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Standard deduction V. mortgage interest deduction - is it basically only for the rich?


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0















In the USA experience:



I find the whole "mortgage interest deduction V. standard deduction" issue confusing.



Here's how I understand it:




  1. Everyone gets a $24,000 deduction. Great so far.


  2. If you like, you can instead take your mortgage interest as a deduction. (Obviously you would not do this unless that interest is $24,001 or more.)


  3. The vast majority of folks in the US with a mortgage pay about $10,000 a year in interest - nowhere near the $24k point.


  4. For rich people, your mortage interest is going to be more than $24,000. Let's say $50,000!


  5. Et voila, rich people get an extra ($26,000 in the example) tax break.



My question is simply, do I understand the situation correctly?



Maybe there's another factor I don't know about?



Is the "Standard deduction V. mortgage interest deduction" issue simply a case of "a break for anyone with a pricey house"?



Thanks, colonial friends! :)



{Note - of course there are a few obscure cases where folks have other, very large, deductions they can itemize, say, extremely large "tithe" charitable donations or whatever. I'm dismissing those cases. The overwhelming, normal, itemized deduction would be "mortgage interest."}










share|improve this question


















  • 1





    And this concept doesn't extrapolate against the entire country. A lot of folks in CA and NY got big tax increases as a result of the tax cut's changes to the deductions for things like state taxes, property taxes and mortgage interest. Its the limitation on all of these things combined, not just mortgage interest. A lot of apartment dwelling silicon valley employees were itemizing previously due to state income tax...

    – quid
    4 hours ago








  • 4





    Everyone gets a $12,000 standard deduction. Every two get a $24,000 deduction. That is for married filing jointly.

    – Harper
    2 hours ago






  • 4





    Sorry, maybe I’m being dense. What is the point of this question? Who benefits from itemizing? Is that the actual question?

    – JoeTaxpayer
    1 hour ago
















0















In the USA experience:



I find the whole "mortgage interest deduction V. standard deduction" issue confusing.



Here's how I understand it:




  1. Everyone gets a $24,000 deduction. Great so far.


  2. If you like, you can instead take your mortgage interest as a deduction. (Obviously you would not do this unless that interest is $24,001 or more.)


  3. The vast majority of folks in the US with a mortgage pay about $10,000 a year in interest - nowhere near the $24k point.


  4. For rich people, your mortage interest is going to be more than $24,000. Let's say $50,000!


  5. Et voila, rich people get an extra ($26,000 in the example) tax break.



My question is simply, do I understand the situation correctly?



Maybe there's another factor I don't know about?



Is the "Standard deduction V. mortgage interest deduction" issue simply a case of "a break for anyone with a pricey house"?



Thanks, colonial friends! :)



{Note - of course there are a few obscure cases where folks have other, very large, deductions they can itemize, say, extremely large "tithe" charitable donations or whatever. I'm dismissing those cases. The overwhelming, normal, itemized deduction would be "mortgage interest."}










share|improve this question


















  • 1





    And this concept doesn't extrapolate against the entire country. A lot of folks in CA and NY got big tax increases as a result of the tax cut's changes to the deductions for things like state taxes, property taxes and mortgage interest. Its the limitation on all of these things combined, not just mortgage interest. A lot of apartment dwelling silicon valley employees were itemizing previously due to state income tax...

    – quid
    4 hours ago








  • 4





    Everyone gets a $12,000 standard deduction. Every two get a $24,000 deduction. That is for married filing jointly.

    – Harper
    2 hours ago






  • 4





    Sorry, maybe I’m being dense. What is the point of this question? Who benefits from itemizing? Is that the actual question?

    – JoeTaxpayer
    1 hour ago














0












0








0








In the USA experience:



I find the whole "mortgage interest deduction V. standard deduction" issue confusing.



Here's how I understand it:




  1. Everyone gets a $24,000 deduction. Great so far.


  2. If you like, you can instead take your mortgage interest as a deduction. (Obviously you would not do this unless that interest is $24,001 or more.)


  3. The vast majority of folks in the US with a mortgage pay about $10,000 a year in interest - nowhere near the $24k point.


  4. For rich people, your mortage interest is going to be more than $24,000. Let's say $50,000!


  5. Et voila, rich people get an extra ($26,000 in the example) tax break.



My question is simply, do I understand the situation correctly?



Maybe there's another factor I don't know about?



Is the "Standard deduction V. mortgage interest deduction" issue simply a case of "a break for anyone with a pricey house"?



Thanks, colonial friends! :)



{Note - of course there are a few obscure cases where folks have other, very large, deductions they can itemize, say, extremely large "tithe" charitable donations or whatever. I'm dismissing those cases. The overwhelming, normal, itemized deduction would be "mortgage interest."}










share|improve this question














In the USA experience:



I find the whole "mortgage interest deduction V. standard deduction" issue confusing.



Here's how I understand it:




  1. Everyone gets a $24,000 deduction. Great so far.


  2. If you like, you can instead take your mortgage interest as a deduction. (Obviously you would not do this unless that interest is $24,001 or more.)


  3. The vast majority of folks in the US with a mortgage pay about $10,000 a year in interest - nowhere near the $24k point.


  4. For rich people, your mortage interest is going to be more than $24,000. Let's say $50,000!


  5. Et voila, rich people get an extra ($26,000 in the example) tax break.



My question is simply, do I understand the situation correctly?



Maybe there's another factor I don't know about?



Is the "Standard deduction V. mortgage interest deduction" issue simply a case of "a break for anyone with a pricey house"?



