SolveYourProblem
Article Series: Taxes
Help Me Understand My Taxes
The
Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) Surprise
When the Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) was
introduced by Congress, their heart was in the right place.
This alternate tax was intended to stop the ultra-rich from
exploiting every tax loophole in the system and taking advantage
of every deduction on the books to reduce their tax bill to
zero, or indeed often to below zero, meaning the super wealthy
were getting tax refunds at the end of the year. However, because
of flukes in AMT laws, the super rich are no longer the only
people getting socked by the AMT. Every year, more and more
families are being required to lose some of their deductions
and pay more taxes than ever before.
To understand the AMT, experts recommend that you think of
it as something you pay in addition to regular taxes. You cannot
understand AMT law in the framework of traditional income tax
laws, and you cannot determine if you are subject to taxation
under AMT without doing your regular tax returns. To get started
figuring out if AMT is going to get you, it helps to understand
why so many more people are falling prey to it every year.
While regular income tax brackets and rates are adjusted for
rising inflation every year, AMT rates are not. AMT tax brackets
are based on figures of wealth that are more than 30 years
old. That helps explain why AMT affected only 19,000 people
when it was instituted and affects millions of families now.
That 2006 upper middle class salary would have made you seriously
well off in the 1970s, and since the rates have not been adjusted,
you are now considered to be in the financial upper crust.
If that news has made you say, “uh-oh,” then it may be time
to run the figures and see if you fall into the AMT tax bracket.
There is only one way to do this; fill out your regular 1040
forms, and then get a Form 6251, the AMT form, from the IRS.
You will need the information from the 1040 to fill out your
6251. The 6251 form is going to ask you to count as income
all sorts of things the 1040 doesn’t; like home equity loans
that were not used for home improvements and the money you
have made on every single stock transaction (not transactions
over a set amount, like regular tax). You will need to add
back nearly all of the deductions you took on the 1040, like
your personalized deductions, any deductions under the Energy
Credit Act, your mortgage interest payments, and many of your
business related expenses. Your income, plus all of those deductions
from the 1040, equals your AMT taxable income. While each case
is different, a general rule of thumb says that if that amount
is over $75,000, then you owe AMT tax.
The AMT is notoriously complicated, and gets even more so
if you own your own business, are a shareowner in a business,
or own several real estate properties. Experts recommend you
get a financial advisor or tax expert on board to help you
navigate the AMT system. A little more bad news - if you are
found to have been eligible for AMT in the past, but haven’t
paid it, the IRS will slap you with a back tax bill, plus a
fine, for however many years you have avoided the tax. All
is not lost, however. Keep your old 6251 forms because you
may be eligible to reclaim some of your AMT tax on future 1040
forms, especially if income from stocks is what put you over
the edge. Again, consult a financial advisor to see how this
affects you.
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SolveYourProblem.com : 2007
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