Well our nanny gets back more than she puts in because she has two kids... |
If you don't mind sharing what deductions did you use, most of the deductions we have are mortgage interest and real estate taxes. Ironically when we got a lower interest rate we lost quite a bit of the interest deduction. |
Yes they do. It's called the Earned Income Credit. |
People saying they pay low rates on high incomes may be folding investment income which is taxed at a completely different rate in with their earned income when they state their household income. |
| We paid 15.1% at $285K but gave about $25K away in cash (my husband is really into charitable giving) plus about $5k in things plus have a $450K mortgage at 3.5%. |
That's a benefit? |
It's a benefit the middle class has - taking the full value of their deductions - that the 300-500 K crowd doesn't get. |
Are you talking about your tax bracket or effective tax rate. Because even with no deductions at all, effective tax rate for 300K income is 25% and not 33% |
HUH http://www.bankrate.com/finance/taxes/tax-brackets.aspx |
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In this thread:
People who confuse marginal tax rate with effective tax rate |
Are you paying the AMT? Without that, the total tax due after 55K in deductions would be about 68,000, which is a 21% effective tax rate for 330K income |
I'd rather be at 35% with an HHI of $450 than $100k with a rate of 10%. I'd say you don't need any help. |
Effective tax rate is your total tax paid divided by your total income. The 33% tax bracket is only on income above 183K and effective tax rate would be much lower |
| We are at 37%, which is higher than it's ever been. Lots of AMT, the .9% medicare kicker, some self employment taxes, etc. |
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"The Alternative Minimum Tax exemption amount for tax year 2013 is $51,900 ($80,800, for married couples filing jointly), set by the American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012, which indexes future amounts for inflation. The 2012 exemption amount was $50,600 ($78,750 for married couples filing jointly)."
What a frickin' joke, adjusted for inflation starting last year? How about you adjust for inflation starting the year it was enacted. |