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Level 3
January 25, 2022
Solved

Incorrect tax rate used?

  • January 25, 2022
  • 2 replies
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In solving an earlier problem, I added $1000 in interest income to see my marginal federal tax rate.

Using the Form 1040 Qualified Dividends and Capital Gain Worksheet, line 25, I compared the tax calculation before and after the added interest income. The resulting increase in the tax was $370, or 37%, implying I am in the 37% tax bracket. [NOTE: this is before calculating the Net Investment Tax.]

 

However, my AGI on Form 1040-SR (Line 33) is far below the $628,301 floor for the 37% tax bracket.

Why is my tax being calculated for the higher 37% tax bracket?

    Best answer by Mike9241

    that additional income may be kicking some of your capital gains from the 15% bracket to the 20% bracket

    see if the worksheet before is 0 on line 21 and now there is an amount.

     

    also, many other items on your return can be affected by more income - we can't see your return.

     

    2 replies

    Level 11
    January 25, 2022

    While it appears that you are not in the 37% tax bracket, it is not clear why the additional interest of $1,000 should generate additional tax owed of $370.  Can you provide additional information regarding your other sources of income, and any tax credits you are receiving?  With additional information, we may be able to provide a more detailed explanation.  

     

    When providing additional information, do not include any personal identifiable information.   

    **Say "Thanks" by clicking the thumb icon in a post. **Mark the post that answers your question by clicking on "Mark as Best Answer"
    chirashiAuthor
    Level 3
    January 26, 2022

    Hi GeorgeM777,

     

    I repeated my experiment, using $1000 in an IRA withdrawal (I am over 60) to avoid Net Investment Income impact. (Form 8960 is using my actual investment income for its calculations, so the extra $1000 has no impact there.)

    1. My only deductions/credits are the standard deduction and the $600 charitable gift deduction.

    2. My income includes employment income (I retired in 2021), Social Security, pensions, interest & dividends & cap gains, and a partial IRA -> Roth conversion.

    3. I also have income tax withholding on the employment income and pensions, plus a sizable estimated tax payment.

     

    I have concern that the additional tax calculation in TT is exactly 37.0%, when my AGI is $100K below the 37% bracket floor. If the issue were due to other tax/income/credit interactions, I do not believe the rate discrepancy would be precisely 2.0%.

    Mike9241Level 15Answer
    Level 15
    January 26, 2022

    that additional income may be kicking some of your capital gains from the 15% bracket to the 20% bracket

    see if the worksheet before is 0 on line 21 and now there is an amount.

     

    also, many other items on your return can be affected by more income - we can't see your return.

     

    chirashiAuthor
    Level 3
    January 26, 2022

    Hi, Mike9241,

     

    My cap gains were already more than enough to get the 20% treatment.

    And if some other income/deduction interaction is the culprit, I doubt that would result in exactly 37.0% marginal tax, vs the 35% I think it should be.

     

    I get the same result when I add non-investment income (e.g., non-penalty IRA withdrawal) -- 37.0% additional tax (before other taxes/penalties). My AGI is $100K below the 37% bracket floor.