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Could I be hit with this Alternative Minimum Tax?
You may soon have to pay the Alternative Minimum Tax, which increases your tax bill by knocking out a lot of exemptions, deductions, and credits you may have gotten used to, when doing your regular income taxes. Here are the answers to common questions about the dreaded AMT.
In 1969, Congress noticed that some people with a high gross income had a lot of deductions and therefore paid much less in tax than lower-income people who had few deductions. So Congress instituted the Alternative Minimum Tax to make the tax system fairer.
The Alternative Minimum Tax has evolved into a tax system that is parallel to our regular income tax system. The AMT expands the amount of your income that can be taxed, adding items that were tax-free under the regular tax system, and disallowing many deductions.
TurboTax automatically determines whether you owe the additional tax.
In 1987, one year after the last major overhaul of the Alternative Minimum Tax system, only one tenth of one percent of all returns had to pay the Alternative Minimum Tax.
Today, the Alternative Minimum Tax is no longer just for high-income individuals. Now, many middle-income Americans are paying the Alternative Minimum Tax or having their tax credits limited by its hidden effects.
The Treasury Department expects that more and more people will be paying the AMT over the next few years.
| Income | Year | Year | Year |
| 2000 | 2005 | 2010 | |
| $75,000-$100,000 | 2.3% | 14.7% | 29.3% |
| $100,000-$200,000 | 5.7% | 16.1% | 35.6% |
| $200,000-$500,000 | 18.8% | 34.0% | 64.0% |
In fact, in 2010, the percentage of married couples with children paying AMT in all income brackets is projected to be 39 percent.
More people will be subject to the AMT in the future largely because the AMT exemption amounts have not been indexed for inflation. Regular tax brackets and regular tax personal exemptions are indexed for inflation each year to prevent bracket creep, an automatic upward shift in the marginal income tax bracket through inflation. More and more people will be subject to the AMT, not because they are making more money in real dollars, but just through the effects of cost of living adjustments in their wage income.
The simplest way to see why you are paying the AMT, or how close you came to paying it, is to look at your completed Form 6251 from last year.
To avoid the AMT, you need to understand how the AMT differs from the regular tax system.
We'll walk through form 6251, line by line, looking at the way the AMT handles different deductions and expenses, and wherever we see a workaround, we will suggest how to lessen the impact of the AMT.
Line 1, Standard Deduction: If you itemize, this line is your Adjusted Gross Income (AGI) minus your itemized deductions (some of which are added back in on the following lines). If, on the other hand, you take the standard deduction instead, this line is solely your AGI; you can't take any part of the standard deduction when calculating the AMT. So, if you took the standard deduction on your regular return, it is added back into your income here.
Line 2, Medical Expenses: If you itemize deductions, medical deductions are only allowed to the extent that they exceed 10 percent of adjusted gross income, rather than 7.5 percent under the regular tax system.
Suggestion: See if your employer has a pre-tax medical deduction plan or cafeteria plan. If you pay medical expenses on a pre-tax basis, they are no longer included in taxable wages or deductible as itemized deductions. This will help with both the AMT and your regular tax.
Line 3, Taxes: In calculating the AMT, you cannot take itemized deductions for state and local income tax, real estate taxes, and personal property taxes, even though these were deductible on your regular return.
Suggestion: In a year that you have to pay the AMT, don't bother prepaying real estate or 4th-quarter state estimated tax payments in December. You get no AMT benefit from paying these taxes in the taxable year.
Suggestion: Real estate tax and personal property taxes are not deductible for AMT if they are part of itemized deductions. Taxes deductible on a business schedule (Schedule C), rental schedule (Schedule E), or farm schedule (Schedule F or Form 4835) are allowed for the AMT.
Line 4, Home Equity Interest: Home mortgage interest claimed as an itemized deduction is only deductible for the AMT if the loan proceeds were used to buy, build or improve your home. For regular tax purposes, interest on home equity mortgages up to $100,000 is deductible, even if the proceeds are used for personal purposes, such as buying a car.
