign partnership.
in a foreign partnership at any time during the partnership’s
tax year.
• Category 2: A U.S. person who at any time during the tax year
of the foreign partnership owned a 10% or greater interest in
the partnership while the partnership was controlled by U.S.
persons each owing at least 10% interest. However, if there was
a Category 1 filer at any time during that tax year, no person will
be considered a Category 2 filer.
• Category 3: A U.S.
person, including a related person, who
contributed property during that person’s tax year to a foreign
partnership in exchange for an interest in the partnership, if that
person either owned directly or indirectly at least a 10% interest
in the foreign partnership immediately after the contribution, or
the value of the property contributed by such person or related
person exceeds $100,000. If a domestic partnership contributes
property to a foreign partnership, the partners are considered
to have transferred a proportionate share of the contributed
property to the foreign partnership. However, if the domestic
partnership files Form 8865 and properly reports all the required
information with respect to the contribution, its partners will
generally not be required to report the transfer.
Category 3 also
includes a U.S. person that previously transferred appreciated
property to the partnership and was required to report that
transfer under IRC section 6038B, if the foreign partnership
disposed of such property while the U.S. person remained a
partner in the partnership.
• Category 4: A U.S.
person who had acquired or disposed of or
had a change in proportional interest may be required to report
under this category if certain requirements are met.
A penalty of $10,000 can be assessed for failure to furnish the
required information within the time prescribed. This penalty is
applied for each tax year of each foreign partnership. Furthermore,
once the IRS has sent out a notification of the failure to report the
information, an additional $10,000 penalty can be assessed for
each 30-day period that the failure continues, up to a maximum
of $50,000 for each failure.
international tax planning and reporting requirements
the beneficiary receives an excess distribution or recognizes gains
treated as excess distributions.
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FORM 5471, INFORMATION RETURN OF
U.S. PERSONS WITH RESPECT TO CERTAIN
FOREIGN CORPORATIONS
Form 5471 is used to satisfy the reporting requirement for U.S.
persons who are officers, directors, or shareholders in certain
foreign corporations. You will be required to file this form if you
meet one of the following tests (Category 1 has been repealed):
• Category 2: You are a U.S. person who is an officer or director
of a foreign corporation in which a U.S.
person has acquired
stock that makes him/her a 10% owner with respect to the
foreign corporation, or acquired an additional 10% or more of
the outstanding stock of the foreign corporation.
• Category 3:
You are a U.S. person who acquires stock in a
foreign corporation which, when added to any stock owned on
the date of acquisition or without regard to stock already owned,
meets the 10% stock ownership requirement with respect to
the foreign corporation, or
One of the issues faced by U.S. multinationals is that profits earned
by foreign subsidiaries can often be subjected to U.S.
federal
income tax, even if the cash that represents those earnings is not
repatriated. This is the result of the wide variety of anti-deferral
rules introduced by Congress over the years.
Most notably, Subpart F was designed to currently tax the types
of income that could be easily moved into low tax jurisdictions,
such as dividends, interest, rents and royalties. The anti-deferral
rules aim to subject such income to federal tax in the year in which
the subsidiary earns it.
The CFC look-through rule provides that
certain dividends, interest, rents and royalties paid between related
parties are excluded from the calculation of Subpart F. Accordingly
the look-through rule operates to reduce the global effective tax
rate for many multinational companies.
Observation: The look-through rule for related par ies has been pert
manently extended as a result of PATH.
• You are a U.S. person who disposes of sufficient stock in the
Another oft-encountered rule under the Subpart F regime is the
rule which limits the CFC’s investment in U.S.
Under this provision
if a CFC extends a loan to its U.S. shareholder or a party related to
its U.S. shareholder, the loan is deemed a dividend for U.S.
taxpayers. Included in the definition of a loan are certain trade receivables
as well as using the CFC as collateral or as a guarantor to obtain
a bank loan in the U.S.
Category 4: You are a U.S. shareholder who owns more than
50% of the total combined voting power of all classes of stock
entitled to vote or more than 50% of the total value of the stock
in a foreign corporation for an uninterrupted period of 30 days
or more during any tax year of the foreign corporation.
FORM 3520, ANNUAL RETURN TO REPORT
TRANSACTIONS WITH FOREIGN TRUSTS
AND RECEIPT OF CERTAIN FOREIGN GIFTS
AND FORM 3520-A, ANNUAL INFORMATION
RETURN OF FOREIGN TRUST WITH A U.S.
OWNER
• You are a person who becomes a U.S.
person while meeting
the 10% stock ownership requirement with respect to the
foreign corporation, or
foreign corporation to reduce your interest to less than the
10% stock ownership requirement.
•
• Category 5: You are a U.S. shareholder who owns stock in a
controlled foreign corporation (“CFC”) for an uninterrupted
period of 30 days or more and who owns the stock on the last
day of that year. A CFC is defined as a foreign corporation that
has U.S.
shareholders (counting only those with at least a 10%
interest) that own on any day of the tax year of the foreign
corporation more than 50% of the total combined voting power
of all classes of its voting stock, or the total value of the stock
of the corporation.
Note: Certain constructive ownership rules apply in determining stock
ownership for these purposes.
The same penalties that apply for failure to file Form 8865 also
apply to Form 5471 (see the discussion in the previous section).
The information required to properly complete the Form 5471 can
be extensive and at times difficult to obtain.
U.S. persons who either create a foreign trust, receive distributions from a foreign trust, or receive gifts or bequests from foreign
persons are required to file Form 3520.
A foreign trust is defined as a trust in which either a court outside
of the U.S. is able to exercise primary supervision over the administration of the trust or one or more non-U.S.
persons have the
authority to control all substantial decisions of the trust.
The information return must be filed in connection with the formation of a foreign trust, the transfer of cash or other assets by the
settlor or grantor to a foreign trust, and the receipt of any distributions by a U.S. beneficiary from a foreign trust. Any uncompensated
use of foreign trust property (e.g., real estate or personal property)
by a U.S.
grantor, U.S. beneficiary, or any related person is treated
as a distribution to the grantor or beneficiary equal to the fair
market value of the use of the property and must be reported. The
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In October 2014, the IRS made it easier for taxpayers who hold
interests in certain Canadian retirement plans to get favorable U.S.
tax treatment and took additional steps to simplify procedures for
U.S. taxpayers with these plans.
Gifts or bequests that you receive in the form of money or property from a non-resident alien (including a foreign estate) that is
valued in the aggregate at more than $100,000 annually and gifts
in excess of $15,601 in 2015 ($15,671 for 2016) from a foreign
corporation or foreign partnership are also reported on Form 3520.
Eligible U.S. citizens and residents with interests in these retirement
plans will now be treated as automatically making a retroactive
election to defer U.S. income tax on income accruing in their
Canadian retirement plans until a distribution is made.
The annual
filing of the Form 8891 is eliminated.
Form 3520 must be filed by the due date of your individual income
tax return, including extensions. The failure to do so may subject
you to a penalty of 35% of the gross value of any property transferred to the trust, 35% of the gross value of the distributions
received from the trust, or 5% of the amount of certain foreign
gifts for each month for which the gift goes unreported (not to
exceed 25% of the gift).
