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AGI is 81,826. MA does not let me do circuit breaker deduction because is recognizes our AGI as over 88,000. Why?
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AGI is 81,826. MA does not let me do circuit breaker deduction because is recognizes our AGI as over 88,000. Why?
You are correct about the $88,000, for Married Filing Jointly.
It could be one of two things:
1) You might be filing as Head of Household. The income limit is $73,000.
2) You may have income that's taxed only for MA, which makes your Massachusetts personal income tax return different from your 1040.
Here are the rules, from mass.gov:
If it's not one of these two, post back to this thread.
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AGI is 81,826. MA does not let me do circuit breaker deduction because is recognizes our AGI as over 88,000. Why?
You are correct about the $88,000, for Married Filing Jointly.
It could be one of two things:
1) You might be filing as Head of Household. The income limit is $73,000.
2) You may have income that's taxed only for MA, which makes your Massachusetts personal income tax return different from your 1040.
Here are the rules, from mass.gov:
If it's not one of these two, post back to this thread.
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AGI is 81,826. MA does not let me do circuit breaker deduction because is recognizes our AGI as over 88,000. Why?
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AGI is 81,826. MA does not let me do circuit breaker deduction because is recognizes our AGI as over 88,000. Why?
Do you meet all of these other requirements?
- You must be a Massachusetts resident or part-year resident.
- You must be 65 or older by December 31.
- You must file a Massachusetts personal income tax return.
- You must own or rent residential property in Massachusetts and occupy it as your primary residence.
- For tax year 2018, your total Massachusetts income doesn't exceed:
- $58,000 for a single individual who is not the head of a household.
- $73,000 for a head of household.
- $88,000 for married couples filing a joint return.
- If you are a homeowner, your Massachusetts property tax payments, together with half of your water and sewer expense, must exceed 10% of your total Massachusetts income for the tax year.
- If you are a renter, 25% of your annual Massachusetts rent must exceed 10% of your total Massachusetts income for the tax year.
If you do meet ALL of them and you're still not getting the credit, try clearing out you MA return and re-starting it.
Here's how:
If that still doesn't work, post back to this thread.
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