Financial Fitness

Actions

Here's what the Republican tax plan means for you

Posted
and last updated

House Republican leaders on Thursday released details of reforms that would overhaul the U.S. tax code, cut individual income tax rates and remove a number of breaks and deductions in the name of making Americans’ tax bills simpler and smaller.

Much political wrangling remains before the plan would become law; both houses of Congress must approve the bill, and President Donald Trump has to sign it. But were it to take effect in 2018, as Republicans would like, here’s how the tax plan could change things for you.

The big impact

This plan would affect virtually all taxpayers in some way. The impact of each part will depend on your individual tax situation and your adjusted gross income, or AGI.

NEW TAX BRACKETS

The current progressive federal tax system has seven tax brackets: 10%, 15%, 25%, 28%, 33%, 35% and 39.6%. The GOP plan would shrink the number of brackets.

Proposed 2018 federal income tax brackets

Tax rate Single Married, filing jointly Married, filing separately Head of household
0% (effectively)

Because the law would increase the standard deduction, which is the amount by which you can automatically decrease your taxable income, you'd pay no tax if your income falls below these amounts:

Single filers: $12,000 (or $18,000 if you have a qualifying child). Joint filers: $24,000.

12% up to $45,000 up to $90,000 up to $45,000 up to $67,500
25% $45,001 to $200,000 $90,001 to $260,000 $45,001 to $200,000 $67,501 to $230,000
35% $200,001 to $500,000 $260,001 to $1 million $200,001 to $500,000 $230,001 to $500,000
39.6% $500,001 or more $1 million or more $500,001 or more $500,001 or more

STANDARD DEDUCTION WOULD NEARLY DOUBLE

The bill would increase the standard deduction — the amount that people deduct from their AGIs — so fewer people likely will want to take the time to itemize deductions on their tax return. About one-third of the taxpayers itemize now; the bill projects that fewer than 10% would itemize as a result of this change.

Filing status 2018 current deduction 2018 proposed*
* The bill sets the standard deduction at $24,000 for joint filers, $12,000 for individual filers and $18,000 for a head of household. It then adjusts the amounts for inflation in 2018.
Single $6,500 $12,200
Married, filing jointly $13,000 $24,400
Married, filing separately $6,500 $12,200
Head of household $9,550 $18,300

PERSONAL EXEMPTION WOULD BE ELIMINATED

Now, many taxpayers can claim a personal exemption of $4,150 for themselves, their spouse and any dependents in 2018. That would go away.

CHILD TAX CREDIT WOULD GET BIGGER

The child tax credit would increase, and a credit would be allowed for people caring for “non-child dependents.”

  2018 current 2018 proposed
Maximum credit $1,000
  • $1,600
  • $300 for non-child dependents
  • $300 "family flexibility" credit
Phases out at
  • $75,000 AGI for single filers
  • $110,000 AGI for joint filers
  • $115,000 AGI for single filers
  • $230,000 AGI for joint filers

Only people with a work-eligible Social Security number would be able to claim the refundable portion of this credit, as well as the American Opportunity Tax Credit and the Earned Income Tax Credit.

STATE AND LOCAL DEDUCTIONs WOULD SHRINK or vanish

On your federal tax return, you can deduct your property taxes, as well as state and local income or sales taxes. The new plan would eliminate the deduction for state and local income or sales taxes, and it would cap the property tax deduction at $10,000.

MORTGAGE INTEREST DEDUCTION WOULD FALL

Currently, you can deduct mortgage interest on home loans of up to $1 million. The bill would cut that to $500,000 for new mortgages. Existing mortgages would get to keep the higher limit.

no changes to 401(K) contribution limits

No changes are proposed to 401(k) contribution limits; in 2018, they would be $18,500 per year pretax and $24,500 for those ages 50 and up. But the bill proposes some changes on rollover timing, plan testing, hardship distributions and distributions to certain people who want to work rather than retire.