U.S. citizens and resident aliens qualify for this special treatment
as long as they filed and continue to file U.S.
returns for any year
they held an interest in an RRSP or RRIF and include distributions
as income on their U.S. returns.
In addition to the filing requirements of Form 3520, there is also
a requirement to file Form 3520-A, Annual Information Return of
Foreign Trust With a U.S. Owner, which is an annual information
return of a foreign trust with at least one U.S.
owner and which is
considered a grantor trust. If you are a U.S. person who directly or
indirectly transfers property to a foreign trust, the trust is presumed
to have a U.S.
beneficiary and is considered a grantor trust unless
you can demonstrate that under the terms of the agreement, no
income or corpus of the trust can be paid or accumulated for the
benefit of a U.S. person. As the U.S.
owner, you are responsible for
ensuring that the foreign trust annually furnishes certain information to the IRS and the other owners and beneficiaries of the trust.
Form 3520-A must be filed by March 15 after the foreign trust’s
tax year, in the case of a calendar-year trust. A 6-month extension
can be requested on IRS Form 7004.
FORM 8891, U.S. INFORMATION RETURN
FOR BENEFICIARIES OF CERTAIN CANADIAN
REGISTERED RETIREMENT PLANS
For years prior to 2014, U.S.
citizens or resident beneficiaries of
certain Canadian retirement plans (e.g., RRSPs and RRIFs) were
subject to U.S. income taxation on income accrued in the plan
annually even though the income was not currently distributed
to the beneficiary. Canada does not tax the accrued income, like
the U.S.
does, until distributions are made out of the plan. To deal
with this potential mismatch and avoid double taxation, the United
States-Canada income tax treaty provides relief. Prior to October
2014, an election had to be made annually on Form 8891 to defer
taxation.
Taxpayers who have previously reported on their U.S.
federal
income tax returns undistributed accrued income in a Canadian
retirement plan during a tax year are not eligible individuals under
the 2014 procedure and will remain currently taxable on the undistributed income. These taxpayers, if they now want to make an
election with respect to a Canadian retirement plan, must seek
the consent of the IRS.
FORM 8938, STATEMENT OF FOREIGN
FINANCIAL ASSETS
U.S. citizens or resident aliens filing joint returns who hold, at
the end of the year, an aggregate of more than $100,000 (or
$50,000 for single taxpayers) in certain foreign assets (e.g., a
foreign financial account, an interest in a foreign entity, or any
financial instrument or contract held for investment that is held
and issued by a foreigner) will be required to report information
about those assets on Form 8938.
Those taxpayers filing jointly
who hold $150,000 (or $75,000 for singles) in foreign assets at
any time during the year also have a filing obligation regardless of
whether the end-of-year threshold is met. This requirement is in
addition to the FBAR reporting. Form 8938 is part of the annual
income tax return, whereas the FBAR is filed separately.
Other thresholds apply to individuals residing outside of the U.S.
Also, individuals not required to file a U.S.
income tax return for the
tax year are not required to file Form 8938 even if the aggregate
value of the specified foreign financial assets is more than the
appropriate reporting threshold and there is a reporting exception
for foreign financial assets reported on certain information returns.
international tax planning and reporting requirements
use or loan of trust property will not be considered a distribution
to the extent the loan is repaid with a market rate interest or the
user makes a payment equal to the fair market value of such use
within a reasonable time frame.
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Noncompliance with these rules for any tax year could result in
a failure-to-file penalty of $10,000 and continuing failure to file
penalties up to $50,000. In addition, a 40% understatement
penalty for underpayment of tax as a result of a transaction
involving an undisclosed specified foreign financial asset can be
assessed; Criminal penalties may also apply.
For tax returns filed after March 18, 2010, the statute of limitations
for assessing tax with regard to cross-border transactions or
for certain foreign assets will be extended for 3 years from the
date certain informational reporting is submitted related to
the transaction or the asset if the failure to report was due to
reasonable cause and not willful omission. If an omission is in
excess of $5,000 related to a foreign financial asset, the statute
of limitations will be extended from 3 years to 6 years and would
not begin to run until the taxpayer files the return disclosing the
reportable foreign asset.
Observation: The definition of a reportable foreign asset is much
broader than under the FBAR rules and includes interests in offshore
hedge funds, private equity funds, and real estate holding companies.
FOREIGN ACCOUNT TAX COMPLIANCE ACT—
FATCA
Beginning July 1, 2014, foreign financial institutions are required
to report directly to the IRS certain information about financial
accounts held by U.S. taxpayers, or by foreign entities in which
U.S.
taxpayers hold a substantial ownership interest. To properly
comply, a foreign financial institution was required to enter into a
special agreement with the IRS by June 30, 2014. A participating
institution will be required to implement certain due diligence
procedures prior to opening an account, identify U.S.
account holders who have opened accounts or after the effective date of the
agreement, and have certain procedures for pre-existing accounts.
The U.S. account holder will need to provide the institution Form
W-9 to identify the status as a U.S. person and the institution will
report the information to the IRS.
Those institutions that do not
participate and account owners unwilling to provide information
will be subject to a 30% withholding tax on certain U.S.-sourced
payments including interest, dividends and proceeds from the
sale of securities.
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state tax issues
state tax
issues
New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Pennsylvania, and
California tax most of the income subject to federal
income tax, but all five states either limit or exclude the
itemized deductions you claimed on your federal return.
Florida does not impose income taxes on individuals.
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chart
INTRODUCTION
You do not get a complete picture of your personal tax situation
until you consider the impact of income taxes in the state or
states where you work or live, or from which you derive certain
types of income. Each state has specific tax laws so the impact
can be very different depending on the state jurisdictions in which
you are subject to tax. This chapter is devoted to providing a
summary of the state income taxes that may impact you if you
work or live in the states of New York, New Jersey, Connecticut,
Pennsylvania and California. Florida does not impose a personal
income tax.
But before we discuss the factors that distinguish these states
from each other, we should point out the rules relating to income
exclusions, which are quite similar:
14
2015-2016 MAXIMUM
NEW YORK TAX RATES
State or City
Maximum Tax Rates
New York State
8.82%
New York City
3.876%
For 2012-2017, the maximum NYS tax rate is applicable for married
filing joint taxpayers with income over $2 million.
For income under $2
million, the top rate is 6.85%.
INCOME EXCLUSIONS
New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Pennsylvania and California
do not tax the following items of income:
•
Interest on obligations of:
1. The U.S. and its possessions, such as Puerto Rico (e.g., U.S.
Treasury bills and bonds),
• State and local income tax refunds (since they do not allow a
deduction for payments of state and local income taxes).
• Social Security benefits.
• Certain pension and retirement benefits, subject to various
limitations, including the payor of the pension, the age of the
recipient, and which state is being considered.
2. Governmental agencies and municipalities within your state
of residence, and
NEW YORK
3. Port Authority of New York and New Jersey for residents of
New York and New Jersey, including such interest earned
through bond funds.
