FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE: March 2011
The
Latest News on the AMT
Do
you consider yourself “wealthy?” Most
people do not, especially during challenging
economic times. But just because you
don’t feel like a high-earner
doesn’t mean you are immune to
something that was originally created
to ensure that the rich and powerful
paid their fair share of taxes: the
alternative minimum tax or AMT. The
New York State Society of CPAs explains
what it’s all about and provides
an update on the newest tax laws affecting
the AMT.
Created
to Level the Playing Field
The
AMT was originally introduced in
1970
because Congress wanted
to ensure
that the rich paid a fair minimum
tax on their income. It had become
clear
that some high-income people were
able to find so many tax breaks
that they
were paying virtually no federal
taxes. The AMT is a parallel
tax with its
own separate set of rules and forms.
However, the rates that determine
who is subject to the AMT have
not kept
pace with inflation, which means
that now a sizable number of
middle-class taxpayers are affected.
While the
tax
applied to a few thousand people
when first enacted, today millions
are subject
to the AMT, including many families
making under $100,000 a year.
New
Exemptions
The
AMT does not apply to all of your
income and Congress
regularly
updates
the amounts that are exempt.
Under the Tax Relief, Unemployment
Insurance
Reauthorization, and Job Creation
Act of 2010, passed late last
year, the
AMT exemption amounts for 2010
are $47,450 for unmarried individuals
and $72,450 for married individuals
filing
jointly. Those are the amounts
you’ll
use in preparing your 2010
return in time for this year’s
April deadline. For next year’s
return, the 2011 amounts are
$48,450 for single taxpayers
and $74,450 for married people
filing jointly.
An
Initial Delay
In
addition, the Internal Revenue Service
announced
late last
year that as many
as 13.5 million taxpayers
who use any of five forms
that
relate to
the AMT
would have to delay filing
their tax returns while
the IRS updated
its forms
and its computer systems
in light of the new law’s
changes. The IRS was expected
to be ready to receive
these returns by mid-to-late
February, but your CPA
can offer more information
on whether your return
will
be affected.
Tax-Planning
Opportunities
Good
tax planning can help minimize some
of
the AMT
impact. For example,
one downside of the
AMT is the possibility that
you
won’t be able
to benefit from common
deductions,
such as the
one for property taxes.
While this deduction
is available for those
paying
the regular tax, it
is not valid for taxpayers
subject to the AMT.
Let’s
say you believe you
will be hit with the
AMT in
2012 but not for current
2011 income. In that
case, you should
try to make your first
property tax payment
for 2012 late this
year so
that you can deduct
it on your income tax
form
for 2011. In addition,
if
you are not subject
to the AMT in future
years,
it may be possible
to claim
a credit for a refund
of some of what you
laid out in the years
when
you
did have to pay AMT.
Your
Local CPA Can Help
This
is clearly a complicated and confusing
topic,
but one that can
have a significant
impact on many
taxpayers.
Keep in mind that
your CPA can offer
valuable
advice
on the AMT and
a wide
range of other
financial issues.
Turn
to him or
her with all your
questions on your
family’s
financial concerns.