Kamala wants to let Trump's 2017 tax cuts expire at the end of 2025. That would cost $1000/month for the average middle class family.
Philip J Fry said:
Higher taxes is just an excuse for more spending.
That was a fine idea 10s of trillions ago then our politicians on both sides of the isle proved they can't actually cut spending and will just put the lower tax revenue collected on our children's tab. Until congress/executive branch can actually trim the size of the federal budget, it's hard to support individual income tax cuts.Philip J Fry said:
Higher taxes is just an excuse for more spending.
themissinglink said:That was a fine idea 10s of trillions ago then our politicians on both sides of the isle proved they can't actually cut spending and will just put the lower tax revenue collected on our children's tab. Until congress/executive branch can actually trim the size of the federal budget, it's hard to support individual income tax cuts.Philip J Fry said:
Higher taxes is just an excuse for more spending.
But I guess we'll just make it our children's problem.
ChoppinDs40 said:
Trumps tax breaks actually hurt some of us. $10k local tax limit sucks. Especially with the insane rise in property taxes the last few years.
DannyDuberstein said:ChoppinDs40 said:
Trumps tax breaks actually hurt some of us. $10k local tax limit sucks. Especially with the insane rise in property taxes the last few years.
But the massive increase in the standard deduction likely covered much of that.
A couple with ordinary AGI of $230k would have paid $52k in taxes with the pre-Trump brackets. At $500k, it would be $143k. Under the current Trump brackets, the couple would pay $40k at $230k and $115k at $500k. The marginal rate applied to your property taxes isn't covering that unless you are paying $40k in property taxes
thann07 said:
The estate tax threshold is very important to anyone who intends to keep agriculture as independent ventures. We will have a full turnover of agricultural lend within a generation without it.
If Kamala wins and reduces it further, and does away with the stepped up basis, it will accelerate even further.
#1 issue in this election to some and it isn't even discussed.
Agsrback12 said:
We need that guy that rolled in and cut several major departments out of government (can't remember the country). That is the way.
I was still preparing returns back then and I would guess prior to the legislation, 60% of my folks itemized. That percentage was lower than most because a lot did not itemize because they were one generation above me (clients of the guy I bought the practice from) and they had no mortgage interest any more.DannyDuberstein said:
Went from $13k to $24k as part of the change in 2018. Then went from $24 to $29 over the past 6 years.
Good.ChoppinDs40 said:
Trumps tax breaks actually hurt some of us. $10k local tax limit sucks. Especially with the insane rise in property taxes the last few years.
themissinglink said:
Unpopular opinion, but the tax cuts need to expire. We can't afford them. Easy to say "cut spending", but there are very few proposals (and none that substantially move the needle) which would make it through even if Republican's controlled both chambers of Congress and the White House. The only thing that could potentially move the needle is entitlement reform and neither party seems to have the stomach to actually try to address it.
ChoppinDs40 said:
Trumps tax breaks actually hurt some of us. $10k local tax limit sucks. Especially with the insane rise in property taxes the last few years.
It raised my taxes. I have a large family with older children, itemize deductions, own rental properties with operating losses, have a cash-out refi, and even made too much to get Covid checks. Add that to the massive increases in social security taxes, and my bill has significantly increased.rgleml said:
Kamala wants to let Trump's 2017 tax cuts expire at the end of 2025. That would cost $1000/month for the average middle class family.
gigemhilo said:ChoppinDs40 said:
Trumps tax breaks actually hurt some of us. $10k local tax limit sucks. Especially with the insane rise in property taxes the last few years.
If I remember correctly, it helped like 60% of taxpayers and hurt 5-10%. The rest were "neutral".
I specifically remember in the 2018 filing year having to explain to many how the tax cuts helped them even though they weren't able to itemize or their refund was lower (or owed). Part of the change was lowering withholding amounts so that people would have more money in their pocket instead of on account with the IRS. The law change was highly criticized and misunderstood because of that.
This is exactly the case. So many people mistakenly let the IRS be their off limits savings account and habitually overpay just so they can get a $4k to $8k refund each year. Doesn't make sense, but they would. That uproar by the uninformed is what prompted the revised W-4 which was purported to better tune the withholding.gigemhilo said:ChoppinDs40 said:
Trumps tax breaks actually hurt some of us. $10k local tax limit sucks. Especially with the insane rise in property taxes the last few years.
If I remember correctly, it helped like 60% of taxpayers and hurt 5-10%. The rest were "neutral".
I specifically remember in the 2018 filing year having to explain to many how the tax cuts helped them even though they weren't able to itemize or their refund was lower (or owed). Part of the change was lowering withholding amounts so that people would have more money in their pocket instead of on account with the IRS. The law change was highly criticized and misunderstood because of that.
one safe place said:This is exactly the case. So many people mistakenly let the IRS be their off limits savings account and habitually overpay just so they can get a $4k to $8k refund each year. Doesn't make sense, but they would. That uproar by the uninformed is what prompted the revised W-4 which was purported to better tune the withholding.gigemhilo said:ChoppinDs40 said:
Trumps tax breaks actually hurt some of us. $10k local tax limit sucks. Especially with the insane rise in property taxes the last few years.
If I remember correctly, it helped like 60% of taxpayers and hurt 5-10%. The rest were "neutral".
I specifically remember in the 2018 filing year having to explain to many how the tax cuts helped them even though they weren't able to itemize or their refund was lower (or owed). Part of the change was lowering withholding amounts so that people would have more money in their pocket instead of on account with the IRS. The law change was highly criticized and misunderstood because of that.
With the lower rates and much broader brackets at which those rate apply, most people were better off with the new tax law. And many who said they were hurt by the new law didn't do anything but compare the bottom line (their refund or what they had to pay) for one year versus the other. The only way to know how it impacted you would have been to take the numbers from 2017 and enter them in the 2018 software, or take the 2018 numbers and run them through the 2017 software.