RIV Flashcards
standard deduction – single
$12,550
standard deduction – HoH
$18,800
standard deduction – MFJ
$25,100
tax treatment of alimony payments
if divorce is pre-2019, alimony payments received are taxable income to the recipient
NOTE: if payment is REQUIRED to be paid, even if payee dies, they are not considered to be alimony payments
max charitable contributions
60% of AGI (100% in 2021)
amount to deduct is amount contributed + carryovers
ex: if someone makes 80K, the max amount is $48K. if they donated 17K in y1 and 15K in y2, the y1 is carried over and max amount is 17K+15K
“earned income” for a self-employed person
net earnings from self employment after one-half of the self employment tax
tax deduction for personal casualty loss
amount the casualty loss exceeds 10% of AGI and $100 floor
ex: 50K AGI x 10% = 5k +100
if loss is 6k = 6k - 5100 = 900 deductible
tax treatment for a scholarship
anything not part of qualified expenditures is taxable (i.e. room and board)
is child support taxable?
no, child support is non taxable. only alimony (from divorce before dec 31 2018) is taxable
when is tax payer required to make estimated quarterly tax payments? (2 conditions)
1) 1,000 or more tax liability
2) withholding is less than the lesser of
90% current year tax or 100% of prior year tax (110% if AGI is greater than 150K)
where to adjust IRA contributions
form 1040
AGI deduction for: property taxes on rental property
deduct FOR AGI on schedule E, then report net income on 1040
AGI deduction for: charitable contributions
can deduct from AGI, limited to 60% of AGI (100% for 2020 and 2021). must be to qualified charity organization
AGI deduction for: alimony
deduct FOR AGI on 1040
no deduction after 2018
AGI deduction for: medical expenses
deduct anything from AGI exceeding the (medical expense floor % *AGI)
ex: AGI of 70K, floor of 7.5% = $5,250
if med expenses of 10K – you can deduct $4,750 (10k-5.25K)