Tax Law Changes, the good, the bad and the ugly…
Let’s talk good news first:
- The tax rates are lower and most people should benefit from this
- For those that don’t itemize, you may benefit from the new standard deduction – please note that the personal exemption is no longer a deduction. Example – you are married filing joint, no kids and don’t itemize. In 2017, you got $8,100 in exemptions and $12,700 standard deduction, a total of $20,800. In 2018 you would have a straight $24,000 standard deduction
- For those higher wage earners with children, the income phase out for the child tax credit is substantially increased to $200,000 for single and $400,000 married filing jointly
- For other dependents, you won’t have the exemption BUT you get a credit of up to $500 per dependent, again with the higher income thresholds
- There will be incentives for business owners – self-employed, or pass thru entities like LLC’s and S Corps but we need to understand this better
Now the bad news:
- Fewer people will itemize. The higher standard deductions of $12,000 single, $18,000 head of household and $24,000 married filing jointly will eliminate many people from itemizing
- Fewer items to itemize and caps on certain deductions will further minimize the ability to itemize. This includes the cap on ALL taxes you pay (lines 5 thru 8 on 2017 Schedule A) is capped at $10,000. So it you earn $100,000 and you paid in $4,950 in IL income tax plus your real estate taxes are $8,000, you no longer get $12,950 in deductions. It is capped at $10,000.
In addition, you can no longer deduct items that appear on lines 21 thru 26 on your 2017 Schedule A. This includes job related expenses – union dues, mileage, tolls, travel, education, home office, etc. IT DOES NOT EFFECT GAMBLING LOSSES
- You can no longer deduct interest on home equity loans/lines IF it was not incurred for the purpose of buying, building or substantially improving the qualified residence.
- There is a limit on charitable contributions also but it is pretty lenient – cannot exceed 60% of your Adjusted Gross Income.
- There are still additional deduction increases for 65 or older and/or blind