WSJ+ Tax-Guide 2020 Updated PDF
WSJ+ Tax-Guide 2020 Updated PDF
WSJ+ Tax-Guide 2020 Updated PDF
The lead authors of this book were Laura Saunders and Richard Rubin, with
contributions from Theo Francis, Anne Tergesen, and Stephanie Armour. The
graphics editors were Peter Santilli and Kara Dapena. The design editor was Jay
Morris. The news editor was Aaron Lucchetti and the lead editor was Bourree Lam.
A NOTE TO OUR READERS
On March 20, the Internal Revenue Service announced that it is postponing the
deadline for filing individual tax returns for 2019 from April 15 to July 15 as a result
of the coronavirus pandemic.
In addition, quarterly estimated tax payments due April 15 are also postponed
until July 15.
It also delays the deadline for making Health Savings Account, Individual
Retirement Account and Roth IRA contributions for 2019 to July 15 from April 15.
Some states have also delayed their tax deadlines and others are likely to,
following the IRS’s announcement.
Taxpayers who have already filed their returns but not yet paid their balance may
be able to reschedule their payments.
In addition, the IRS is easing enforcement actions such as audits, liens and levies
until July 15.
INTRODUCTION Charitable-Donation
Deductions..................................................27
THE BIG PICTURE Medical-Expenses Deduction........ 29
Tax Rates and Brackets......................... 4 Alimony........................................................ 30
Standard Deduction Other Deductions.................................... 31
and Personal Exemption....................... 6
Child and Dependent RETIREMENT AND EDUCATION
Tax Credits......................................................8 Retirement Savings.............................. 33
Withholding and Estimated Retiree Tax Issues.................................. 35
Tax Payments............................................10
529 Education-
Taxes on Investment Income............11 Savings Accounts................................... 36
Alternative Minimum Tax.................. 13 Other Education
Individual Mandate................................14 Benefits........................................................ 38
Toward the end of 2019, lawmakers passed the most important changes to the
nation’s retirement system since 2006. They came just two years after Congress
delivered the largest overhaul of the U.S. tax code in three decades.
Nearly every American has been affected in some way by these changes. They apply
to a broad range of provisions, including popular deductions for mortgage interest
and state taxes, child credits, estate-and gift-tax exemptions, the alternative
minimum tax and retirement-savings incentives.
Many taxpayers remain confused. Last year, millions of filers were surprised to
receive smaller refunds or owe higher taxes because they hadn’t adjusted their
paycheck withholding after the overhaul. Home sellers in some high-tax areas
aren’t getting prices as high as expected due to changes in state and local
tax deductions.
The passage of the 2019 spending bill by Congress included what has been known
as the Secure Act, and it made extensive changes to retirement provisions with
bipartisan support. Now savers, retirees and workers on the cusp of retirement
need to evaluate key changes to required withdrawals from their individual
retirement accounts and planning for their so-called Stretch IRAs. Some will need
to consider new savings options, such as whether to opt for an annuity in their
401(k) that would provide lifetime income but might have high fees.
This book was first written by the reporters and editors of The Wall Street Journal
in 2018 to help dispel confusion about 2017 tax-law changes. This revision updates
that information both for 2019 and 2020. It also includes what taxpayers need to
know about the Secure Act, along with new links to relevant Journal articles on
these topics. It reviews the promises and results of the 2017 overhaul as well.
Taxes touch Americans in many different areas of their lives, from paying for
education, investing, and running a business to home buying or selling, coping
with medical expenses and saving for retirement. With this book, taxpayers have
a guide to the 2020 world of taxes.
3.
TAX RATES AND BRACKETS
The 2017 tax overhaul changed rates and income brackets, but whether
people owe more or less often depends on other provisions
The tax overhaul altered rates and brackets, but not as much as some proposed.
Instead, the major changes affecting Americans often stem from other provisions,
such as the expanded standard deduction
or child tax credit.
Lawmakers also switched to a less
generous method for calculating inflation THE TOP AND BOTTOM RATES
adjustments to tax brackets and other key The top tax rate was reduced
provisions. They are now adjusted using to 37% from 39.6%; the lowest
the typically slower-moving chained rate remains 10%. The changes
consumer-price index instead of a to rates and brackets weren’t as
traditional method of inflation known as dramatic as some proposed.
the CPI-U. The shift will cost Americans
$133.5 billion over a decade, according to Congress’s Joint Committee on Taxation.
For example, the new top tax bracket for individuals began at $500,000 for 2018
and rose to $510,300 for 2019 under the new inflation adjustment. The adjustment
would have been to $512,075 under the prior system, according to calculations
by the Tax Foundation. By 2025, this gap between the old and new brackets is
projected to be $10,325.
While many thresholds in the tax code are adjusted for inflation, there are
important exceptions. Among those that aren’t adjusted are some tax breaks for
homeowners, taxes on Social Security benefits, and certain taxes on investment
income. As a result, millions of Americans are paying more to Uncle Sam because
there’s no indexing for such provisions.
The tax code has seven income-tax brackets. The rate changes expire at the end
of 2025, but the change to the inflation adjustment is permanent. The overhaul
dropped the top rate from 39.6% to 37%. The lowest rate remains 10%, which takes
effect at the first dollar of taxable income.
4.
TAX RATES AND BRACKETS
However, taxpayers may have more or less income before the 10% rate applies
than they did before the overhaul, due to changes to deductions, exemptions
and other provisions.
*Applies to gains on assets held longer than a year and qualified dividends. 5.
Source: Internal Revenue Service
STANDARD DEDUCTION
AND PERSONAL EXEMPTION
The expansion of the standard deduction and repeal of the
personal exemption affect millions of Americans
For many people, the tax overhaul’s most sweeping changes are the near-doubling
of the standard deduction and repeal of the personal exemption.
