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best to dissect the impact of the tax law changes from withholdings ......not aware of any changes to IRAs in the tax law change
1) take out the 2017 Form 1040 and divide line 63 (total taxes) by line 37 (adjusted Gross). for 2018, on Form 1040, divide line 15 (total tax) by line 7 (adjusted Gross). Assuming relatively similar income from one year to the next, that percentage difference is the impact of the tax law change
2) take the difference of the resulting percentages and multiply by the 2017 Form 1040 line 37 and THAT is the dollar impact of the tax law change against last year's income. For example, let's say the percent was 10% last year and 11% this year and the Adjusted Gross was $50,000 last year. then the impact of the tax law against last years' gross was $500 ((11%- 10% * $50,000)
3) take the difference between what your refund was last year and subtract what you owe this year and then subtract the result from #3. that is the impact of withholdings. For example, if last year's refund was $300 and you now owe $1,000 then that difference is $1300. then if the result of #3 was $500, then the tax law caused you to pay an extra $500 and changes in the withholding tables drove the other $800 ($1300 - $500)
a lot of math, but it can help understand what is tax law driven and what is withholding driven
Mine went up enough to have to deal with underpayment penalty issue on both federal and state level which seems to be preventing e-filing my returns so I have to paper file which is an extra hassle on top of the tax increase.
YES. Last year we received more than $6000 in federal and state refunds. This year we owe feds almost $800 and state refund went from $1440 to $280. This with me claiming ZERO deductions at work. Granted, I had a little more 1099 side income this year than last, and my spouse started working and knocked us just into the bottom of the next tax bracket up, but a $6000+ drop is clearly the result of something else (i.e., "tax cuts"). And mortgage interest is meaningless now. Now need to file a new W-4 with my employer asking them to withhold additional tax each paycheck. First time in my life I'd had to do this.
I agree. Now that I am completely retired my wife and I have a lot of small incomes that do not take out a lot of taxes to cover the sum. Most do not take out any state taxes and two incomes do not participate in taking out Virginia income tax.
Yes, there was a significant impact to me due to the cap on taxes (income and property). I lost over 20k in deductions related to property. Perhaps this affected you also.
A big tax increase! I'm in the low end of the tax bracket as a disabled former teacher and normally get back about $1,200. Even itemizing this year I am only getting back $582 - less than half the usual amount. My very slight increase in income this past year couldn't possibly account for this much increase, I wouldn't think; my taxable income in 2018 was only $9,389. The Republican tax plan sure didn't do this commoner any favors.
You might look at your state, local, property and sales tax deduction (SALT). This deduction has been capped at $10,000. See this link for how the 2018 Tax Reform affects your taxes.
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