TAX RATES
Caution: New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Pennsylvania and
California tax the interest income from municipal bonds issued by any
other state. A mutual fund needs to have at least 50% of its assets
invested in tax-exempt U.S.
obligations and/or in California or its
municipal obligations in order for any “exempt-interest dividends” to be
exempt from California tax. The amount of income that can be excluded
from California is based on the percentage of assets so invested.
A mutual fund needs to have at least 80% of its assets in tax-exempt
U.S. obligations and/or in New Jersey or its municipal obligations
in order for “exempt-interest dividends” to be exempt from New
Jersey tax.
The amount of income that can be excluded from New
Jersey is based upon the percentage of assets so invested. However,
distributions from mutual funds attributable to interest from federal
obligations are exempt from New Jersey tax irrespective of whether
the 80% test is met.
Chart 14 shows the maximum tax rates imposed by New York
State and New York City. These rates apply to all types of income
since New York does not have lower tax rates for net long-term
capital gains or qualifying dividend income.
DEDUCTION ADJUSTMENTS
Your allowable federal itemized deductions are reduced if your
New York adjusted gross income (“NYAGI”) exceeds $200,000
($100,000 for single or married filing separately filers).
The
reduction starts at 25% and increases to 50% if your NYAGI
exceeds $525,000 and is below $1 million. New York completely
eliminates itemized deductions, except for 50% of charitable
contributions, for taxpayers with more than $1 million of NYAGI.
This reduction is in addition to the disallowance of state and local
income and sales taxes. For tax years beginning before 2016, the
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New York State allows a deduction of $1,000 for each dependent.
In addition, New York State allows a deduction for some qualified
education expenses, subject to certain limitations.
BONUS DEPRECIATION
New York State does not conform to federal rules regarding
bonus depreciation, as discussed in the business owner issues
and depreciation deductions chapter.
The exception to this rule is that federal bonus depreciation is
allowed in limited areas of Lower Manhattan — the “Liberty Zone,”
south of Canal Street to the East River; and the “Resurgence Zone,”
south of Houston Street and north of Canal Street.
To the extent you take advantage of bonus depreciation on your
federal return, either directly or from a pass-through entity, you will
need to recompute your New York depreciation without applying
the bonus depreciation rules. New York State does conform to
the federal rules regarding IRC Section 179 depreciation expense,
as discussed in the business owner issues and depreciation
deductions chapter.
NEW YORK LONG-TERM CARE
INSURANCE CREDIT
New York State allows a credit equal to 20% of the premiums paid
during the tax year for the purchase or continuing coverage under
a qualifying long-term care insurance policy.
FAMILY TAX RELIEF AND “CIRCUIT BREAKER”
TAX CREDITS
For tax years 2014 through 2016, there is a refundable credit of
$350 available for New York residents with NYAGI of at least
$40,000 but not more than $300,000 who claimed one or more
dependent children under the age of 17 on the last day of the tax
year and had a tax liability that was equal to or greater than zero.
Qualifying New York City residents can claim a credit against
property taxes paid when property tax exceeds a percentage,
varying from 4 to 6%, of their income. Both homeowners and
renters are eligible, and the amount of property tax deemed paid
by renters is set at 15.75% of adjusted rent paid in the taxable year.
NEW YORK CITY UBT
Self-employed persons working in New York City are subject
to a 4% Unincorporated Business Tax (“UBT”) if their total
unincorporated business gross income exceeds $85,000 (after the
maximum allowance for taxpayer’s services of $10,000 (limited
to 20% of UBT income) and a $5,000 exemption).
New York City residents can claim a credit against their NYC
personal income tax for a portion of the UBT paid by them,
including their share of the UBT tax paid by a partnership. The
credit is 100% of the UBT paid if your taxable income is $42,000
or less, gradually declining as your income reaches $142,000, at
which point the credit is limited to 23% of the UBT paid.
Beginning in 2009, single sales factor is being phased in over 10
years.
For 2015, the allocation formula was 80% receipts, 10%
payroll and 10% property. For 2016, the allocation is 87%, 6.5%,
6.5% and for 2017 it is 93%, 3.5%, 3.5%.
METROPOLITAN COMMUTER
TRANSPORTATION MOBILITY TAX (“MCTMT”)
Beginning in 2009, a tax was imposed on employers and selfemployed individuals engaged in business within the 5 boroughs
of New York City and the counties of Nassau, Rockland, Orange,
Putnam, Suffolk, Dutchess and Westchester. A graduated tax rate
between 0.11% and 0.34% applies to employers based upon the
amount of quarterly payroll.
For quarters beginning on or after
April 1, 2012, payroll must be greater than $312,500 in a calendar
quarter before the employer tax applies. The tax also applies to
self-employed individuals, including partners in partnerships and
members of LLCs that are treated as partnerships based on their
net earnings from self-employment allocated to the MCTD. The tax
does not apply if the allocated net earnings from self-employment
are $50,000 or less for the year.
COLLEGE SAVINGS PROGRAM, CREDITS
AND EXPENSES
New York State has a program that allows you to make
contributions to Section 529 plans as discussed in detail in
the chapter on education incentives.
New York State allows a
deduction up to $5,000 ($10,000 if married filing jointly) if paid
to a New York Section 529 plan.
state tax issues
charitable contribution deduction for taxpayers with a NYAGI of
more than $10 million is reduced to 25% of the corresponding
federal deduction. For tax years beginning in or after 2016, all
taxpayers with more than $1 million of NYAGI are subject to the
50% reduction of the federal charitable contribution deduction.
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In addition, a tuition credit or itemized deduction is available
if you were a full-year New York State resident or your spouse
or dependent (for whom you taken an exemption) was an
undergraduate student enrolled at or who attended an institution
of higher education and paid qualified tuition expenses, and are not
claimed on another person’s return. The credit may be as much
as $400 per student; 4% of qualified expenses up to $10,000.
Alternatively, the maximum tuition deduction is $10,000 per
student. You may claim the credit or the deduction, but not both.
NEW JERSEY
TAX RATES
The maximum tax rate imposed by New Jersey is 8.97%. This
rate applies to all types of income since New Jersey does not
have lower tax rates for net long-term capital gains or qualifying
dividend income.
Note: For New Jersey, the marginal tax rate for single taxpayers with
taxable income in excess of $75,000 but less than $500,000 is 6.37%.
Married/civil union partner taxpayers filing jointly are subject to the
6.37% rate on income in excess of $150,000 but less than $500,000.
Single and married/civil union partner taxpayers filing jointly with
incomes over $500,000 are subject to a top marginal rate of 8.97%.
DEDUCTION ADJUSTMENTS
Except as noted below, no deduction is allowed for itemized
deductions since New Jersey is a “gross income” state.
In addition
to the income exclusions noted above, New Jersey allows the
following deductions to reduce your taxable income:
• Personal exemptions of $1,000 each for you and your spouse
(or domestic partner). New Jersey allows a $1,500 personal
exemption for each dependent child or other dependent (who
qualifies as your dependent for federal income tax purposes).
