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FS-2009-1, January 2009
AMT exemptions rise; several expiring deductions and credits get
a new lease on life; a new standard property tax deduction and a
special first-time homebuyer credit are available to some
homeowners; and retirement savings incentives expand. These are
among the changes taxpayers will find when they fill out their 2008
tax returns. More information about these and other changes,
summarized below, can be found on IRS.gov and in various IRS
documents, including the Instructions for Form 1040.
Economic Stimulus Payments Tax Free
Economic stimulus payments are not taxable, and they are not
reported on 2008 tax returns. However, the stimulus payment does
affect whether a taxpayer can claim the Recovery Rebate Credit and
how much credit he or she can get. The credit is figured like last
year's economic stimulus payment except that the amounts are based
on tax year 2008 instead of 2007. A taxpayer may qualify for the
Recovery Rebate Credit if, for example, she did not get an
economic-stimulus payment or had a child in 2008. See Fact Sheet
2009-3 for details. In most cases, the IRS can figure the credit.
The instructions for Forms 1040, 1040A and 1040EZ have more
information.
AMT Exemption Increased for One Year
For tax-year 2008, Congress raised the alternative minimum tax
exemption to the following levels:
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$69,950 for a married couple filing a joint return and
qualifying widows and widowers, up from $66,250 in 2007
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$34,975 for a married person filing separately, up from
$33,125 and
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$46,200 for singles and heads of household, up from
$44,350
Under current law, these exemption amounts will drop to $45,000,
$22,500 and $33,750, respectively, in 2009. Form 6251 and the AMT
Calculator provide more information.
Expiring Tax Breaks Renewed
Several popular tax breaks that expired at the end of 2007 were
renewed for tax-years 2008 and 2009. As a result, eligible taxpayers
can claim:
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The deduction for state and local sales taxes on Form 1040
Schedule A , Line 5
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The educator expense deduction on Form 1040, Line 23 or Form
1040A, Line 16
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The tuition and fees deduction on Form 8917 and
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The District of Columbia first-time homebuyer credit on Form
8859
In addition, the residential energy-efficient property credit is
extended through 2016. In general, solar electric, solar water
heating and fuel cell property qualify for this credit. Starting in
2008, small wind energy and geothermal heat pump property also
qualify. Use Form 5695 to claim the credit.
The non-business energy property credit for insulation, exterior
windows, exterior doors, furnaces, water heaters and other
energy-saving improvements to a main home is not available in 2008
but will return in 2009.
Standard Deduction Increased for Most
Taxpayers
Nearly two out of three taxpayers choose to take the standard
deduction rather than itemizing deductions such as mortgage interest
and charitable contributions. The basic standard deduction is:
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$10,900 for married couples filing a joint return and
qualifying widows and widowers, a $200 increase over 2007
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$5,450 for singles and married individuals filing separate
returns, up $100 and
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$8,000 for heads of household, up $150
Higher amounts apply to blind people and senior citizens. The
standard deduction is often reduced for a taxpayer who qualifies as
someone else’s dependent.
New this year, taxpayers can claim an additional standard
deduction, based on the state or local real-estate taxes paid in
2008. Taxes paid on foreign or business property do not count. The
maximum deduction is $500, or $1,000 for joint filers.
Also new for 2008, a taxpayer can increase his standard deduction
by the net disaster losses suffered from a federally declared
disaster. A worksheet is available in the instructions for Forms
1040 and 1040A.
First-Time Homebuyer Credit
Those who bought a main home recently or are considering buying
one may qualify for the first-time homebuyer credit. Normally, a
taxpayer qualifies if she didn’t own a main home during the prior
three years. This unique credit of up to $7,500 works much like a
15-year interest-free loan. It is available for a limited time only
–– on homes bought from April 9, 2008, to June 30, 2009. It can be
claimed on new Form 5405 and is repaid each year as an additional
tax. Income limits and other special rules apply.
Tax Relief for Midwest Disaster Areas
Special tax relief related to severe storms, tornadoes or
flooding, occurring after May 19, 2008, and before Aug. 1, 2008, is
available to individuals in portions of Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana,
Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska and Wisconsin
that were affected by these disasters. Tax benefits include:
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Liberalized rules for certain personal casualty losses and
charitable contributions
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An additional exemption amount for persons who provided
housing for someone displaced by these disasters
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The option to use 2007 earned income to figure a 2008 earned
income tax credit (EITC) and additional child tax credit
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An increased charitable standard mileage rate for use of
personal vehicle for volunteer work related to these
disasters
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Special rules for withdrawals and loans from IRAs and other
qualified retirement plans
Details on these and other relief provisions are
in Publication 4492-B .
Contribution Limits Rise for IRAs and Other Retirement
Plans
This filing season, more people can make tax-deductible
contributions to a traditional IRA. The deduction is phased out for
singles and heads of household who are covered by a workplace
retirement plan and have modified adjusted gross incomes (AGI)
between $53,000 and $63,000, compared to $52,000 and $62,000 last
year.