Suggestion: If you are subject to the AMT, there is no advantage to using your home equity line of credit to buy a car, because the interest will not be deductible. You may be able to get a lower interest rate from a regular car loan. If the car is used in your business, you may be able to write off some of your auto loan interest as a business expense on Schedule C.
Line 5, Miscellaneous Itemized Deductions: Miscellaneous itemized deductions are not deductible for AMT purposes. Often generated by employee business expenses, these itemized deductions can save you a lot of money on your regular return. If so, when the AMT puts them back into your taxable income, you could face a big problem.
Suggestion 1: Employee business expenses (Form 2106) are incurred by employees, not self-employed individuals. These work-related expenses were not reimbursed in full by the employer. These expenses become miscellaneous deductions on Schedule A, Itemized Deductions. If you are in this situation, ask your employer to start reimbursing you for your business expenses.
If your employer has a non-accountable business expense plan, encourage him or her to adopt an accountable plan.
To avoid this situation, encourage your employer to change to an accountable plan. With this plan, you turn in your receipts to your employer and you must refund any expense advance not used. Because you are not taxed on the advance and you do not take a deduction for the expenses, you avoid being hit by AMT rules.
Suggestion 2: If you have employee business expenses that your employer refuses to reimburse, and you know that these expenses are causing you to pay the AMT, consider negotiating with your employer. You may be better off by having the employer pay some of these expenses in exchange for a lower salary.
Example:
Imagine you are single and have wage income of $200,000. You have $40,000 in unreimbursed employee business expenses. You have no other income items or deductions. In 2005, you owed $44,807 regular tax plus $3,808 AMT for a total federal tax liability of $48,615.
You negotiate with your employer and he agrees to pay $20,000 of your unreimbursed employee business expenses in exchange for a $20,000 drop in pay. Your employer saves on payroll taxes, workman's compensation insurance, and in some cases liability insurance premiums, and you have wage income of $180,000 and only $20,000 in miscellaneous itemized deductions. You would now owe $44,289 in regular tax, and no AMT. By dropping your income and expenses by $20,000 each, you have reduced your income taxes by $4,326.
Line 7, State Tax Refund: If you have a taxable state tax refund on your regular tax return, it does not count as taxable income for AMT purposes because you do not receive a corresponding deduction for state tax.
Line 8, Investment Interest: The investment interest deduction may be different for AMT purposes because it depends on whether you have taxable private activity bond interest (see line 11). If you do, you may have an additional deduction for investment interest.
Line 9, Depletion: You can calculate depletion from mining, oil, gas, timber or other similar activities for regular tax purposes using either the cost or percentage depletion method. For AMT, only the cost method is allowed.
Suggestion: If this line is generating AMT on your tax return, consider electing the cost method of depletion.
Line 11: Tax-exempt Interest: This line commonly has an entry, but the amount is usually not large enough to generate AMT on its own. Some tax-exempt interest, namely from private activity bonds, is not tax-exempt for AMT purposes. A private activity bond is a state or local bond issued to provide funds for private, nongovernmental activities such as building a sports stadium, industrial development, student loan financing, or low-income housing. These bonds are often issued by states, counties, or cities and are tax-exempt for regular federal tax, but not for the AMT. If you invest in mutual funds, the year-end literature often contains information about the amount or percentage of the distributions from private activity bonds. This amount is entered on Line 11 to show the income as taxable for AMT purposes.
Suggestion: If you are subject to the AMT, invest in tax-exempt bonds that are not private activity bonds. Many mutual fund companies have two listings of state bond funds, one that contains private activity bonds, and one that doesn't. Read the literature carefully.
Line 12, Section 1202 Exclusion: You can exclude from your income some portion of the gain on the sale of qualified small business stock held more than five years. The gain on the sale of this stock is 50 percent excludable for regular tax purposes, but 42 percent of the excluded gain is added back for AMT purposes.
Suggestion: In the year that you sell qualified small business stock, try to eliminate or reduce as many other AMT adjustments as possible to get the maximum gain exclusion on the sale of the stock.