Taxpayers 65 years of age or over at the close of the taxable year,
blind, or disabled, and certain dependents attending college are
allowed an additional $1,000 exemption.
• Alimony, separate maintenance, or spousal support payments to
the extent they are includible in the gross income of the recipient
(regardless of where the recipient lives).
• Medical expenses in excess of 2% of New Jersey gross income.
• The 50% portion of business travel and entertainment expenses
that is disallowed on your federal return for self-employed
individuals, business owners, and partners in a partnership.
• Property taxes up to a maximum of $10,000 paid on a personal
residence.
• Tenants are allowed a property tax deduction based on 18% of
the rent paid during the year.
If you are considered a self-employed individual for federal income
tax purposes or you received wages from an S corporation in which
you were a more than 2% shareholder, you may deduct the amount
you paid during the year for health insurance for yourself, your
spouse/civil-union partner/domestic partner, and your dependents.
The amount of the deduction may not exceed the amount of your
earned income, as defined for federal income tax purposes, derived
from the business under which the insurance plan was established.
You may not deduct any amounts paid for health insurance
coverage for any month during the year in which you were eligible
to participate in any subsidized plan maintained by your (or your
spouse’s/civil-union partner’s/domestic partner’s) employer. Note
that for federal tax purposes, you may be able to deduct amounts
paid for health insurance for any child of yours who is under the age
of 27 at the end of 2015.
However, for New Jersey purposes, you
may deduct such amounts only if the child was your dependent.
NEW JERSEY BUSINESS INCOME
New Jersey requires taxpayers to report gross income by category.
Prior to 2012, a loss within one category of income could only be
applied against other income within that same category. Thus, a
net loss in one category of income could not be applied against
income or gains in another (e.g., net profits from business). As
outlined below, there have been significant changes to the New
Jersey business tax regime for years after 2011.
In 2011, legislation established an alternative business calculation
under the gross income tax as a mechanism that permits taxpayers
who generate income from different types of business entities to
offset gains from one type of business with losses from another,
and permits taxpayers to carry forward business-related losses
for a period of up to 20 taxable years.
The law specifically permits taxpayers to net gains and losses
derived from one or more of the following business-related
categories of gross income: net profits from business; net gains
or net income from rents, royalties, patents, and copyrights;
distributive share of partnership income; and net pro rata share of S
corporation income.
The law specifies that a taxpayer who sustains
a loss from a sole proprietorship may apply that loss against
income derived from a partnership, subchapter S corporation, or
rents and royalties, but is prohibited from applying losses from
these categories to income that is not related to the taxpayer’s
conduct of the taxpayer’s own business, including salaries and
wages, the disposition of property, and interest and dividends.
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The law also phases in the tax savings equally over 5 years
beginning with tax year 2012. Once fully implemented, the
maximum savings will be equal to 50% of the savings that would
accrue from unlimited netting between these income categories
and the net loss carry forward.
In 2012, New Jersey repealed the “regular place of business” rule
and the “throw-out” rule for corporations. With the repeal of the
“regular place of business” rule, businesses in New Jersey are
now able to apportion income outside of the state even if they do
not maintain an office outside New Jersey. Repeal of the “throwout” rule eliminates the requirement to throw sales out of the
denominator of the gross receipts factor for sales to jurisdictions
that do not impose certain business taxes.
Commencing in 2012, there was a 3-year phase-out of the property
and payroll factors for apportioning income to New Jersey.
This
law modifies the Corporation Business Tax formula used to
determine the portion of the income of a corporation subject to
tax by New Jersey from a 3-factor formula to a single sales factor
formula. Beginning in 2014, the apportionment formula was fully
phased in using the receipts factor at 100%. Single sales factor
apportionment only applies to C corporations and S corporations
and not entities taxed as partnerships or sole proprietorships.
IRC SECTION 179 EXPENSE
New Jersey permits a limited IRC Section 179 deduction of up to a
maximum of $25,000.
If you have more than one business, farm
or profession, you may not deduct more than a total of $25,000
of IRC Section 179 costs for all activities. To the extent higher IRC
Section 179 deductions were taken for federal purposes, you will
need to recompute your New Jersey deduction.
COLLEGE SAVINGS PROGRAM
New Jersey does not provide for a college savings credit or
deduction.
NEW JERSEY HOMESTEAD BENEFIT
AND SENIOR FREEZE (PROPERTY TAX
REIMBURSEMENT) PROGRAMS
These programs provide property tax relief for amounts paid on
a principal residence.
Senior Freeze Program
The Senior Freeze Program provides for a reimbursement of
the difference between the amount of property taxes paid for
the base year and the amount for which you are applying for a
reimbursement. Applicants must meet the following conditions to
be eligible for a Senior Freeze property tax reimbursement:
• Have been age 65 or older OR receiving federal Social Security
disability benefits;
Note: New Jersey withholding tax calculations for nonresident partners
will continue to be based on the corporate apportionment formulas as
modified by the laws above.
This could result in a significant disparity
between income subject to tax by New Jersey for nonresident partners
and the amount of nonresident withholding tax on the same income.
BONUS DEPRECIATION
New Jersey has not conformed to federal rules regarding bonus
depreciation. See the chapter on business owner issues and
depreciation deductions.
• Have lived in New Jersey for at least 10 years as either a homeowner or a renter;
• Have owned and lived in your home for at least 3 years;
• Have paid the full amount of the property taxes due on the home
for the base year and each succeeding year up to and including
the year in which you are claiming the reimbursement; and
• Have met the income limits for the base year and for each
succeeding year up to and including the year for which you are
claiming the reimbursement. These limits apply regardless of
marital/civil-union status.
However, applicants who are married
or in a civil-union must report combined income of both spouses/
civil-union partners.
Note: Under the terms of the State Budget for FY 2016, only those
applicants whose income for 2013 did not exceed $84,289 and whose
state tax issues
The law provides that net losses from business-related categories
of income may be carried forward and applied against income in
future taxable years. The law limits the application of net losses
which are carried forward to gains and losses from the same
business-related categories of income from which the net loss is
derived, and allows the losses to be carried forward for a period
of up to 20 taxable years following the year the net loss occurs.
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income for 2014 did not exceed $70,000 (the original limit was $85,553)
will be eligible to receive reimbursements for 2014 provided they met
all the other program requirements. Residents whose 2014 income was
over $70,000 but not over $85,553 will not receive reimbursements for
2014, even if they met all the other program requirements. The Division
of Taxation will send notices to these applicants advising them that they
are not eligible to receive reimbursement payments for 2014. However,
by having filed an application by the October 15, 2015 extended due
date, these residents established their eligibility for benefits in future
years and ensure that they will be mailed an application for 2015.
RECAPTURE TAX AMOUNT FOR TAXPAYERS IN
HIGHER INCOME BRACKETS
A taxpayer whose Connecticut AGI exceeds the income thresholds
specified below, after computing his or her Connecticut income tax
liability using the applicable tax rates, and after applying the 3%
phase-out provision, is required to add the recapture amount of
tax as indicated below.