The standard deduction is the amount filers subtract from income if they don’t
break out deductions for mortgage interest, charitable contributions, state and
local taxes and other items on Schedule A. Listing these deductions is called
“itemizing.”
Switching to the standard deduction will simplify the returns of nearly 30 million
filers. It will also lighten the IRS’s burden, because the agency will have fewer
deductions to monitor.
But the change also means these filers won’t get a specific benefit for having
mortgage interest or making charitable donations. That could affect future
decisions about donations or owning a home.
6.
STANDARD DEDUCTION
AND PERSONAL EXEMPTION
Many families with younger children will come out ahead under the new law,
especially if they took the standard deduction in the past, because of the expanded
child credit of up to $2,000 per child that extends to far more households. But
some others won’t, especially if their dependents are age 17 or older. They will get a
$500 tax credit in place of the exemption.
The repeal of the personal exemption and the expanded standard deduction and
child credit expire at the end of 2025.
—Laura Saunders
7.
CHILD AND DEPENDENT TAX CREDITS
The child credit doubled and became available to more families, a move that
more than offset the repeal of the personal exemption in many cases
The maximum child tax credit is now $2,000, up from $1,000 for each child in a
family under age 17 at year-end.
Many more families are also eligible for this credit. For 2019 and 2020, it begins to
phase out at $400,000 of adjusted gross income for most couples and $200,000 for
most singles, compared with 2017 levels of $110,000 for couples and $75,000 for
singles. Low and moderate
earners may be eligible for a
payment of up to $1,400 per
child due to the credit, even if
they don’t owe income tax. CHILD CREDIT VS. PERSONAL EXEMPTION
For many filers with children under 17, the
The changes to this credit
expanded credit is a more valuable benefit
expire after 2025. The credit than the personal exemption, which was
and income levels aren’t suspended by the overhaul. A credit is a dollar-
adjusted for inflation, but the for-dollar offset of taxes, while the personal
payment of up to $1,400 per exemption was a deduction from income that
child to lower earners will phased out for higher earners.
be adjusted infrequently in
coming years.
For many middle-income filers with children under 17, the expanded credit will
be a more valuable benefit than the personal exemption, which was suspended
by the overhaul. A credit is a dollar-for-dollar offset of taxes, while the personal
exemption was a deduction from income that phased out for higher earners. For
2017, it was $4,050 for each household member.
For example, a married couple with three young children and taxable income of
about $200,000 in 2017 wouldn’t have qualified for the prior child tax credit. The
personal exemption for the children could have saved them about $3,300 in tax,
according to tax specialist Roberton Williams of the Tax Policy Center. For 2019,
the child credit would save such a family $6,000 of tax.
8.
CHILD AND DEPENDENT TAX CREDITS
Families with dependents age 17 and older, such as college students or an elderly
parent, often fare less well after the overhaul. The tax credit for each of these
dependents drops to $500, so in many cases the personal exemption would have
provided more benefit.
The revised provisions don’t alter existing tax-code rules defining who is a
dependent.
—Laura Saunders
9.
WITHHOLDING AND ESTIMATED
TAX PAYMENTS
Employees should refigure paycheck
withholding or risk unwelcome surprises
After the 2017 overhaul, the Treasury Department made automatic adjustments
to paycheck withholding based on the law’s changes that raised take-home pay
for more than 90% of employees in 2018. The withholding changes also applied to
pension payments.
However, these automatic
withholding changes led
to confusion during the
2019 filing season, as many WITHHOLDING AND TAX REFUNDS
taxpayers received smaller Automatic changes to paycheck withholding
refunds or had larger raised take-home pay for millions in 2018, and
payments due than expected many filers were surprised by smaller refunds
when they filed their 2018 or higher taxes due in 2019. To avoid penalties,
returns. taxpayers should check their withholding and
estimated tax payments.
The changes to withholding
remain in effect for 2019 and
2020 for many filers. Those
who weren’t happy with their refund size or taxes due
last year should have made revisions to their 2019 withholding.
The IRS posted a calculator on its website to help with decisions, and it has been
updated for 2020. The agency has also revised the W-4 form that employees use to
determine withholding.
The IRS waived penalties for some people who didn’t pay enough taxes throughout
the year in 2018, but these waivers don’t apply to 2019 taxes. In general, filers can
avoid penalties if they pay 90% of the current year’s taxes owed, either through
withholding or by making the correct quarterly estimated tax payments.
10.
TAXES ON INVESTMENT INCOME
The overhaul made few changes to investment-income taxes,
preserving the favorable rates for capital gains and dividends
The tax overhaul didn’t change the favorable rates for long-term capital gains and
many dividends, and a popular zero rate on these types of investment income for
middle-income households is still in effect.
For 2019, the zero rate applies to married couples, filing jointly, up to a threshold
$78,750 of taxable income ($39,375 for singles). A 15% rate then takes effect for joint
filers with up to a threshold of $488,850 of taxable income ($434,550 for singles). A
20% rate applies above that.
For 2020, the zero rate applies to married couples, filing jointly, up to a threshold
of $80,000 of taxable income ($40,000 for singles). A 15% rate then takes effect for
joint filers up to a threshold of $496,600 ($441,450 for singles). A 20% rate applies
above that.
There is also a 3.8% surtax on net investment income for filers with higher incomes.
Long-term capital gains are net profits on investments held longer than a year. As
in prior law, short-term capital gains on investments held a year or less are taxed at
the same rates as ordinary income.
The favorable rates for dividends apply to those that are “qualified,” which most
are. Nonqualified dividends are taxed at ordinary-income rates.
Say that Susan is a single taxpayer with $30,000 of taxable ordinary income for
2019 after deductions and exemptions, such as for tax-free municipal-bond interest
or the sale of a home. Her taxable income is subject to regular rates up to 12%, as
detailed in the tax brackets.
11.