Line 13, Incentive Stock Options: This line is another common problem for people affected by the AMT. If you exercise an incentive stock option (ISO) but do not sell the stock in the year of exercise, the transaction is not taxable that year for regular tax purposes. However, the difference between the exercise price and the fair market value of the stock on the day of the exercise is an adjustment for AMT and appears on Line 13. For many people, this adjustment can be a very large number. Essentially, you are going to be taxed on a hypothetical profit (what you might have made if you sold the stock on the day you bought it.
Example:
You exercise incentive stock options (ISOs) to purchase 100 shares of stock at $3 per share and you decide to hold the stock as a long-term investment. The stock is trading at $33 per share on the day of the exercise. Line 13 on your Form 6251 is $3000 (100 shares x ($33-$3 per share)).
Your basis in this stock is now $300 ($3 x 100) for regular tax purposes, but $3300 ($33 x 100) for AMT purposes. When you later sell the stock, you will have an entry on Line 16, Disposition of Property Difference, to account for the difference in your tax basis for regular and AMT purposes.
Suggestion 1: If you exercise the ISOs in the previous example at $33 and the stock falls before the end of the current year, you can sell the stock and avoid the AMT. If the stock fell to $25 during the year of the exercise, you would be subject to regular tax on only $22 per share ($25-$3) and not be subject to the AMT adjustment at all.
Suggestion 2: When you exercise ISOs, always use tax planning software to forecast the tax consequences. You may need to sell some of the stock in the year of the exercise to pay the tax due.
Line 14, Estates or Trusts: This line contains differences between AMT and regular tax deductions from estates or trusts. Decisions by the administrators of the estate or trust may be beyond your control.
Line 15, Electing Large Partnerships: An entry on this line comes from a partnership in which you are a partner. Other than disposing of the investment, which would have other tax ramifications, there is probably nothing you can do about an entry on this line.
Line 16, Disposition of Property Difference: The tax basis in assets that you sold may be different for regular and AMT purposes depending on the depreciation method you chose (see Line 17), or on your incentive stock options (see Line 13).
Line 17, Post-1986 Depreciation: On this line, you enter the depreciation difference for regular and AMT purposes. For AMT purposes, you generally must depreciate (deduct) business assets over a longer period of time than you can for regular tax purposes. This creates a difference between regular tax depreciation and AMT depreciation. This is an entry that does self-correct. By the time the asset is completely written off, you have received the same deduction for both regular and AMT purposes.
Suggestion: If you have an entry on this line, consider electing a slower depreciation method for your business assets, which could eliminate the AMT adjustment.
Line 18, Passive Activities: This line contains the differences between AMT and regular tax deductions for passive activities. This line usually relates to a difference in depreciation methods for rentals, partnerships, or S Corporations.
Suggestion: If the adjustment is from a rental property, consider using slower depreciation methods for regular tax purposes to eliminate an entry on this line. If the adjustment is from a partnership or S Corporation, the depreciation methods are selected at the entity level and there is probably nothing you can do.
Line 19, Loss Limitations: You may have AMT or regular tax differences due to passive investments in partnerships or S Corporations. Depending on your percentage of ownership, you may discuss with the management of these investments any items that are generating AMT on your tax return to see if the AMT impact can be lessened in future years.
Line 20, Circulation expenditures: This line relates to the difference between how newspaper or magazine circulation expenditures are deducted under both tax systems.
Suggestion: If you have an entry on this line, consider making an election under Internal Revenue Code (IRC) 59(e) to amortize these expenses over three years for regular tax purposes. This will eliminate the entry on this line for AMT purposes.
Line 21, Long-Term Contracts: Long-term construction contractors are generally required to use the percentage of completion method of accounting for long-term contract revenue, rather than the completed-contract method. This is a timing difference that will reverse in later years.
Line 22, Mining Costs: Mining exploration and development costs may also generate an AMT adjustment unless you make an IRC 59(e) election to write-off the costs over 10 years. Making the election eliminates an entry on this line.
Line 23, Research and Experimental Expenditures: This adjustment is related to a timing difference between deducting Research and Experimental Expenditures for regular and AMT purposes. You can eliminate this line entry if you make the IRC 59(e) election to deduct the costs over 10 years.