Other important changes

EDUCATION TAX CREDITS AND DEDUCTIONS

  • The student loan interest deduction would go away
  • The American Opportunity Tax Credit would remain and would be worth up to $2,500, as it is now. It would include tuition, fees and course materials. And it would be available for an additional year — a fifth year of college — but only for up to $1,250.
  • The Lifetime Learning Credit and the Hope Scholarship Credit would be dropped
  • The tuition and fees deduction would go away
  • The interest on U.S. savings bonds would become taxable when used to pay higher education expenses. It currently is not taxable for people below certain AGIs.
  • The breaks on tuition for employees of educational institutions and employer-provided educational assistance would become taxable

NEW RULES ON HOME SALES

The bill would require taxpayers to live in a home for five of the past eight years in order to exclude capital gains from the sale of that house. Currently, it’s two of the past five years.

The limit on the exclusion would stay at $500,000 for joint filers and $250,000 for singles but would begin phasing out for taxpayers with AGIs above $500,000 for joint filers and $250,000 for single filers. You could use the exclusion only once every five years instead of once every two years.

CAP ON ITEMIZED DEDUCTIONS WOULD BE AXED

In 2018, the cap on itemized deductions is $320,000 for joint filers, $293,350 for head of household, $266,700 for single filers and $160,000 for married people filing separately. The proposal would eliminate those caps.

INDIVIDUAL BUSINESS INCOME WOULD BE TAXED AT LOWER RATE

The tax rates would change for people involved in sole proprietorships, partnerships, LLCs and S corporations. This is important for freelancers and self-employed people because, typically, income from these forms of businesses is taxed at the ordinary income rate, or at rates of up to 39.6%. The bill would tax some of that income at 25% instead.

ALternative minimum tax WOULD GO AWAY

The alternative minimum tax requires taxpayers to run their numbers twice while preparing returns — under regular tax rules and under stricter AMT rules that disallow some exemptions and deductions — and pay the higher amount owed. That would be eliminated.

ESTATE TAX WOULD BE PHASED OUT

The estate tax exemption would roughly double to $10 million; it’s $5.6 million in 2018. The estate tax itself would go away completely in 2024. Some states have their own estate tax rules. The related gift tax would cap out at 35%.

CHARITABLE CONTRIBUTION RULES WOULD CHANGE

  • Under the new plan, you could deduct up to 60% of your AGI for cash donations to charity, instead of the current 50%
  • There would be no more deductions for college athletic event seating rights
  • The mileage deduction for charitable service would be adjusted for inflation; it’s currently 14 cents per mile

THESE DEDUCTIONS AND CREDITS WOULD BE ELIMINATED

  • Deduction for the cost of tax software or human tax preparation help for filing returns
  • Deduction for unreimbursed medical expenses; currently you can deduct qualified expenses that exceed 10% of your AGI
  • Deduction for alimony payments. If you receive alimony, it wouldn’t be considered income.
  • Deduction and exclusions for moving expenses
  • Deduction for contributions to Archer medical savings accounts
  • Deduction for employee business expenses for most people
  • Casualty loss deductions, except for losses associated with special disaster-relief legislation
  • Adoption credit and adoption assistance
  • Tax credit for the elderly or the disabled
  • Tax credit for plug-in electric vehicles
  • Tax credit for mortgage credit certificates
  • Income exclusion for employee achievement awards
  • Deduction for contributions to employer-provided dependent care accounts. It’s currently limited to $5,000 for people filing jointly and $2,500 for those married filing separately.

What will happen to my tax bill?

That question is not easy to answer. As with most things tax-related, the answer is: It depends.

Rep. Kevin Brady, R-Texas, chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, says a typical family of four making $59,000 a year would save $1,182 per year in taxes. But will that be the case for you? It’s largely a factor of how much you make and the specific deductions you’ve been taking. Moving to a higher or lower tax bracket doesn’t necessarily mean you’ll pay more or less in taxes.

For example, the decision to itemize or take the standard deduction could get less tricky for some people. Homeowners, people living in high-tax states, people paying for college and plenty of other folks might see some big changes, but a shift to a lower tax bracket may — or may not — make up for the loss.