TAXES ON INVESTMENT INCOME
But Susan also has a $20,000 long-term capital gain. This $20,000 “stacks” on top
of her $30,000 of other taxable income, and the 15% bracket for capital gains begins
at $39,375 of taxable income. As a result, she would owe zero tax on $9,375 of her
gain and 15% on the remaining $10,625.
3.8% SURTAX
The tax overhaul didn’t repeal the 3.8% surtax on net investment income. This levy
takes effect at $250,000 of adjusted gross income for most married couples and
$200,000 for most single filers. Those thresholds aren’t indexed for inflation.
As a result, top-bracket taxpayers typically owe 23.8% instead of 20% on their long-
term gains and dividends. Some investors in the 15% bracket for this income owe
the 3.8% surtax on part or all of it because their adjusted gross income is above the
$250,000/$200,000 thresholds. Filers below these threshold don’t owe it.
—Laura Saunders
12.
ALTERNATIVE MINIMUM TAX
Republicans kept this levy after vowing to kill it,
but they revised it to affect far fewer people
The overhaul nearly repealed the alternative minimum tax, or AMT, a parallel tax
system that is both complex and confusing. The purpose of the AMT is to limit
tax breaks allowed by the regular tax system and ensure that high earners can’t
legally avoid all taxes.
In the end, lawmakers retained the AMT, but with important changes. The changes
expire at the end of 2025.
Far fewer people will owe the revised AMT, according to the Tax Policy Center. It
estimates that about 200,000 filers will owe the levy for 2019 and and the same
number for 2020, compared with 5 million filers for 2017. The AMT will also fall
less heavily on those earning $500,000 or less and more heavily on higher earners
than in the past.
Several triggers of the prior AMT have been reduced or repealed, helping to lower
the number of taxpayers who owe it. These prior triggers include state and local
tax deductions, personal exemptions and miscellaneous deductions. In addition,
the AMT exemption was expanded.
Tax specialists say the breaks triggering the revised AMT are likely to be more
unusual items such as incentive stock options, interest from certain municipal
bonds and net operating losses.
—Laura Saunders
13.
INDIVIDUAL MANDATE
Obamacare requirement to have health
insurance or pay a penalty is gone for 2019
Republicans used the tax overhaul to achieve a health-policy aim: eliminating the
individual mandate to have health insurance, a centerpiece of the 2010 Affordable
Care Act.
A principal feature of the ACA, often called Obamacare, was that most individuals
had to pay a penalty if they didn’t have health coverage that met new federal
standards. The law exempted certain groups from the payment, including the very
poor, members of certain religious groups and people with brief coverage gaps.
Those exemptions were expanded in 2018, enabling people to claim the exemption
without showing supporting documents.
FEWER INSURED
Health plans worry that fewer young, low-risk people will get insurance, forcing
up premiums further. Some analysts counter that the mandate has never been
aggressively enforced and has had little impact.
Some states have, or are considering, their own state-wide penalties and insurance
coverage requirements.
In short, people who didn’t have coverage during 2019 don’t owe a federal penalty.
—Stephanie Armour
14.
HOME-SELLERS’ EXEMPTION
Nothing changed, despite an initial effort
by House Republicans to reduce the benefit
Despite proposed changes, the tax benefit for home sellers has remained.
Married couples filing jointly can exclude $500,000 of profit on the sale of a
primary home from taxes. For single filers, the exemption is $250,000 of profit.
These amounts aren’t indexed for inflation.
For example, say that John and Jane
bought a home many years ago for
$250,000 $120,000 and later made improvements
that added $100,000 to its cost. This
Exemption for singles year, they sell the home for $600,000.
Other limits and exceptions apply, such as for certain military personnel. For more
information, see IRS Publication 523, Selling Your Home.
—Laura Saunders
15.
ESTATE AND GIFT TAX
Lawmakers didn’t repeal the estate tax, but they doubled
the exemption, reducing the number of liable estates
For 2019, an inflation adjustment lifted it to $11.4 million per individual and $22.8
million per couple. For 2020, it’s $11.58 million per individual, and $23.16 million
per couple.
About This increase in the exemption is set
7,700 to lapse after 2025. In November 2018,
the Treasury Department and the IRS
Number of estates issued proposed regulations that would
expected to owe allow individuals who make large gifts
estate tax for 2017 between 2018 and 2025 to retain the tax
benefit of the higher exemption, even if
About
it reverts to pre-2018 levels. These rules
2,700 were made final in 2019.
Number of estates Here is a simplified example. Say that
expected to owe John has assets of $11 million, and he
estate tax for 2019 gave it to a trust for his heirs in 2019.
The transfer is free of gift tax because
exemption was $11.4 million for 2019.
But after 2025 the exemption reverts to its 2017 level of $5.49 million (plus an
inflation adjustment), and John dies in 2026. Under the Treasury rules, John’s
estate wouldn’t owe tax on the portion of his 2019 gift that’s above the
2026 exemption.
The number of estates that owe tax is expected to drop sharply as a result of the
overhaul’s changes. About 2,700 estates, or 0.1% of people who died, are expected
to owe estate tax for 2019, according to estimates by the Tax Policy Center. For
2017, when the exemption was $5.49 million per person, 7,700 estates were
expected to owe the tax.
16.
ESTATE AND GIFT TAX
For example, say that Robert dies owning shares of stock worth $100 each that
he bought for $5, and he held them in a taxable account rather than a tax-favored
retirement plan such as an IRA.
Because of the step-up provision, Robert’s estate won’t owe capital-gains tax on
the $95 of growth in each share of stock. Instead, the shares go into his estate at
their full market value of $100 each. Heirs who receive the shares then have a cost
of $100 each as a starting point for measuring taxable gain when they sell.
If Linda died in 2019 leaving an estate of $2 million to heirs other than her husband
Jack, he could claim the $9.4 million of Linda’s unused exemption for his own use
during life or after his death.
