nash031
Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
Doing everything legally possible to stay in the 25% bracket while we're both still working. (Un?)Fortunately it gets harder every year.
I do what ever I need to in order to stay in the 15% bracket....
staying under 15% until RMD's kick-in at 70.5
How in the world are you in the 33% bracket with an effective tax rate of only 6%
We are also in the 33% bracket + 3.8% ACA, paying $36.80 on every $100 (for 2014) and our effective average tax rate is almost 22%.
staying under 15% until RMD's kick-in at 70.5
Tax software tells me if I earned another $100 in interest in 2014 that I would pay another $33 in taxes, so I was in the 33% marginal income tax bracket. Tax software also tells me that my effective average tax rate is about 6%.
How in the world are you in the 33% bracket with an effective tax rate of only 6%....
I am a master of tax planning including tax credits. For one thing, I have no interest income, but if I did, then it would be taxed at 33%.
Your poll does not reflect the change to the tax code by the ACA so I can't vote as no category fits. My federal income taxes for 2014 were 0, actually less than 0 as I got a refundable tax credit for $1800.![]()
Pretty much whatever I want it to be! But in 2014 I ran it up to a marginal rate of 28.8%, which was the 25% bracket plus the 3.8% ACA investment tax. I entered 28% in the poll, though 25% might be the better answer.
4. What is modified adjusted gross income for purposes of the Net Investment Income Tax?
For the Net Investment Income Tax, modified adjusted gross income is adjusted gross income (Form 1040, Line 37) increased by the difference between amounts excluded from gross income under section 911(a)(1) and the amount of any deductions (taken into account in computing adjusted gross income) or exclusions disallowed under section 911(d)(6) for amounts described in section 911(a)(1). In the case of taxpayers with income from controlled foreign corporations (CFCs) and passive foreign investment companies (PFICs), they may have additional adjustments to their AGI. See section 1.1411-10(e) of the final regulations.
I am generously curious about how you ended up paying the 3.8% Net Investment Income Tax while remaining in the 25% bracket. Perhaps you have many Schedule A deductions or you are effected by the (cryptic) MAGI calculation for NII described below.
I was under the impression that NII only applies to taxpayers with MAGI over 200,000/250,000 for single/married returns, which I thought would usually imply a nominal marginal tax bracket of at least 28% or 33%.
-gauss
I'll never be below the 25% bracket. Pensions are wonderful things, so I certainly won't complain about paying the taxes.
Not at all. You can easily be in within the 15% tax bracket but pay the NIIT if most of your income is from long-term capital gains and qualified dividends. You won't pay the higher income tax brackets on ordinary income. You might even get 0% tax on some of your cap gains/qual dividends. You'll probably be driven to pay some AMT though. That acts like a 26% tax bracket on part of your ordinary income - but only applies to ordinary income.
I am generously curious about how you ended up paying the 3.8% Net Investment Income Tax while remaining in the 25% bracket. Perhaps you have many Schedule A deductions or you are effected by the (cryptic) MAGI calculation for NII described below.
I was under the impression that NII only applies to taxpayers with MAGI over 200,000/250,000 for single/married returns, which I thought would usually imply a nominal marginal tax bracket of at least 28% or 33%.
-gauss
I also did a Roth conversion over the top of the 15% bracket, then recharacterized down to the limit. According to TT my effective tax rate was 4.14%. Not sure exactly how they get that.