Line 24, Installment Sales: Installment sales of inventory items are not allowed for AMT purposes for sales entered into between August 16, 1986, and January 1, 1987. (Almost no one uses this line).
Line 25, Intangible Drilling Costs: This line relates to the difference in timing of the deductions for intangible drilling costs. You can make an election under IRC 59(e) to write off intangible drilling costs over 60 months for regular tax purposes, and eliminate an entry on this line.
Line 26, Other Adjustments: This line relates to any other income or deduction items that are affected by AMT differences, such as taxable IRA distributions, self-employed health insurance, IRA deductions, and other income-based calculations.
Also, in calculating the AMT you cannot take the deductions for personal exemptions. This is one of the reasons that married couples with children are strongly affected by the AMT. If you are a married couple with three children, you lose $16,000 ($3,200 x 5) in personal exemptions under the Alternative Minimum Tax system.
Having thrown so many items back into your income, you now get a small break. Your taxable income for AMT purposes is reduced by an exemption amount, which depends on your income and filing status. For married couples filing jointly with alternative minimum taxable income of $150,000 or less, the exemption amount is $58,000 in 2005. This exemption amount phases out as income increases, but the amount is not indexed for inflation, which is part of the reason more people are being subjected to the AMT.
Now you calculate the Tentative Minimum Tax. You compare this figure to the tax you calculated under the regular tax system on Form 1040.
The difference is the Alternative Minimum Tax.
You pay the Tentative Minimum Tax or the regular tax, whichever is higher.
If the calculation on Form 6251, Alternative Minimum Tax shows that your Tentative Minimum Tax is less than your regular tax, you don’t owe any AMT, but you may still be affected by the AMT in other ways.
Because of the AMT, you may not be receiving all of your tax credits such as the Low-Income Housing or Work Opportunity Credits.
Your Tentative Minimum Tax limits these credits and other general business credits, because these credits cannot reduce the tax you pay below the Tentative Minimum Tax.
You get a tax credit for Alternative Minimum Tax paid in a prior year.
This credit, calculated on Form 8801, Credit for Prior Year Minimum Tax, calculates how much of the AMT was related to deferral items as opposed to exclusion items.
Certain items in Lines 2 through 26 of the Form 6251 are simply not deductible for AMT purposes, such as taxes, home equity mortgage interest, and miscellaneous deductions. Lines 2-5, 7-9, 11, and 12 are exclusion items. If you paid AMT based on entries on these lines, you will not receive a tax credit for AMT.
Other items create timing differences, such as depreciation differences between the two tax systems, and will generate a credit on Form 8801 and reduce your taxes in future years.
Lines 13 through 26 are deferral items. An AMT credit may be generated based on the reversal of the timing difference of these items. For example, AMT depreciation methods may be slower than those for the regular tax, but you will eventually receive the same deduction.
There are some things you can do to plan ahead for the Alternative Minimum Tax:
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| Loan Type | Today | Last Week |
|---|---|---|
| 30 Year Fixed | 5.13% | 5.16% |
| 15 Year Fixed | 4.70% | 4.60% |
| 1 Year ARM | 3.98% | 4.00% |
| 30 Year Fixed Jumbo | 6.06% | 6.10% |
| 5/1 ARM | 4.30% | 4.26% |
| 3/1 ARM | 4.75% | 4.80% |
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|---|---|---|
| $30K Home Equity Loan | 8.35% | 8.39% |
| $50K Home Equity Loan | 8.36% | 8.41% |
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| $30K HELOC | 5.24% | 5.26% |
| $50K HELOC | 4.99% | 5.00% |
| $75K HELOC | 4.99% | 5.00% |
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|---|---|---|
| 36 Month New Car Loan | 6.90% | 6.96% |
| 48 Month New Car Loan | 7.05% | 7.12% |
| 60 Month New Car Loan | 7.11% | 7.18% |
| 36 Month Used Car Loan | 7.39% | 7.43% |
| 48 Month Used Car Loan | 7.50% | 7.51% |
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| Reward Credit Cards | 12.85% | 12.85% |
| Instant Approval Credit Cards | 13.32% | 13.32% |
| Balance Transfer Credit Cards | 13.46% | 13.46% |
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