ANNUAL GIFTS
The law also allows any taxpayer to make annual gifts to anyone—relative,
neighbor, friend or stranger—up to a certain amount free of federal gift tax. An
inflation adjustment raised this exemption from $14,000 to $15,000 per recipient
for 2018, and it will remain at that level for 2019 and 2020.
Above this exemption, taxable gifts are subtracted from an individual’s lifetime
estate- and gift-tax exemption, which is $11.4 million per person for 2019 and
$11.58 million per person for 2020.
These annual gifts aren’t deductible from income tax, but they do gradually
remove assets from the giver’s estate, and the amounts can add up—especially
17.
ESTATE AND GIFT TAX
if the assets grow in value after the gift. A husband and wife with three married
children and six grandchildren, for example, could shift $360,000 a year to the 12
family members by using this benefit.
The annual exemption can be used to transfer complex assets, such as fractional
shares of a business, but expert help is recommended.
BUNCHING GIFTS FOR COLLEGE
In an alternative strategy, givers can “bunch” five years of annual $15,000 gifts to
a 529 education-savings plan, typically for children or grandchildren.
No tax is due, but a gift-tax form should be filed, says Mark Kantrowitz, the
publisher of savingforcollege.com.
—Laura Saunders
18.
THE ‘KIDDIE TAX’
The overhaul simplified a special levy on a child’s ‘unearned’ income, but Congress repealed
the revision in 2019 because of its unfavorable effects on children of lower earners
The overhaul made significant changes to the “Kiddie Tax,” a special levy on a
child’s “unearned” income above $2,200 for 2019 and the same for 2020. These
changes greatly simplified the levy, but they also raised taxes significantly on
lower-earning families—such as those with children of military service members
who died on duty.
In 2019, the law came full circle when Congress repealed the overhaul’s changes
to the Kiddie Tax and reinstated prior law. Affected taxpayers can choose either
version of the law for their 2018 and 2019 returns. Those who want to claim
refunds for 2018 need to file amended returns.
The Kiddie Tax typically applies to investment income such as dividends, interest,
and capital gains, although it can also apply to taxable financial aid for education
and certain other payouts, such as a taxable survivor’s benefit. It doesn’t apply to a
young person’s earned income, such as from mowing lawns or designing websites.
Congress passed the Kiddie Tax in 1986 to prevent wealthy or affluent people from
taking advantage of their children’s lower tax rates by shifting income-producing
assets to them. Today, the Kiddie Tax applies to nearly all children under 18 and
many who are under 24, if they are full-time students and aren’t self-supporting.
The overhaul simplified the Kiddie Tax by making a youngster’s unearned taxable
income subject to trust-tax rates rather than the parents’ income-tax rate. An
unanticipated result of the change was that, while the Kiddie Tax was often lower
or the same for children of high-income parents, it rose for children of parents in
lower tax brackets.
Here’s an example. After a Navy chief petty officer died of a heart attack at age
39 in 2017, his 6-year-son received a survivor’s benefit that in 2018 came to about
$29,300.
19.
THE ‘KIDDIE TAX’
The pre-2018 Kiddie Tax rules taxed the son’s income at his mother’s tax rate,
which was 12%. After the 2017 revision, the top rate on the son’s income rose to
37%. Following the 2019 revision, the child’s tax rate will again be linked to his
mother’s rate.
The reinstatement of prior law for 2020 and beyond means that generous parents,
grandparents and others need to take yet another look at the income-tax effects of
making gifts to young people.
—Laura Saunders
20.
CRYPTOCURRENCY
The IRS is on the warpath about cryptocurrency tax compliance
Cryptocurrency owners who fail to answer the question or are untruthful risk
higher penalties.
The IRS released new rules on the tax treatment of cryptocurrency, including
controversial guidance on certain splits known as forks.
The recent guidance follows the agency’s original notice, issued in 2014. It said that
bitcoin and its kin are property, not currencies like dollars or francs. Often they are
investment property like stock shares or real estate. Sales proceeds are typically
taxed as long- or short-term capital gains, and losses can offset gains.
If cryptocurrencies are held for personal use, as a home is, rather than primarily as
an investment, then profits are taxable but losses aren’t deductible. The IRS hasn’t
issued guidance in this area.
—Laura Saunders
21.
DEDUCTIONS
22.
STATE AND LOCAL TAX DEDUCTIONS
The overhaul capped the deduction for state
and local taxes at $10,000 per return
In a landmark change, the tax overhaul put a cap on deductions for state and local
taxes, known as SALT. Previously these deductions were unlimited for individuals,
although many people who owed the alternative minimum tax lost the benefit of
some or all of their SALT write-offs.
Now taxpayers can deduct property and income or sales taxes, but only up to
$10,000 per return. This change expires at the end of 2025.
23.
STATE AND LOCAL TAX DEDUCTIONS
The new cap will affect many married couples more than singles, because the
$10,000 SALT limit is per return and not per person.
Some Wall Street Journal readers have asked whether two spouses can each file
separately and claim two $10,000 deductions. The answer is no. Although married
couples can file separate returns, in this case each spouse would get a $5,000
deduction for state and local taxes. To qualify for two $10,000 deductions, the
couple would have to divorce.
The tax overhaul enacted new curbs on deductions for mortgage interest, both
indirect and direct. These changes expire at the end of 2025.
14 million
than list write-offs separately on
Schedule A.
Estimated number For example, if a married couple’s
of returns taking the mortgage interest, state taxes and
mortgage deduction charitable contributions average about
for 2017 vs. 2019 $15,000 per year, they benefited from
listing these deductions on Schedule
A before the overhaul. But for 2019
they won’t, because it is to their advantage to take the $24,400 standard
deduction instead.
For new buyers, however, the $1 million limit drops to a total of $750,000 for a first
and second home. These limits aren’t indexed for inflation.
25.