The result of the recapture tax is essentially
that the entire AGI is taxed at the highest income tax rate, without
the benefit of graduated rates.
The program is expected to continue in 2016 for property taxes
paid in 2015.
• Filing status is “Single”
Homestead Benefit Program
• Filing status is “Head of household:” If Connecticut AGI is more
or “Married filing separately:” If
Connecticut AGI is more than $200,000.
than $320,000.
The requirements for the Homestead Benefit are slightly different,
have different filings deadlines and are not age-based. It is possible
to be eligible for both the Homestead Benefit Program and the
Senior Freeze (Property Tax Reimbursement) program, but the
amount of benefits received cannot exceed the amount of property
taxes paid on their principal residence.
CONNECTICUT
TAX RATES
• Filing status is “Joint” or “Qualifying widow(er):” If Connecticut
AGI is more than $400,000.
DEDUCTION ADJUSTMENTS
No deductions are allowed for itemized deductions, as Connecticut
is a “gross income” state, as modified by the income exclusions
noted above.
The maximum tax rate imposed by Connecticut is 6.99%. This
rate applies to all types of income since Connecticut does not
have lower tax rates for net long-term capital gains or qualifying
dividend income.
Connecticut allows resident individual taxpayers’ income tax
credits for real estate and personal property taxes paid to
Connecticut political subdivisions on their primary residences or
privately owned or leased motor vehicles.
The maximum credit
amount cannot exceed your personal tax liability. These credits
are phased out for higher income persons.
Note: The maximum tax rate for Connecticut is 6.9% for the following
individuals:
BONUS DEPRECIATION
• Filing
status is Single or Married filing separately with
Connecticut taxable income of over $250,000 but not over
$500,000.
• Filing status is Head of Household with Connecticut taxable
income of over $400,000 but not over $800,000.
• Filing status is Joint or Qualifying Widow(er) with Connecticut
taxable income of over $500,000 but not over $1,000,000.
If your taxable income is more than these thresholds, the maximum
tax rate is 6.99%.
Connecticut has conformed to federal rules regarding bonus
depreciation. Connecticut does not allow bonus depreciation for
C corporations.
See the chapter on business owner issues and
depreciation deductions.
. 121
state tax issues
tax tip
27
RESIDENCY CAUTION
Your principal residence is in Connecticut but you work in New York City and maintain an apartment there. During the year you were present
in New York for more than 183 days. You are a statutory resident of both New York State and New York City for tax purposes. As a result,
Connecticut, New York State, and New York City would tax all of your income.
A partial credit is available to offset some of this additional tax.
You can eliminate this tax by being present in New York State for 183 days or less or by eliminating the New York City apartment. By statute,
a partial day in New York is considered a full day spent in New York with minor exceptions. Also, a day working at your home in Connecticut
will be considered by New York to be a day working in New York, while Connecticut will consider it a day working in Connecticut.
Therefore,
income allocated to these days will be taxed by both New York State and Connecticut with no offsetting credit. Be sure to maintain substantiation to support the days in and out of New York.
chart
IRS SECTION 179 EXPENSE
Connecticut does conform to the federal rules regarding IRC
Section 179 depreciation expense as discussed in the business
owner’s issues and depreciation deductions chapter.
2015-2016 MAXIMUM
PENNSYLVANIA TAX RATES
State or City
COLLEGE SAVINGS PROGRAM
Connecticut taxpayers may deduct contributions to the
Connecticut Higher Education Trust from federal AGI, up to
$5,000 for individual filers and $10,000 for joint filers. Amounts
in excess of the maximum allowable contributions may be carried
forward for 5 years after the initial contribution was made.
The “CHET Baby Scholars” program provides up to $250 toward a
newborn’s future college costs.
For children born or adopted on or
after January 1, 2014, CHET Baby Scholars will deposit $100 into
a CHET account. A second deposit of $150 will be made if family
and friends add at least $150 to the child’s enrolled CHET account
within 4 years. The deadline to participate is 12 months after the
child’s birth or adoption and there are no income limitations.
15
Maximum Tax Rates
Pennsylvania
3.07%
Philadelphia
3.924%
See chart 16 for Philadelphia rate of tax withheld on Form W-2.
PENNSYLVANIA
TAX RATES
Pennsylvania imposes a flat tax on all income at a rate of 3.07%
(see Chart 15).
Pennsylvania has 8 categories (buckets) of income,
and income/loss from one bucket may not be used to offset
income/loss from another. The single flat tax rate of 3.07% applies
to all types of income since Pennsylvania does not have lower tax
rates for net long-term capital gains or qualifying dividend income.
Income from a business is subject to allocation and apportionment
to the extent the business is “doing business” both within and
outside of Pennsylvania. The default method is specific allocation if
the taxpayer has books and records to substantiate the allocation.
However, most taxpayers apportion their business income.
The
apportionment formula for Pennsylvania Personal Income Tax
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chart
16
PHILADELPHIA RATE OF TAX WITHHELD
ON FORM W-2 FOR WAGES
Period
Resident
Nonresident
July 1, 2013 - June 30, 2014
3.924%
3.495%
July 1, 2014 - June 30, 2015
3.92%
3.4915%
3.9102%
3.4928%
July 1, 2015 and subsequent years
purposes is an equal-weighted 3-factor method, and the sales
factor utilizes a cost of performance method.
the gross receipts tax are determined on a cost of performance
method for most businesses.
Note: The 3-factor apportionment method, based upon cost of
performance, differs from the corporate tax apportionment method of
a single sales factor based upon market sourcing.
Philadelphia imposes a NPT on the net profits from the operation of
a trade, business, profession, enterprise or other activity conducted
by individuals, LLCs, partnerships, associations or estates and
trusts. The tax is imposed on the entire net profit of any selfemployed person who is a resident of Philadelphia regardless
of the location of the business. It is also imposed on businesses
conducted in Philadelphia by nonresidents. Corporations are not
subject to this tax.
Also, the proportionate amount of partnership,
LLC and other association income attributable to corporate
partners or members is exempt from the NPT. For residents, the
NPT rate is 3.92% for 2014 and 3.9102% for 2015 and for nonresidents the NPT rate is 3.4915% for 2014 and 3.4828% for 2015.
Philadelphia imposes a Wage Tax on compensation earned by
residents of the City and on nonresidents who work within the City.
The tax rate for compensation paid after July 1, 2015 is 3.9102% for
residents and 3.94828% for nonresidents. However, nonresidents
may apportion their income based upon duty days spent working
within the City of Philadelphia.
Philadelphia imposes an unearned income tax, known as the
“School Income Tax,” upon all residents of the City.
The tax rate is
3.9102%, and typically matches the Wage Tax rate. Some examples
of taxable unearned income are dividends, certain rents and royalties, S corporation distributable income, and short-term (held
for 6 months or less) capital gains. Earned income that is otherwise subject to the Philadelphia Business Income and Receipt Tax
(“BIRT”), the Net Profits Tax (“NPT”) or Wage Tax is not subject
to the School Income Tax.
