"Making
Work Pay" Tax Credit
The
recently enacted “American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009” (the 2009
economic stimulus act) contains a wide-ranging tax package that includes tax
relief for low and moderate-income wage earners, individuals and families with
college expenses, and home and car purchasers. The centerpiece of the tax
package—and at $115 billion its single largest component—is a “Making Work Pay”
tax credit of up to $400 per year for individuals, or $800 per year for couples.
Here the details of this new credit:
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Eligible individuals
will receive an income tax credit for two years (tax years beginning in 2009
and 2010). The new credit, like other tax credits, will reduce a person's
tax liability on a dollar-for-dollar basis. Wage earners who don't earn
enough to pay income taxes will be able to claim the difference as a tax
refund.
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The new credit is the
lesser of (1) 6.2% of an individual's earned income or (2) $400 ($800 in the
case of a joint return). In other words, for individuals with earned income
above roughly $6,451 ($12,902 for couples), the credit maxes out at $400
($800 for couples). For the last half of 2009, workers can expect to see
perhaps $13 a week less withheld from their paychecks starting around June.
That reduction goes down to about $9 per week next year.
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Nonresident aliens do
not qualify for this credit. Neither do estates, trusts, or individuals who
can be claimed as a dependent on someone else's return.
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The credit is available
in full only if AGI (adjusted gross income, with some modifications for
highly specialized income) doesn't exceed $75,000 for an individual
($150,000 if you file a joint return). The credit is phased out at a rate of
two percent of the eligible individual's AGI above $75,000 ($150,000 in the
case of a joint return). So no credit is allowed for individuals with AGI of
$100,000 or more, or for joint filers with AGI of $200,000 or more.
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Unlike the $600 per
worker lump-sum rebates issued last year, the credit can be received as a
reduction in the amount of income tax that is withheld from a paycheck, or
through a credit on a tax return.
-
Since the credit is
based on taxable wages and thus unavailable to many retired people and other
whose income does not come from wages, the new law includes a one-time
payment of $250 to retirees, disabled individuals and SSI recipients
receiving benefits from the Social Security Administration, and Railroad
Retirement beneficiaries, and to veterans receiving disability compensation
and pension benefits from the U.S Department of Veterans' Affairs. The
one-time payment is a reduction to any allowable Making Work Pay credit.
Similarly, a one-time refundable tax credit of $250 is provided in 2009 to
certain government retirees who are not eligible for Social Security
benefits. This one-time credit is a reduction to any allowable making Work
Pay credit.
I hope this
information is helpful. If you would like more details about this or any other
aspect of the new law, please do not hesitate to call.