MORTGAGE-INTEREST DEDUCTION
For example, if John had a $750,000 mortgage on a first home and a $200,000
mortgage on a second home as of December 15, 2017, then he can continue to deduct
the interest on both on Schedule A. But if he bought one home with a $750,000
mortgage by that date, and then bought a second home using a $200,000 mortgage
in 2018, he can’t deduct the interest on the second loan.
MORTGAGE REFINANCING
According to the National Association of Realtors, homeowners can refinance
mortgage debt up to $1 million that existed on Dec. 15, 2017 and still deduct the
interest. But often the new loan can’t exceed the amount of the mortgage being
refinanced.
For example, if Linda has a $1 million mortgage she has paid down to $800,000,
then she can refinance up to $800,000 of debt and continue to deduct interest on
it. If she refinances for $900,000 and uses $100,000 of cash to make substantial
improvements to the home, she could also deduct the interest on $900,000,
according to the NAR.
But if Linda refinances for $900,000 and simply pockets $100,000 of cash, then she
could deduct interest on only $800,000 of the refinancing.
—Laura Saunders
26.
CHARITABLE-DONATION DEDUCTIONS
The overhaul didn’t make major changes to these deductions, but the near
doubling of the standard deduction means far fewer filers will choose to itemize
15 Million
The standard deduction is the amount
filers can subtract from income if
Returns expected they don’t list “itemized” write-offs
to deduct charitable for mortgage interest, charitable
donations, state taxes and the like on
donations for 2019 Schedule A.
Say that Jane and her husband, Robert, donate $10,000 to charities each year, but
their mortgage is paid off and their only other itemized deduction is $10,000 of
state and local taxes, for a total of $20,000.
This couple itemized deductions on Schedule A for tax year 2017, because the
$20,000 total exceeded their $12,700 standard deduction. But for tax year 2019,
they will opt for the standard deduction of $24,400, because it exceeds the $20,000
total on Schedule A.
27.
CHARITABLE-DONATION DEDUCTIONS
This means that Jane and Robert won’t get a specific tax benefit
for giving to charity on their
2019 return—a change that is
worrying charities
that rely on donations from
filers who aren’t wealthy.
DONOR-ADVISED FUNDS
For charitable donors who Donors can bunch smaller gifts into one larger
want a tax break, there are deduction, but payments to charities can
ways around this change. One be made over several years. Meanwhile, the
is to “bunch” donations every assets can be invested and grow tax
few years to surmount the free. These accounts save paperwork but
higher standard deduction. have fees.
If Jane and Robert donate
$20,000 every other year,
they could itemize in those years and claim
the standard deduction in the years they don’t donate.
Givers should also consider so-called donor-advised funds. These popular accounts
enable donors to bunch smaller gifts into one large amount and take a deduction
in the year of the gift. The donor can then designate charities as recipients later.
Meanwhile, the assets can be invested and grow tax-free, although the accounts
have fees.
Donors who are 70½ or older have another good strategy if they have individual
retirement accounts. Many can benefit from contributing up to $100,000 of IRA
assets directly to one or more charities.
—Laura Saunders
28.
MEDICAL-EXPENSES DEDUCTION
After considering an end to this write-off, lawmakers
retained it and made it slightly more generous
Expenses that qualify include many out-of-pocket costs not typically covered by
health insurance. Among them are nursing-home costs, insurance premiums
paid with after-tax dollars, prostheses, eyeglasses, and even a wig if needed after
chemotherapy, among others.
This deduction is only available to filers who itemize. For more details, see IRS
Publication 502.
—Laura Saunders
29.
ALIMONY
Future alimony payments are expected
to shrink as a result of the overhaul
The overhaul made a major change to the tax status of alimony payments. Payers
can’t deduct alimony on their tax returns for divorce and separation agreements
signed after 2018.
At the same time, alimony recipients no longer have to report these payments as
income, making the tax treatment of them similar to that for child support.
Deductions are still allowed for alimony paid as a result of agreements signed in
2018 and before, and such payments will still be taxable to recipients.
Divorce specialists say that in many cases, the overhaul’s changes to alimony will
be negative for both members of the couple because the payer and the payee often
are in very different tax brackets.
The move “changes the economics of many divorces,” says Madeline Marzano-
Lesnevich, a New Jersey-based lawyer and national head of the American Academy
of Matrimonial Lawyers. She said the payments to lower-earning spouses are
likely to shrink as a result.
Alimony, also called maintenance, is typically used when one spouse of a divorcing
couple earns far more than the other. Alimony payments continue for a period of
years and help defray the expense of splitting one household into two.
—Laura Saunders
30.
OTHER DEDUCTIONS
Many write-offs have been curtailed, including
those for unreimbursed employee travel expenses
The tax overhaul suspended many other deductions or imposed new limits on
them. These changes generally expire at the end of 2025.
Also gone is the deduction for investment-advisory fees. This change affects
investors who pay fees for advice based on a percentage of their assets, including
many with tax-efficient separately managed accounts. It also hits investors in
hedge funds or other funds structured as partnerships, if they owe tax on profits
before hefty fees are deducted.
Also on Schedule A, lawmakers curtailed the deduction for most casualty and
theft losses other than from federally declared disasters. Some other itemized
deductions are still allowed, such as for certain gambling losses. They are listed in
the instructions for Schedule A.
Elsewhere on the return, Congress ended the deduction for moving expenses by
taxpayers who aren’t in the military. However, educators can still deduct up to
$250 of unreimbursed expenses for classroom supplies, even if they don’t itemize.
—Laura Saunders
31.
RETIREMENT AND
EDUCATION
32.
RETIREMENT SAVINGS
In 2019, the Secure Act legislation made important
changes to retirement-savings provisions
In the final version of the 2017 overhaul, lawmakers backed off a controversial
proposal to lower the amount Americans can contribute before taxes to 401(k) and
similar retirement-savings plans.
But they did make other changes affecting savers who have these plans. Savers
who leave a company with a 401(k) loan outstanding now have until the day they
file their federal tax return to repay the loan. Under prior law, such employees
typically had to repay such loans within 60 days of departure or pay income tax on
the loan’s balance and in some cases a 10% penalty.
