Thanks to several rounds of tax
cutting by Congress the past few years, this filing season should
be less taxing -- albeit a bit more complicated -- for individuals.
Incorporated in 2001 income tax returns is a host of new and expanded
benefits, including a cut in most tax rates, a $100 increase in
the child tax credit and a break for some of the millions of dependents
and other taxpayers who didn't receive a full tax rebate check in
the mail last year.
Lower-bracket investors are eligible for a new, lower capital gains
rate for investments held more than five years. More interest on
student loans can be deducted.
Self-employed individuals can write off more of their business
equipment purchases. Most IRS car mileage rates have been boosted.
Middle-income taxpayers will get some additional protection from
the dreaded "alternative minimum tax."
And most everyone will benefit to some extent from the annual inflation
adjustments to the tax system.
The biggest changes embedded in 2001 returns reflect the first
wave of benefits from President Bush's 10-year, $1.35 trillion Economic
Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001. Other changes
stem from tax-cut legislation enacted during President Clinton's
second term.
The tax changes for 2001 can add up to hundreds of dollars or more
in tax savings. But a lot of it won't be reflected in this season's
tax refund checks. That's because most people will have received
much of the benefit last year.
That is when the IRS sent out tax rebate checks of up to $300 for
singles, $600 for married couples and $500 for heads of households.
The rebates reflected the immediate reduction in the bottom tax
bracket. The 2001 tax act lowered from 15 percent to 10 percent
the tax rate for the first $6,000 of taxable income for singles,
$12,000 for married couples, and $10,000 for heads of household.
New wrinkles
The changes created a few new wrinkles in the tax forms that individuals
will have to wrestle with this filing season.
For instance, taxpayers who didn't receive a full rebate check
last year will need to fill out a nine-line worksheet to calculate
how much of a break, if any, they're entitled to claim on their
2001 returns to get the benefit of the new 10 percent rate. Dependents
will have a three-line worksheet to fill out.
Lower-income parents will need to make some extra calculations
to figure their child tax credit. The new law will enable many more
parents with modest incomes to reap a benefit from the credit.
Higher-bracket investors are likely to be left scratching their
heads at one of the more peculiar tax provisions enacted by Congress
in recent memory. They can arrange to have investments acquired
before 2001 made eligible for a 2 percent lower capital gains tax
rate in 2006 by electing on their tax return to pretend the investment
was sold and repurchased at the start of 2001.
"The trend toward greater complexity is continuing," said Mark
Luscombe, principal federal tax analyst at CCH Inc., a publisher
of legal references for tax professionals.
What is likely to cause the most angst this tax season is the IRS
plan to revive the practice of conducting some random audits of
taxpayer returns. Normally, individuals are picked for audit based
on something suspicious in their return. But for the first time
since 1988, the IRS plans to randomly select nearly 50,000 of this
tax season's returns for a special audit, which makes everyone a
potential target. The IRS said this year's random audits wouldn't
be as exhaustive or as burdensome for taxpayers as the old random
audits.
Here's a summary of the major changes in 2001 returns.
- Tax rates: Each of the tax rates above the 15 percent
tax bracket have been lowered a half percentage point in 2001 tax
tables.
A new 10 percent tax rate became effective for 2001, but the rate
isn't included in the tax tables because the benefit was delivered
to most taxpayers last year through the mass mailing of tax rebate
checks. Other eligible taxpayers will be able to get the benefit
of the 10 percent rate on 2001 returns through a "rate reduction
credit" or a special worksheet for dependents.
- Child credit: The child tax credit for families with children
under age 17 increases from $500 in 2000 to $600 per child for the
2001 tax year.
- Student loan deduction: Up to $2,500 in interest paid
on college loans in 2001 will be eligible for the student loan deduction,
up from $2,000 in 2000.
- Kiddie tax: For children under age 14, the first $1,500
of investment income gets preferential tax treatment, up from the
first $1,400 in 2000.
- Capital gains: A new lower capital gains rate of 8 percent
applies to most types of investments held more than five years by
investors whose regular tax bracket is no higher than 15 percent.
That compares with a 10 percent rate that normally applies to investments
held more than one year by lower-bracket investors.
Similar relief won't be available for higher-bracket investors
until 2006 and will apply only to investments they acquired after
2000 and then held more than five years. But investments acquired
before 2001 can be made to qualify for an 18 percent capital gains
rate in 2006, instead of 20 percent, by electing on 2001 returns
to pay tax now on prior appreciation.
- IRAs: The income-eligibility limits for traditional deductible
IRAs have been raised by $1,000 for workers who are covered by an
employer retirement plan.
- Business equipment: Many self-employed individuals and
other small businesses will be eligible to immediately write off
up to $24,000 of business equipment purchased last year without
having to depreciate the costs over a period of years. The previous
limit was $20,000.
- Car deductions: The IRS standard mileage rate for business
use of an automobile increased by 2 cents, to 34.5 cents for 2001.
The rate for job-related moves and medical transportation increased
by 2 cents, to 12 cents a mile.
- Household help: If you paid a housekeeper, gardener or
other household helper less than $1,300 last year, you won't have
to pay Social Security or Medicare taxes on behalf of the worker.
The $1,300 threshold is up from $1,200 in 2000.
- Social Security tax: Higher-paid workers will find Social
Security taxes taking a bigger bite. The 6.2 percent Social Security
tax (12.4 percent for the self-employed) will apply to the first
$80,400 of job earnings in 2001, up from $76,200 in 2000.
- Inflation adjustments: The tax tables, personal exemption,
earned income credit and other elements of the tax system have been
adjusted for inflation. Personal exemptions, for instance, have
increased by $100. The standard deduction has increased by $150
for single individuals and by $250 for married couples filing jointly.
- Self-employed retirement plans: For self-employed workers,
the 2001 deposit limit for defined-contribution Keogh plans increased
by $5,000, to $35,000.
- Alternative minimum tax (AMT): The AMT exemption, which
helps protect most taxpayers from being subject to the AMT, increased
by $4,000 on a joint return to $49,000, and by $2,000 for singles
to $35,750.
- Terrorist attacks: Substantial income tax and estate tax
relief was extended to families of victims of the Sept. 11, 2001
terrorist attacks, the subsequent anthrax attacks and the 1995 bombing
of the federal building in Oklahoma City.