Philadelphia imposes a BIRT, (f/k/a the Business Privilege Tax
(“BPT”)), upon all persons engaged in business within the City.
“Persons” includes individuals, partnerships, associations and
corporations.
Rental activities are usually considered to be business
activities. The BIRT is the sum of 2 taxes; one on income and one
on gross receipts. For 2015, the gross receipts tax rate is 0.1415%,
and the income tax rate is 6.41% on net taxable income.
For the
2014 tax year, the income tax apportionment methodology is
property, payroll and double weighted sales divided by 4. For the
2015 tax year, the income tax apportionment methodology will
be a single sales factor. The sales factor and taxable receipts for
DEDUCTION ADJUSTMENTS
No deductions are allowed for itemized deductions, as Pennsylvania
is a “gross income” state, as modified by the income exclusions
noted above.
BONUS DEPRECIATION
Pennsylvania required that taxpayers add back the federal bonus
depreciation.
The taxpayer may then subtract an amount equal to
3
/7 of the taxpayer’s ordinary depreciation deduction under IRC Sec.
167. The deduction may be claimed in succeeding taxable years
until the entire amount of the addback has been claimed. Any
disallowed depreciation not claimed as a result of the subtraction
may be claimed in the last year that the property is depreciated
for federal tax purposes.
.
123
Pennsylvania permits a limited deduction of up to a maximum
of $25,000 using IRC section 179. If you have more than one
business, farm or profession, you may not deduct more than a total
of $25,000 of IRC section 179 costs for all activities. To the extent
higher Section 179 deductions were taken for federal purposes, you
will need to recompute your Pennsylvania depreciation deductions.
COLLEGE SAVINGS PROGRAM
Pennsylvania allows a deduction of up to the maximum federal
annual exclusion amount of $14,000 ($28,000 if married filing
jointly) for 2014 and 2015 to any Pennsylvania or non-Pennsylvania
529 plan in computing Pennsylvania taxable income.
CALIFORNIA
TAX RATES
California’s top marginal income tax rate is 12.3% for the 2015 tax
year. This rate applies to all types of income since California does
not have lower tax rates for net long-term capital gains or qualifying
dividend income.
The following table shows the 2015 marginal tax rates in effect for
married filing joint taxpayers:
during the year in excess of $200,000.
California’s $200,000 phaseout threshold is not adjusted for inflation.
ESTIMATED TAX PAYMENTS
Installments due shall be 30% of the required annual payment for
the first required installment, 40% of the required annual payment
for the second required installment, and 30% of the required annual
payment for the fourth required installment. No payment is required
for the third installment.
You are to remit all payments electronically once you make an estimate
or extension payment exceeding $20,000 or you file an original return
with a total liability over $80,000 for any taxable year that begins on
or after January 1, 2009. Once you meet the threshold, all subsequent
payments regardless of amount, tax type, or taxable year must be
remitted electronically.
Individuals who do not pay electronically will
be subject to a 1% noncompliance penalty.
There are limits on the use of the prior year’s tax safe harbor. Individuals
who are required to make estimated tax payments, and whose
California AGI is more than $150,000 (or $75,000 for married filing
separately), must figure estimated tax based on the lesser of 90%
of their current year’s tax or 110% of their prior year’s tax including
AMT. Taxpayers with current year California AGI equal or greater
than $1,000,000 (or $500,000 for married filing separately), must
figure estimated tax based on 90% of their tax for the current year.
SUSPENDED NET OPERATING LOSS CARRYOVERS
Taxable Income:
$526,444 or less
9.3%
$526,445 to $631,732
10.3%
$631,733 to $1,052,886
11.3%
Over $1,052,886 12.3%
There is an additional Mental Health Services Tax of 1% for taxable
income in excess of $1,000,000.
BONUS DEPRECIATION
California did not conform to the federal bonus depreciation provisions.
IRC SECTION 179 EXPENSE
California law only allows a maximum deduction of $25,000.
The
California maximum expensing amount is reduced dollar-for-dollar by
the amount of qualified expensing-eligible property placed in service
For taxable years beginning 2008 through 2011, California suspended
the net operating loss deduction. However, taxpayers with MAGI of
less than $500,000 for 2008/2009 and $300,000 for 2010/2011
were not affected by the net operating loss suspension rules.
Taxpayers may continue to compute and carry over net operating
losses during the suspension period. The carryover period for
suspended 2008–2011 losses is extended by one year for losses
incurred in 2010; 2 years for losses incurred in 2009; 3 years for
losses incurred in 2008; and 4 years for losses incurred in taxable
years beginning before 2008.
California allows net operating losses incurred in taxable years
beginning on or after January 1, 2013, to be carried back to each of
the preceding 2 taxable years.
A net operating loss cannot be carried
back to any taxable year before January 1, 2011. For net operating
losses attributable to 2013, the carryback amount to any taxable year
cannot exceed 50% of the net operating loss. For 2014 net operating
losses, the carryback cannot exceed 75% of the net operating loss.
Net operating losses attributable to taxable years beginning on or
state tax issues
IRC SECTION 179
.
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EisnerAmper 2016 personal tax guide
after January 1, 2015 can be carried back in full. A taxpayer may
elect to relinquish the entire carryback period with respect to a net
operating loss for any taxable year. If the taxpayer elects to relinquish
the carryback period, the net operating loss is carried forward only to
the years eligible under the applicable carryover period.
For tax years beginning before January 1, 2015, Florida required that
taxpayers add back to taxable income 100% of Federal Section 179
deductions in excess of $128,000 and deduct 1/7 of the addback each
year for 7 years. For assets placed in service after 2014, no addbacks
are required for section 179 deductions.
FLORIDA
OTHER CONSIDERATIONS
TAX RATES
SAME-SEX MARRIED COUPLES AND REGISTERED
DOMESTIC PARTNERS
Florida does not impose a personal income tax.
PROPERTY TAX EXEMPTIONS
Florida resident property owners may receive an exemption from a
portion of Florida property taxes.
The homestead exemption provides
that the first $25,000 of the value of a taxpayer’s primary, permanent
Florida residence is exempt from all property taxes, including school
district taxes. The second $25,000 of value is fully taxable, and the
third $25,000 of value is exempt from all non-school taxes.
In addition to the homestead exemption, there are $500 exemptions
from property tax available to widows and widowers who have
not remarried and to legally blind individuals. Florida also provides
property tax exemptions for military veterans and military members
deployed during the previous calendar year.
S CORPORATIONS
Florida recognizes the federal S corporation election and does not
impose tax on S corporations except for years when they are liable for
federal tax.
Tax on taxable S corporations is imposed only on built-in
gains and passive investment income. Because Florida does not have
a personal income tax, other S corporation income is not taxed.
Qualified subchapter S subsidiaries are not treated as separate
corporations or entities from the S corporation parent.
BONUS DEPRECIATION AND SECTION 179
EXPENSING
C corporations are taxed in Florida.
Florida conforms to federal rules regarding bonus depreciation for
property placed in service after December 31, 2014.