With a traditional IRA, savers typically get a tax deduction for contributions and
owe ordinary income tax on withdrawals. With a Roth IRA, there is no upfront tax
deduction, but withdrawals are usually tax-free in retirement.
Savers can also convert all or part of a traditional IRA to a Roth IRA, but they owe
income tax on the conversion. Future tax-free withdrawals from the Roth account
won’t push the saver into a higher tax bracket or trigger higher
Medicare premiums.
Until the overhaul, savers could also undo a Roth conversion by “recharacterizing”
it by the October tax-filing date of the year following the original conversion.
Reasons for undoing the conversion typically included a lower account balance
than at the time of the switch, or a lack of cash to pay the tax bill. Roth conversions
completed in or after 2018 can no longer be undone.
33.
RETIREMENT SAVINGS
The law also now allows many savers with tax-deferred accounts to delay required
minimum payouts until after age 72 rather than after age 70 ½. This delay applies
to people born after June 30, 1949.
In addition, there are new rules for many people who inherit Roth and traditional
IRAs or 401(k)s. Under prior law, younger heirs could often take required
withdrawals over many decades, a technique known as the Stretch IRA.
Now, many heirs of people who die after Dec. 31, 2019 will have to empty the
accounts within 10 years, although annual payouts are not required during
this period.
The new law exempts some heirs from this new requirement, including surviving
spouses. They can continue to stretch required payouts—and taxes on them—over
their lifetimes.
Another change makes it easier for employers to offer annuities within 401(k)
plans. That gives workers access to an investment option that provides a steady
lifetime income, although annuities often have high fees.
34.
RETIREE TAX ISSUES
The overhaul didn’t change the taxation of Social Security benefits or retirement-plan
distributions, but the large increase in the standard deduction will benefit many retirees
A key change of the overhaul will be positive for many retirees: the near-doubling
of the standard deduction. For individuals it is $12,200 for 2019 and $12,400 for
2020, while for married couples filing jointly it is $24,400 for 2019 and $24,800
for 2020.
The standard deduction is the amount taxpayers can deduct if they don’t list
write-offs for state taxes, charitable donations, mortgage interest and the like on
Schedule A. Many retirees who
have paid off their mortgages take
the standard deduction.
The expanded standard deduction
expires at the end of 2025.
ADDITIONAL STANDARD DEDUCTION
The overhaul also retained the People age 65 and older are eligible to
‘additional standard deduction’ for take the additional standard deduction:
people age 65 and older. It is $1,650 • $1,650 for singles
for singles and $1,300 for each
eligible spouse in a married couple • $1,300 for each partner
of a married couple
for both 2019 and 2020.
As a result of these changes,
many retirees will see an after-tax income boost, even with the elimination of the
personal exemption.
NO CHANGES TO IRA CHARITABLE TRANSFERS
Neither the 2017 overhaul nor the 2019 Secure Act changed charitable transfers
from individual retirement accounts, or IRAs. This popular benefit allows retirees
70½ or older to donate IRA assets up to $100,000 directly to one or more charities
and have the donations count toward their required annual payout.
For IRA owners who give to charity, this is often a tax-efficient move. Donors can
still take the standard deduction and receive a tax break for their giving.
While there is no deduction for gifts of IRA assets, the withdrawal doesn’t count
as taxable income. This can help reduce Medicare premiums that rise with income
and taxes on other investment income.
35.
—Laura Saunders
529 EDUCATION-SAVINGS ACCOUNTS
These plans can now be used to pay up to $10,000 of private school tuition and up
to $10,000 of student-loan debt, but clarifications are needed in some states
The overhaul made so-called 529 accounts more flexible—but there is also a
downside. The Secure Act also added a key change.
Named after a section of the tax code enacted two decades ago, 529 accounts allow
savers to contribute dollars after federal taxes have been paid on them. The assets
are invested and can grow free of federal and state taxes.
Withdrawals from the accounts are tax-free if they are used to pay eligible
education expenses such as college tuition, books, and often room and board.
These plans are popular with middle- and upper-income families. According to
Mark Kantrowitz, publisher of savingforcollege.com, assets in 529 plans grew to
$352 billion in June 2019 from $133 billion a decade earlier.
Most 529 plans are offered by states, and nearly all states have them. More than 30
states offer a tax break for contributions, says Mr. Kantrowitz. Savers dissatisfied
with their own state’s investment offerings or fees can go elsewhere, although
investment options are limited in most states.
PAYING FOR K-12 EDUCATION
A big change in the tax overhaul allows 529 plan assets to be used for up to
$10,000 per year, per student, for private-school tuition for K-12.
This change provides savers who have a 529 plan with more flexibility.
But private schools will likely want to know about families’ 529 savings and may
take that information into account when making financial-aid decisions. Those
who want to use this new break should also check carefully to make sure that these
withdrawals are approved for their specific plan.
According to Mr. Kantrowitz, about 20 states with income-tax breaks for 529 plans
allow them for K-12 tuition. New York, California, Michigan and New Jersey are
among those that don’t allow tax-free 529 payouts to be used for K-12 tuition.
SECURE ACT CHANGES
Parents and others with 529 education savings accounts can now take tax-free
36.
529 EDUCATION-SAVINGS ACCOUNTS
Many changes related to education, including tax-free tuition waivers and student-
loan interest deduction, seemed to be on the horizon as the tax overhaul took shape
in 2017. In the end, Congress didn’t enact several that were approved by the House
of Representatives.
In addition, Congress didn’t enact the House Republicans’ changes to the American
Opportunity tax credit for college, Coverdell education savings accounts and the
Lifetime Learning tax credit.
The overhaul did make an important change for people with student loans who die
or become disabled: such forgiveness of debt due to death or disability is no longer
taxable. This provision expires at the end of 2025.
