Yes. Depending on your combined income, you may have taxable social security of $0. "Combined Income" is calculated as your Adjusted Gross Income (AGI) + Nontaxable Interest + 1/2 of your Social Se...
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Yes. Depending on your combined income, you may have taxable social security of $0. "Combined Income" is calculated as your Adjusted Gross Income (AGI) + Nontaxable Interest + 1/2 of your Social Security Benefits. If this amount is less than the threshold for your filing status, you could have $0 taxable social security. As long as line 6a shows your social security benefits, if line be says $0, then this would be correct. Now, if you are not done with your return and you add more income, this could change and more of your SS could become taxable.
Taxability of Social Security & SSDI
General Rule: Social Security benefits are not fully taxed. Depending on your "combined income," up to 85% of your benefits may be taxable.
SSDI Treatment: SSDI (Social Security Disability Insurance) benefits are treated exactly the same as regular Social Security benefits for tax purposes.
Thresholds for 85% Taxable:
Single: Combined income above $34,000.
Married Filing Jointly: Combined income above $44,000.
Married Filing Separate: Benefits are taxable at 85% regardless of income level.
Thresholds for 50% Taxable:
Single: Combined income between $25,000 and $34,000.
Married Filing Jointly: Combined income between $32,000 and $44,000.
Why did the taxable amount of my Social Security benefits change so much from last year?
If your income is over the amount that would keep your benefits from being taxable, go back through the social security section and double check your answer to did you live in a foreign country while receiving your SS benefits.