The Supreme Court’s decision striking down Section 3 of DOMA had
a significant impact on same-sex married couples with regard to their
federal and state income and estate taxes, health care benefits, social
security and retirement benefits.
The U.S. Department of the Treasury and the IRS have ruled that
same-sex couples, legally married in jurisdictions that recognize their
marriages, will be treated as married for all federal law purposes.
The
ruling applies regardless of whether the couple lives in a jurisdiction
that recognizes same-sex marriage or does not recognize same-sex
marriage. This applies for federal income, gift, and estate tax purposes.
This ruling does not apply to registered domestic partnerships, civil
unions or similar formal relationships recognized under state law.
Legally married same-sex couples generally must file their federal
income tax return using either the married filing joint or marred filing
separate status.
Individuals who were in same-sex marriages may, but are not required
to, file original or amended returns choosing to be treated as married
for federal tax law purposes for the years still open under the statute
of limitations, generally 3 years from the date the return was filed or
2 years from the date the tax was paid. As a result, refund claims can
still be filed for the tax years, 2012 and 2013.
On June 26, 2015, the U.S.
Supreme Court held, in Obergefell v. Hodges,
that the Fourteenth Amendment requires states to offer same-sex
marriage and recognize same-sex marriages performed elsewhere.
All 50 U.S. states, 4 of 5 U.S.
territories, and the District of Columbia
are fully compliant with the Obergefell decision.
In New Jersey, a civil union couple may file a joint New Jersey tax
return beginning with the 2007 tax year and generally civil unions
entered into outside New Jersey will be recognized in New Jersey
for state tax purposes. New Jersey civil union couples must take
the affirmative step of getting married in order to get the federal tax
benefits now available.
Please refer to the chapter on planning for same-sex couples for more
information.
. 125
RESIDENCY CAUTION
Build America Bonds (tax credit type) provide the bondholder a nonrefundable tax credit of 35% of the interest paid on the bond each
year. If the bondholder lacks sufficient tax liability in any year to fully
utilize that year’s credit, the excess credit can be carried forward for
use in future years.
Individuals who maintain a residence in one jurisdiction, such as New
York City, but also have a residence in another jurisdiction must be
very careful to avoid the strict rules that could make them a resident
of both jurisdictions for tax purposes (see Tax Tip 27). Generally, if
you maintain a permanent place of abode in New York, New Jersey,
Connecticut or Pennsylvania and spend more than 183 days in that
state, you will be taxed as a resident of that state even if your primary
residence is in another state. California applies a similar test using 9
months as the threshold, unless you can prove that the time spent in
the state was due to a temporary or transitory purpose.
In addition,
the domicile test treats you as a resident of New York or New Jersey
even if you only spend as little as 30 days in the state if you continue
to be domiciled there. “Domicile” is generally defined as the place
which is most central to your life and is determined using a facts and
circumstances test.
NONRESIDENT TAXATION
Residents of New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Pennsylvania
or California working in other states as nonresidents are taxed by
that other state. The income subject to tax is generally based on
an allocation of salary and other earned income, using a formula
comparing days worked within and outside the state.
Also, the sale
of real property located in a nonresident state by a nonresident is
typically subject to tax by the nonresident state. This includes the
gain on the sale of a cooperative apartment by a nonresident of New
York State. However, you are allowed to reduce your resident state
tax by a credit amount based on the tax paid to the nonresident state,
subject to limitations.
Note: New York State treats days worked at home for the convenience
of the employee as days worked in New York.
To qualify as a day worked
outside New York, you must prove that there was a legitimate business
reason that required you to be out of state, such as meeting with a client
or customer. You should keep a diary or calendar of your activities and with
supporting documents proving your whereabouts (e.g., airplane tickets,
credit card statements, bank statements and your passport).
New York taxes certain income received by a nonresident related to a
business, trade, profession or occupation previously carried on within
New York, whether or not as an employee. This income includes, but
is not limited to, income related to covenants not to compete and
income related to termination agreements.
Note: Pennsylvania has signed reciprocal agreements with Indiana,
Maryland, New Jersey, Ohio, Virginia, and West Virginia under which one
state will not tax employee compensation subject to employer withholding
by the other states.
These agreements apply to employee compensation
only and not to income from sole proprietorships, partnerships and other
entities.
Note: Other state tax credits are allowed California residents for net income
taxes paid to another state (not including any tax comparable to California’s
alternative minimum tax) on income also subject to the California income
tax. No credit is allowed if the other state allows California residents a credit
for net income taxes paid to California. These reverse credit states include
Arizona, Indiana, Oregon and Virginia.
STATE ESTATE OR INHERITANCE TAXES
New York, New Jersey, Connecticut and Pennsylvania impose an
estate or inheritance tax on persons who are domiciled in the state
or have property located in the state.
California and Florida do not
have an estate or inheritance tax. See the chapter on estate and gift
tax planning for a further discussion.
Connecticut is the only state in the country that imposes a state gift
tax. The gift tax is imposed on the aggregate amount of Connecticut
taxable gifts made on or after January 1, 2005 is $2,000,000
state tax issues
BUILD AMERICA BONDS
.
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appendix
A
2016 FEDERAL TAX CALENDAR
Date
Deadline To
January 15, 2016
• Pay final installment of 2015 estimated taxes.
April 1, 2016
• Take first IRA required minimum distribution if you reached age 701/2 in 2015.
April 15, 2016
• File individual income tax and gift tax returns (or extension request) and pay balance of 2015 taxes due.
• Make 2015 IRA contributions.
• Make first quarter estimated tax payment for 2016 (for individuals and trusts).
• File income tax return for trust (or extension request) and pay balance of 2015 taxes due.
June 15, 2016
• Make second quarter estimated tax payment for 2016.
June 27, 2016
• File electronically 2015 Report of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts (FBAR) in time to be received by
Treasury Department by June 30, 2016.
August 1, 2016
• File Keogh plan report (Form 5500) or extension request.
September 15, 2016
• Make third quarter estimated tax payment for 2016.
• Make 2015 money-purchase and defined benefit plan contributions.
• File 2015 income tax return for trusts, if on extension.
October 17, 2016
• File 2015 individual income tax and gift tax returns, if on extension.
• Make 2015 profit-sharing Keogh plan contributions and SEP contributions, if your tax return is
on extension.
December 31, 2016
• Prepay expenses deductible on your 2016 return, including state and local taxes not due until
January 17, 2017 (or even April 17, 2017), if you will not be in the AMT in 2016 or you will be in a lower tax
bracket in 2016, and take capital losses to offset capital gains.
• Accelerate income if you are in a lower tax bracket in 2016 than you expect to be in 2017.
• Establish a Keogh or defined benefit plan for 2016.
• Convert a traditional IRA to a Roth IRA.
• Take required IRA minimum distribution for 2016.
January 17, 2017
• Pay final installment of 2016 estimated taxes.
Note: There are additional filing requirements if you have household employees or if you are a business owner and you pay employees and/ or independent
contractors.