Late in 2019, Congress retroactively extended the Tuition and Fees deduction,
which expired at the end of 2017. Now it expires at the end of 2020. For many
taxpayers, this write-off is not as beneficial as the American Opportunity tax
credit or the Lifetime Learning credit.
For more information, see IRS Publication 970, Tax Benefits for Education.
—Laura Saunders
38.
FOR BUSINESS
OWNERS
39.
PASS-THROUGH INCOME
Owners of pass-through businesses got a break—
but figuring out who is eligible can be challenging
The overhaul created a new deduction of 20% for many pass-through business
owners, making their top tax rate 29.6% instead of the 37% rate that applies to top
earners’ wages and other income. Lawmakers made the change as a way to assist
firms that don’t benefit from the cut in the top corporate rate to 21% from 35%.
A Pass-Through Primer
How different types of businesses would be affected by the final tax
bill’s rules on ‘pass-through’ business income.
Note: Trusts are now eligible for pass-through treatment; they were previously not eligible
under Senate version of the bill. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL.
40.
PASS-THROUGH INCOME
Pass-through owners can claim the 20% deduction for 2019 without restriction if
their taxable income is under $321,400 for joint filers or $160,700 for singles. They
calculate their business income, take 20% of it and subtract that from total income.
It effectively operates like a rate cut
on business income.
41.
PASS-THROUGH INCOME
Phase-outs, exceptions and gray areas make this new tax break complex, and tax
advisers have been struggling to figure it out, especially for service businesses.
In January of 2019, the Trump administration released final rules for this new
deduction that provided more clarity for real-estate owners and service-
industry businesses.
However, it rejected requests from real-estate settlement agents, Major League
Baseball team owners, writers and physical therapists, who all wanted more
favorable rules for their specific industries.
The guidance also established that for many landlords, the new tax break comes
with strings attached. Rental real estate owners who want to claim it for 2019 and
later years will often have to send 1099 forms to service providers who charge
$600 or more that aren’t corporations—and they must also send a copy to the IRS.
—Richard Rubin
42.
INTEREST PAYMENTS
The overhaul put a cap on the amount of
interest cost that most companies can deduct
Heavily indebted companies are facing new limits on their ability to deduct
interest payments from their tax returns, a change that makes business debt
less attractive.
Interest payments have long been
deductible, but the tax law creates a
cap on that break that will raise $253
billion in tax revenue over a decade, NO EXCEPTIONS
according to the Joint Committee The law doesn’t make any exceptions
on Taxation. Under the new rule, for debt issued before the law was
companies will be able to deduct enacted, so companies that borrowed
their net interest costs, but only up in the past will be facing the stringent
to 30% of earnings before interest, new limits immediately.
taxes, depreciation
and amortization.
The law doesn’t make any exceptions for debt issued before the law was enacted,
so companies that borrowed in the past will be facing the stringent new limits
immediately. And proposed Treasury regulations on the subject create a broad
definition of interest that may pinch some companies. Final regulations are
expected in early 2020.
Starting in 2022, unless Congress acts again, the restriction will get even tougher.
At that point, the 30% limit will apply to a different measure of income: earnings
before interest and taxes. The change would hit even more companies.
Small firms won’t be affected. The limit applies only to businesses with average
gross receipts of at least $25 million for the preceding three years. Car dealers and
other similar companies also will be exempt from the limit on the loans they use to
get inventory on their showroom floors.
The legislation exempts many electric utilities from the limit and lets farmers and
many real-estate firms opt out of the limit. Real-estate companies don’t get the
benefit of immediate write-offs for capital investments that tax policy experts view
as the trade-off for the interest limits.
—Richard Rubin
43.
DEPRECIATION
The overhaul allowed companies to immediately write off 100% of
equipment purchases, an extraordinary—albeit temporary—perk
Businesses buying equipment are getting an extraordinary new benefit from the
new tax law: the ability to deduct the entire cost of their equipment purchases in
the first year.
The 100% deductions are an expanded form of the “bonus depreciation” that has
been in place for most of the past 20 years. The break is now available to businesses
that buy used equipment, not just items that are placed into service for the
first time.
There is a catch. The 100% write-offs are even more ephemeral than other tax
cuts in the new law. They are available for items acquired and used after Sept. 27,
2017 and before 2023. After that, the amount eligible for the deduction declines
each year until 2027, when the regular depreciation schedules resume. Some
Republicans have been trying to make those breaks permanent, but that has
become more difficult in divided government, and the outcome hinges on the
2020 election.
44.
DEPRECIATION
Many small companies had already been getting 100% deductions for capital
investments, under Section 179 of the tax code. The law retains and expands
those rules.
The new rules don’t apply to real-estate firms. Generally, they will continue to
operate under the old system that includes depreciation deductions and the ability
to fully deduct interest costs, which are now limited for most other firms.
—Richard Rubin
45.
WHAT HAS THE TAX OVERHAUL
DONE SO FAR?
Two years after Trump’s tax cuts, a deep dive into what happened
to jobs, tax revenue, corporate profits and investment
The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act is now more than two years old. So what did it do?
The tax cuts themselves are easy to see: Tax bills went down for most families and
corporations. Domestic retailers and banks reaped some of the biggest savings.
How the law rippled through the economy is muddier. Employment, wages and
other key indicators have improved, and the 2020 economy looks stronger than
projected at the start of the Trump presidency.
But many of those metrics were already on the rise before the tax law was signed
by President Trump, and most economic numbers don’t show a sharp change that
coincides with the tax law. Early growth in business investment seems to have
faded; overall economic growth rose before pulling back again. Cross-border
investment patterns have changed only modestly.
The bottom line: It seems clear the tax cuts contributed to economic growth—but
not enough to pay for themselves, as many backers promised. And even some of the
intended beneficiaries say the gains haven’t been dramatic.
