Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ugh this is painful OP.
+1. So painful that someone making over 100K a year has literally no idea how basic taxes work.
I work in engineering. We're supposed to be smart, math-savvy people, right?
I once had a colleague tell me that his wife stopped working because her job pushed their whole household into a higher tax bracket, so they actually made less money if she worked.
??????
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ugh this is painful OP.
+1. So painful that someone making over 100K a year has literally no idea how basic taxes work.
Anonymous wrote:Ugh this is painful OP.
Anonymous wrote:Not OP, but people should be nicer. We should encourage some basic financial education in schools. I graduated high school in the 90s so maybe this is done now. I think a lot of young people run into credit problems, and don't know how to best save for retirement etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Others have already stated the obvious.
One of the only reasons you wouldn't want your salary to increase is if it the increase is small and it makes you ineligible for certain deductions.
For example couples with an AGI over 199k cannot contribute to an IRA or Roth IRA.
There are many other deductions and tax breaks that phase out at that income.
If your AGI is 198k and you get a small 2k raise that put you at 200k AGI, this raise may not be worth it, it will cost you more.
But of course if the raise is 10k, you win anyway.
In your case at 105k, you are far away from these figures. Take your raise and enjoy the money.
Are there really phaseouts such that you'd be better off with a lower income? I'm skeptical. Going through a phase out might increase your marginal tax rate, but above 100%?
pp cited being ineligible for a Roth IRA contribution, but there are no income limits for an equivalent backdoor Roth.
Anonymous wrote:Others have already stated the obvious.
One of the only reasons you wouldn't want your salary to increase is if it the increase is small and it makes you ineligible for certain deductions.
For example couples with an AGI over 199k cannot contribute to an IRA or Roth IRA.
There are many other deductions and tax breaks that phase out at that income.
If your AGI is 198k and you get a small 2k raise that put you at 200k AGI, this raise may not be worth it, it will cost you more.
But of course if the raise is 10k, you win anyway.
In your case at 105k, you are far away from these figures. Take your raise and enjoy the money.
Anonymous wrote:There may be reasons not to want to increase salary in certain circumstances, but not OP's. For example, last year my taxable income (after HSA and IRA deductions) was hovering right at the $80K mark. Singles who earn up to $80K can take the full American Opportunity Tax credit for college of $2,500. You get a prorated reduced amount with income up to $90K. And then nothing.
I was trying to decide if I should take on freelance work and what that would do to that credit since I'd be putting in the work but reducing a very good tax credit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hi. I'm currently negotiating salary increase and am cautious about going into a higher tax bracket. Now, I'm making 105K(gross) What is the income amount to enter next tax bracket for a couple with one child?
One option would be to try to negotiate for a lower salary, which would take you into a lower tax bracket. Have you considered that?
Anonymous wrote:Hi. I'm currently negotiating salary increase and am cautious about going into a higher tax bracket. Now, I'm making 105K(gross) What is the income amount to enter next tax bracket for a couple with one child?