. 127
appendix
appendix
B
2015 FEDERAL TAX RATE SCHEDULE
If Taxable Income Is:
Over
But Not Over The Tax Is
+ Of The Amount Over
Married Filing Jointly or Qualifying Widow(er)
$
0.00
+
10%
18,450.00 74,900.00 1,845.00
+
15% 18,450.00
74,900.00 151,200.00 10,312.50
+
25% 74,900.00
151,200.00
230,450.00 29,387.50
+
28% 151,200.00
230,450.00 411,500.00 51,577.50
+
33% 230,450.00
+
35% 411,500.00
+
39.6% 464,850.00
0
411,500.00
$ 18,450.00
$
464,850.00 111,324.00
464,850.00
129,996.50
$
0.00
Single
$ 0.00
$ 9,225.00
$
0.00
+
10% $
0.00
922.50
+
15% 9,225.000
+
25% 37,450.00
9,225.00 37,450.00
37,450.00 90,750.00
90,750.00 189,300.00 18,481.25
+
28% 90,750.00
189,300.00 411,500.00 46,075.25
+
33% 189,300.00
411,500.00 413,200.00 119,401.25
+
35% 411,500.00
413,200.00 119,996.25
+
5,156.25
39.6%
413,200.00
Married Filing Separately
$
0.00
+
10% $
0.00
922.50
+
15%
9,225.00
37,450.00 75,600.00 5,156.25
+
25% 37,450.00
75,600.00 115,225.00 14,693.75
+
28% 75,600.00
115,225.00 205,750.00 25,788.75
+
33% 115,225.00
205,750.00 232,425.00 55,662.00
+
35% 205,750.00
232,425.00 64,998.25
+
0
$ 9,225.00
$
9,225.00 37,450.00
39.6%
232,425.00
Head of Household
$
0
$ 13,150.00
$
0.00
+
10% $
0.00
13,150.00 50,200.00 1,315.00
+
15% 13,150.00
50,200.00 129,600.00 6,872.50
+
25% 50,200.00
129,600.00
209,850.00 26,772.50
+
28% 129,600.00
209,850.00 411,500.00 49,192.50
+
33%
439,000.00 115,737.00
+
35% 411,500.00
439,000.00
125,632.00
+
411,500.00
39.6%
209,850.00
439,000.00
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appendix
C
2016 FEDERAL TAX RATE SCHEDULE
If Taxable Income Is:
Over
But Not Over The Tax Is
+ Of The Amount Over
Married Filing Jointly or Qualifying Widow(er)
$
0
$ 18,550.00
$
0.00
+
10%
18,550.00 75,300.00 1,855.00
+
15% 18,550.00
75,300.00 151,900.00 10,367.50
+
25% 75,300.00
151,900.00 231,450.00 29,517.50
+
28% 151,900.00
231,450.00
413,350.00 51,791.50
+
33% 231,450.00
413,350.00
466,950.00 111,818.50
+
35% 413,350.00
466,950.00
129,996.50
+
39.6%
0.00
+
10%
$
0.00
466,950.00
Single
$
0.00
$ 9,275.00
$
$
0.00
9,275.00 37,650.00
927.50
+
15%
9,275.00
37,650.00 91,150.00
5,183.75
+
25% 37,650.00
91,150.00 190,150.00 18,558.75
+
28% 91,150.00
190,150.00 413,350.00 46,278.75
+
33% 190,150.00
413,350.00 415,050.00 119,934.75
+
35% 413,350.00
415,050.00 120,529.75
+
39.6% 415,050.00
Married Filing Separately
$
0
$ 9,275.00
$
0.00
+
10%
$
0.00
9,275.00 37,650.00
927.50
+
15%
37,650.00 75,950.00
5,183.75
+
25% 37,650.00
75,950.00 115,725.00 14,758.75
+
28% 75,950.00
115,725.00 206,675.00 25,895.75
+
33% 115,725.00
206,675.00 233,475.00 55,909.25
+
35% 206,675.00
233,475.00
+
39.6% 233,475.00
65,289.25
9,275.00
Head of Household
$
0
$ 13,250.00
$
0.00
+
10%
$
0.00
13,250.00 50,400.00 1,325.00
+
15% 13,250.00
50,400.00 130,150.00 6,897.50
+
25% 50,400.00
130,150.00 210,800.00 26,835.00
+
28% 130,150.00
210,800.00 413,350.00 49,417.00
+
33% 210,800.00
413,350.00 441,000.00 116,258.50
+
35% 413,350.00
441,000.00 125,936.00
+
39.6% 441,000.00
. 129
appendix
appendix
D
2015 AND 2016 MAXIMUM EFFECTIVE RATES
Federal NYS NYC CA CT NJ PA
Resident Resident Resident Resident Resident Resident
Maximum Tax
Rates
VAR% 8.82%(a) 12.696% 13.3%(b) 6.99%(c) 8.97%(d) 3.07%(e)
Effective Tax Rates If Not In The AMT Ordinary Income
39.6% Bracket* 39.6% 45%
47% 48% 44% 45% 41%
35% Bracket*
35% 41%
43% 44%
40% 41% 37%
33% Bracket*
33% 39%
42% 42% 38% 39% 35%
28% Bracket
28% 34% 37% 38% 33% 34% 30%
25% Bracket
25% 32%
35% 35% 30% 32% 27%
Long-Term Capital Gains And Qualifying Dividends If Not In The AMT
20% Bracket*
20% 27%
30% 31% 26% 27% 22%
Effective Tax Rates If In The AMT Ordinary Income
28% Bracket
28% 37% 41% 41% 35% 37% 31%
26% Bracket
26% 35%
39% 39% 33% 35% 29%
Long-Term Capital Gains And Qualifying Dividends If In The AMT
20% Bracket
20% 29% 33% 33% 27% 29% 23%
* the maximum ordinary income tax rate for federal is 39.6%, 35%, or 33% and modified adjusted gross income (MAGI) exceeds
If
$250,000 for married filing joint, $200,000 for single and $125,000 for married filing separate taxpayers, you may be subject to
an additional 3.8% Medicare Contribution Tax on net investment income. Similarly, if you meet these MAGI thresholds, long term
capital gains may be taxed at 23.8%.
(a) or NYS, the maximum tax rate is applicable for taxable income over $2,231,700 for married filing joint. If taxable income is under
F
$2,231,700, the rate is 6.85%.
(b) he maximum California rate includes the 1% Mental Health Service Tax. The top rate for married filing joint taxpayers with
T
$1 million or less of taxable income is 12.3%.
(c) Connecticut married filing joint taxpayers with taxable income below $500,000, the maximum tax rate is 6.9%.
For
(d) he maximum tax rate for New Jersey applies to taxable income in excess of $500,000.
If your taxable income is less than
T
$500,000, your maximum tax rate is 6.37%.
(e) he Pennsylvania maximum rate does not include the City of Philadelphia tax on wages and self-employment income of
T
3.92% for Philadelphia residents and 3.4915% for non-residents.
Note: These effective tax rates do not include payroll and self-employment taxes or the 4% New York City Unincorporated Business Tax.
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