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Chapter 4 Business Income & Expenses Part II Income Tax Fundamentals 2013 Student Slides Gerald E. Whittenburg Martha Altus-Buller Steven Gill 2013 Cengage Learning
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Homes With Dual Use – Rental and Personal Three Categories – different tax treatment for each ◦ Category I: Primarily personal use Rented for less than 15 days ◦ Category II: Primarily rental use Rented more than or equal to 15 days and Personal use does not exceed greater of 14 days or 10% of rental days ◦ Category III: Rental/personal (dual use) of property Rented more than or equal to 15 days and Personal use exceeds greater of 14 days or 10% of rental days See following screens for tax treatment for each scenario 2013 Cengage Learning
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Categories of Income Three classifications of income o Active – This is from wages, salaries and self- employment income o Portfolio – This is generated from dividend and interest income o Passive – This is from items such as limited partnerships and rental real estate 2013 Cengage Learning
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Self Employed Health Insurance Deduction 2013 Cengage Learning Deduction for AGI allowed for: o Medical/dental insurance premiums paid to cover the self- employed taxpayer, spouse and dependent children o Medical/dental insurance paid for children under age of 27 who are not dependents o Medicare premiums o Long-term care insurance premiums - within limits Limited by the following o Not allowed in months where taxpayer is eligible to participate in employer-sponsored health care plan o Only allowed to extent of taxpayer’s net earned income o Deductible long-term care premiums based upon taxpayer’s age before close of the taxable year
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Health Savings Accounts (HSA) 2013 Cengage Learning Deduction for AGI allowed for: o Amounts put into an HSA that is used to pay unreimbursed medical expenses o Earnings and unused balance accumulate tax free o Only available if taxpayer has high-deductible insurance High deductible health insurance defined as $2,400 (family) or $1,200 (self only) Maximum out of pocket requirements for insurance policy must be $12,100 (family) or $6,050 (self only) Contribution limited, based upon whether it is for family or self only o HSA contribution must be made by April 15 of following year o Additional contributions allowed for taxpayer age 55 or older
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Moving Expenses Deduction for AGI – can deduct costs of moving personal items and travel (except meals) to new locality o 2012 mileage rate is $.23/mile Moving expenses must be reasonable Qualified moving expenses reimbursed by an employer are not reported as part of gross income Taxpayers in military or involuntarily transferred do not need to meet time/distance test (see next slide) 2013 Cengage Learning
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Types of Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs) Traditional IRA o Deduction for AGI if certain conditions met o Distributions in retirement are taxable Roth IRA o No current deduction o Distributions in retirement are nontaxable 2013 Cengage Learning
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Contributing/Deducting - IRA Roth or traditional IRA contribution limited to lesser of o 100% of earned income or o $5,000 Spouse with no earned income will be able to contribute up to $5,000 For 2012, taxpayers and spouses age 50 and older can contribute an additional $1,000/year (called “catch-up provision”) 2013 Cengage Learning Can make contributions up through April 15, 2013 for 2012
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Contributing and Deducting to a Roth IRA Roth IRA contribution maximum is reduced for all taxpayers over certain income levels o Phase-out for contribution is reflected in table on page 4-19 o Does not matter whether one spouse is an active plan participant or not If taxpayer contributes to both a traditional and Roth IRA, combined amount cannot exceed $5,000 ($6,000 if 50 or over) 2013 Cengage Learning
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Qualified Retirement Plan Contributions by an employer to qualified retirement plans are tax deductible, employee contributions are pre-tax and tax on earnings is deferred To achieve qualified plan status, an employer-sponsored retirement plan must ◦ Be for exclusive benefit of employees ◦ Be nondiscriminatory ◦ Have certain participation and coverage requirements ◦ Comply with minimum vesting requirements ◦ Meet uniform distribution rules Limitations on contributions to/benefits from qualified plans ◦ Defined contribution – annual addition to employee’s account can’t exceed lesser of 25% of compensation or $50,000 ◦ Defined benefit – annual benefit can’t exceed lesser of $200,000 or average compensation for the highest three consecutive years 2013 Cengage Learning
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