How To Follow The Tax Reform Effort
Taxes are complicated. So, endeavoring to clean up the complicated tax code is complicated. And to top it off, understanding the legislative process for passing major tax reform is also quite complicated. Meanwhile, the House of Representative’s proposal – the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act – is just the beginning of a long process. The final bill will most likely look substantially different.
In order to help you follow the process, we compiled this overview – Tax Reform: Understanding the Debate. It details the legislative process, tax basics, and the major provisions under debate. It may raise many questions as it explores answers – but the summary will provide you with insight into the complex negotiating process our country’s leaders will be engaged in for the remainder of the year.
Important context when reading and talking about tax reform:
What does this mean for you?
If the effort is successful, you should be able to file your individual or family taxes on a piece of paper the size of a postcard.
If you make over $500,000 as an individual, or over $1 million as a family, you will remain in the top tax bracket.
According to the Ways and Means Committee “a typical middle-income family of four, earning $59,000 (the median household income), will receive a $1,182 tax cut.”
And, according to this bankrate analysis, if you’re “married, you both work and you have a household income of $120,000… You have two kids, contribute a combined $6,000 per year to tax-preferred retirement accounts (such as 401(k)s and IRAs), and you put $5,000 pretax into a dependent care FSA to pay for day care and after-school services. Assuming you take the standard deduction, you’d owe almost $9,200 in 2018 under current law. But that tax bill would drop by about $1,500 under the Republican plan. However, if you were planning to itemize next year, your potential for savings under the tax overhaul could be much different, especially if you live in an area with high state and local taxes.”
These analyses underscore how difficult it is to individualize what the tax reform will mean to you. In general, your available deductions will decrease but your standard deduction will almost double. Families making under $294,000 will also benefit from an increased child tax credit. If you own a business, you will likely see a similar approach of reduced business tax rates while losing some of the credits and deductions that have historically impacted your business planning. See the overview to learn more!
Leave a comment on what detail of the tax plan you’d like to know more about and we’ll write up a summary of that issue!
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