For married couples filing jointly, in which the spouse who makes
the IRA contribution is covered by a workplace retirement plan, the
income phase-out range is $85,000 to $105,000, up from $83,000 to
$103,000 last year.
Where an IRA contributor who is not covered by a workplace
retirement plan is married to someone who is covered, the deduction
is phased out if the couple’s income is between $159,000 and
$169,000, up from $156,000 and $166,000 in 2007.
The phase-out range remains $0 to $10,000 for a married
individual filing a separate return who is covered by a retirement
plan at work.
The worksheet in the instructions for Form 1040 Line 32 or Form
1040A Line 17 can help a taxpayer figure the IRA deduction.
For 2008, the elective deferral (contribution) limit for
employees who participate in 401(k), 403(b) and most 457 plans
remains unchanged at $15,500. This limit rises to $16,500 in 2009.
The catch-up contribution limit for those aged 50 to 70-½ remains at
$5,000 in 2008 but rises to $5,500 in 2009.
The AGI phase-out range for taxpayers who contribute to a Roth
IRA is $159,000 to $169,000 for joint filers and qualifying widows
and widowers, compared to $156,000 to $166,000 in 2007. For singles
and heads of household, the comparable phase-out range is $101,000
to $116,000, compared to $99,000 to $114,000 in 2007.
Standard Mileage Rates Adjusted for 2008
The standard mileage rate for business use of a car, van, pick-up
or panel truck is 50.5 cents per mile from Jan. 1, 2008, to June 30,
2008, up 2 cents from 2007. The rate is 58.5 cents for each mile
driven during the rest of 2008.
From Jan. 1, 2008, to June 30, 2008, the standard mileage rate
for the cost of operating a vehicle for medical reasons or as part
of a deductible move is 19 cents per mile, down a penny from 2007.
The rate is 27 cents from July 1 to Dec. 31.
The standard mileage rate for using a car to provide services to
charitable organizations is set by law and remains at 14 cents a
mile. As noted earlier, special rates apply to the Midwest disaster
area.
Exemptions Rise
The value of each personal and dependency exemption is $3,500, up
$100 from 2007. Most taxpayers can take personal exemptions for
themselves and an additional exemption for each eligible dependent.
An individual who qualifies as someone else’s dependent cannot claim
a personal exemption, and though personal and dependency exemptions
are phased out for higher-income taxpayers, the phase-out rate is
slower than in past years.
This is one of more than three dozen individual and business tax
provisions that are adjusted each year to keep pace with inflation.
A complete rundown of these changes can be found in 2008 Inflation
Adjustments Widen Tax Brackets, Change Tax Benefits.
Earned Income Tax Credit Rises
The maximum earned income tax credit (EITC) is:
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$4,824 for people with two or more qualifying children, up
from $4,716 in 2007
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$2,917 for those with one child, up from $2,853 last year
and
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$438 for people with no children, up from $428 in
2007.
Available to low and moderate income workers and working
families, the EITC helps taxpayers whose incomes are below certain
income thresholds, which in 2008 rise to:
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$41,646 for those with two or more children
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$36,995 for people with one child and
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$15,880 for those with no children
One in six taxpayers claim the EITC, which, unlike most tax
breaks, is refundable, meaning that individuals can get it even if
they owe no tax and even if no tax is withheld from their
paychecks.
Taxes Lowered for Many Investors
The five-percent tax rate on qualified dividends and net capital
gains is reduced to zero. In general, this reduction applies to
investors whose taxable income is below:
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$65,100, if married filing jointly or qualifying widow or
widower
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$32,550, if single or married filing separately or
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$43,650, if head of household.
Note that taxable income is normally less than total income. The
worksheet for Form 1040 Line 44, Form 1040A Line x or Schedule D and
its instructions provide details.
Kiddie Tax Revised
The tax on a child's investment income applies if the child has
investment income greater than $1,800 and is:
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Under 18 old
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18 years of age and had earned income that was equal to or
less than half of his or her total support in 2008 or
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Over 18 and under 24, a student and during 2008 had earned
income that was equal to or less than half of his or her total
support.
Previously, the tax only applied to children under age 18. Form
8615 is used to figure this tax.
Self-Employment Tax Changes
For those who receive Social Security Retirement or disability
benefits, any Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) payments are now
exempt from the 15.3-percent social security self-employment tax.
Schedule SE and its instructions and Publication 225, Farmer’s Tax
Guide, have the details.
More farmers and self-employed people this year can choose the
optional methods for figuring and paying the self-employment tax.
These optional methods allow those with net losses or small amounts
of business income a way to obtain up to four credits of Social
Security coverage. The income thresholds for both the farm optional
method and the nonfarm optional method are increased for 2008 and
indexed for inflation in future years. Choosing an optional method
may increase a taxpayer’s self-employment tax but it may also
qualify him for the earned income tax credit, additional child tax
credit, child and dependent care credit or self-employed health
insurance deduction. Schedule SE and its instructions have
details.
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