“On the whole it was positive, in that it helped the broader consumer, but on the
effective tax rate for us it was a lot less than you’d think,” Whirlpool Corp. Chief
Executive Marc Bitzer said in an interview in late 2019. He said the global appliance
maker didn’t see a meaningful change in its taxes or boost its U.S. hiring or capital
investment as a result of the law.
For multinational corporations, the law lowered the U.S. federal rate to 21% from
35%, limited some tax breaks, made it easier to get foreign profits to shareholders
and sought to make it harder for companies to benefit from very low foreign tax
rates. How individual companies fared depended on their mix of foreign and
domestic income, among other factors.
46.
WHAT HAS THE TAX OVERHAUL
DONE SO FAR?
Isolating the tax law’s impact—to what extent it spurred investment at a time
of general upswing in the U.S. economy—isn’t easy. And it wasn’t the only major
economic policy change in the past few years. One of the biggest confounding
factors was the trade fight that President Trump has been waging for much of
his administration.
The tax law’s authors hoped to build certainty for businesses, creating a stable
platform for investing. But the climate around the creation of the tax law, which
was written and adopted by Republican lawmakers without Democratic support,
meant that its long-term future has looked vulnerable to political changes right
from the start: Executives worry that major components of the tax law could be
altered or repealed if Democrats regain control of the White House or Congress.
The leading Democratic presidential candidates have all proposed trillions of
dollars in new tax increases, including rolling back the 2017 law’s tax cuts for
corporations and high-income individuals.
The trade war scrambled what certainty was left, leaving businesses unsure about
their costs and wary of investing for the long run.
“We are more competitive in the U.S. than we have been for many, many years on
the tax front,” said Torsten Sløk, chief economist for Deutsche Bank Securities.
So far, he said, the downside effects from trade tension have overshadowed the
benefits for business investment from the tax cuts.
While Democrats say the tax law hasn’t delivered what it promised, Republicans
say it is a big reason the U.S. economy is as strong as it is today.
47.
WHAT HAS THE TAX OVERHAUL
DONE SO FAR?
both groups, the law generally reduced revenue projections from what they would
have been absent the tax overhaul.
2.0
2.0
1.5
Profits after taxes The gap is the amount The gap is
1.5
of corporate income 1.0 the amount
taxes paid. of corporate
income taxes
0.5 paid.
1.0
Q1 2016 Q1 2017 Q1 2018 Q1 2019 0
Q1 Q
Note: Data are seasonally adjusted at annual rates; without inventory valuation and capital consumption adjustments. 2016 201
Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis
49.
Note: Data are seasonally adjusted at annual rates;
without inventory valuation and capital consumption
adjustments.
Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis
WHAT HAS THE TAX OVERHAUL
DONE SO FAR?
–15
But growth soon returned to pre-overhaul levels,
and all but stalled from the first through the third
–20 RECESSION
’18 ’19 ’09 ’11 ’13 ’15 ’17 ’19 quarter of 2019.
Source: Commerce Department via St. Louis Fed
“Anecdotes don’t show companies are spending a
whole heck of a lot more on capex than they have in
the past,” said Joseph LaVorgna, chief economist for the Americas at Natixis.
Administration officials argue that this isn’t surprising. They say the one-time
bump in capital spending should pay dividends for years to come, as companies
reap the benefits of new equipment and facilities.
Much the same was true of wages and household income, though minimum-wage
increases may also be affecting pay.
50.
WHAT HAS THE TAX OVERHAUL
DONE SO FAR?
Percentage of the population age 25-54 who are employed Percentage of the population age
25-54 who are employed
80%
80%
78 RECESSION
78
76
76
74 74
70 70
2008 ’09 ’10 ’11 ’12 ’13 ’14 ’15 ’16 ’17 ’18 ’19 2008 ’10 ’12 ’14 ’16 ’18
Note: Data are as of November. Note: Data are as of November.
Source: Commerce Department via St. Louis Fed Source: Commerce Department via St. Louis Fed
RECESSION
60,000
60,000
55,000 55,000
50,000 50,000
’09 ’10 ’11 ’12 ’13 ’14 ’15 ’16 ’17 ’18 ’19 ’09 ’11 ’13 ’15 ’17 ’19
Note: Monthly data as of Oct. 1, in October 2019 dollars. Note: Monthly data as of Oct. 1, in October 2019 dollars.
Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics via St. Louis Fed Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics via St. Louis Fed
Still, one widely publicized feature of the 2017 tax law hasn’t held up: The bonuses
many companies announced for employees—often described as sharing the
benefits of the corporate tax cut with workers—haven’t been repeated, even as
company tax savings persist.
51.
WHAT HAS THE TAX OVERHAUL
DONE SO FAR?
52.
WHAT HAS THE TAX OVERHAUL
DONE SO FAR?
not shrinking, albeit more slowly than it used to. That raises the question of how
successfully the law is driving U.S. companies to shift more of their operations to
the U.S.
U.S. rather than overseas. So were a reduced tax rate for 125
100
some U.S. production destined for Avg.export,
since Q1 2016 and a complex Avg. since
Q1 2016
100
new global minimum tax rate intended to make low-tax
75
countries less
50
attractive. 75
25 50
0 25
Q1 2016 Q1 2017 Q1 2018 Q1 2019
Source: U.S. Commerce Department (Bureau of Economic Analysis) 0
Q1 Q1 Q1 Q1
2016 2017 2018 2019
Source: U.S. Commerce Department
(Bureau of Economic Analysis)
53.
WHAT HAS THE TAX OVERHAUL
DONE SO FAR?
–0.50 Proponents of the tax law said it would pay for itself
–0.75
over the long run; so far, it has not generated the
amount of growth that would make that possible.
–1.00
–1.25
—Richard Rubin and Theo Francis
–1.50
’18 ’19 ’20 ’21 ’22 ’23 ’24 ’25
Note: 2019 projection shows actual 2018 deficit.
Source: Congressional Budget Office
54.