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Get your taxes done using TurboTax
Your LA state refund will be taxable when both of the following are true:
- You itemized deductions on the Federal return instead of taking the standard deduction, and
- The state refund included an amount that was used as part of the itemized deductions.
In years past, it was a virtual given that if you itemized on your Federal return, you would have state refund to add back in, because state, local, property and real estate taxes were all included to determine itemized deductions, and the amounts that were allowed to be included were not limited. But the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act in 2017 changed that. Beginning that year, State and Local Taxes (including real estate and property taxes), were capped for itemized deductions at 10,000 (even for a married couple filing jointly).
What this means is that, even if you itemized (not a given, since the threshold to do so last year was 24,400 if Married Filing Joint, 12,200 if Single), you still won't include any of the tax refund as taxable income if your total SALT deductions were $10,723 or more, because you would have only been allowed to claim a maximum of 10,000 ("SALT"ed out is the expression I like to use). Since we can't see your screen, we can't guarantee that this is the reason why your state refund is not taxable. But it is the most likely explanation, and if it's true, you can go ahead and not worry that the refund is not being added back to income.
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