Thanks, colonial friends! :)



{Note - of course there are a few obscure cases where folks have other, very large, deductions they can itemize, say, extremely large "tithe" charitable donations or whatever. I'm dismissing those cases. The overwhelming, normal, itemized deduction would be "mortgage interest."}







united-states tax-deduction






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked 4 hours ago









FattieFattie

3,69631735




3,69631735








  • 1





    And this concept doesn't extrapolate against the entire country. A lot of folks in CA and NY got big tax increases as a result of the tax cut's changes to the deductions for things like state taxes, property taxes and mortgage interest. Its the limitation on all of these things combined, not just mortgage interest. A lot of apartment dwelling silicon valley employees were itemizing previously due to state income tax...

    – quid
    4 hours ago








  • 4





    Everyone gets a $12,000 standard deduction. Every two get a $24,000 deduction. That is for married filing jointly.

    – Harper
    2 hours ago






  • 4





    Sorry, maybe I’m being dense. What is the point of this question? Who benefits from itemizing? Is that the actual question?

    – JoeTaxpayer
    1 hour ago














  • 1





    And this concept doesn't extrapolate against the entire country. A lot of folks in CA and NY got big tax increases as a result of the tax cut's changes to the deductions for things like state taxes, property taxes and mortgage interest. Its the limitation on all of these things combined, not just mortgage interest. A lot of apartment dwelling silicon valley employees were itemizing previously due to state income tax...

    – quid
    4 hours ago








  • 4





    Everyone gets a $12,000 standard deduction. Every two get a $24,000 deduction. That is for married filing jointly.

    – Harper
    2 hours ago






  • 4





    Sorry, maybe I’m being dense. What is the point of this question? Who benefits from itemizing? Is that the actual question?

    – JoeTaxpayer
    1 hour ago








1




1





And this concept doesn't extrapolate against the entire country. A lot of folks in CA and NY got big tax increases as a result of the tax cut's changes to the deductions for things like state taxes, property taxes and mortgage interest. Its the limitation on all of these things combined, not just mortgage interest. A lot of apartment dwelling silicon valley employees were itemizing previously due to state income tax...

– quid
4 hours ago







And this concept doesn't extrapolate against the entire country. A lot of folks in CA and NY got big tax increases as a result of the tax cut's changes to the deductions for things like state taxes, property taxes and mortgage interest. Its the limitation on all of these things combined, not just mortgage interest. A lot of apartment dwelling silicon valley employees were itemizing previously due to state income tax...

– quid
4 hours ago






4




4





Everyone gets a $12,000 standard deduction. Every two get a $24,000 deduction. That is for married filing jointly.

– Harper
2 hours ago





Everyone gets a $12,000 standard deduction. Every two get a $24,000 deduction. That is for married filing jointly.

– Harper
2 hours ago




4




4





Sorry, maybe I’m being dense. What is the point of this question? Who benefits from itemizing? Is that the actual question?

– JoeTaxpayer
1 hour ago





Sorry, maybe I’m being dense. What is the point of this question? Who benefits from itemizing? Is that the actual question?

– JoeTaxpayer
1 hour ago










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















6














1. Everyone gets a $24,000 deduction. Great so far.



Yes, the married filing jointly folk have a $24k standard deduction for 2018.



2. If you like, you can instead take your mortgage interest as a deduction. (Obviously you would not do this unless that interest is $24,001 or more.)



The other common itemized deduction is state and local taxes paid (SALT), but mortgage interest historically was the most common item that made itemizing deductions advantageous to people. New tax law capped this SALT deduction at $10k, which is very significant for even middle-class folks in some high-tax areas.



3. The vast majority of folks in the US with a mortgage pay about $10,000 a year in interest - nowhere near the $24k point.



Add in $10k in state and local taxes paid and some other itemized deductions and it gets a bit closer, but part of the intent of raising the standard deduction was to make itemizing less common, simplifying tax returns.



4. For rich people, your mortage interest is going to be more than $24,000. Let's say $50,000!



The deduction is only good for up to $750,000 in loan balance, so $50k is unreasonable, $30k would be about the first year's worth of interest on a $750k loan at 4%, so $50k could happen if they had a terrible rate, but the $750,000 limit puts a ceiling on this deduction.



5. Et voila, rich people get an extra ($26,000 in the example) tax break.



Yes, itemized deductions primarily benefit those with high income. However, tax deductions reduce the amount of income that is subjected to tax, so the benefit is a fraction of the all that money spent on interest/taxes/charity/etc. I'm not sure I'd call it an 'extra' tax break. Conversely, all those that have itemized deductions below the standard deduction benefit from a higher standard deduction, but I'm not sure I'd call that an extra tax break for them either. Regardless of what is perceived to be fair we also have a progressive tax rate which results in the highest income households paying more income tax (in general).






share|improve this answer

































    2














    It is as simple as picking which one of the two is larger -



    (1) Your standard deduction, or



    (2) The sum of all your itemized deductions, taking SALT cap into consideration




    Obviously you would not do this unless that interest is $24,001 or more.




    Especially for taxpayers with a mortgage, it is very common to own a property (the one they have the mortgage for) - in which case they are able to deduct (a portion of) their real estate tax.



    For example, if I have $9000 in state and local taxes deduction, it is only sufficient for my mortgage interest to exceed $15000 for me to prefer itemizing deductions.



    However, in my opinion, your are right about mortgage interest deduction only making a difference for people with either large mortgages (expensive houses), or perhaps the ones with lots of other itemized deductions (e.g., high healthcare costs). This appears in alignment with one of the stated goals of TCJA, which was to increase the ratio of taxpayers preferring taking standard deduction over itemizing.






    share|improve this answer































      1














      Yes, you understand it correctly. Here's what changed.



      And by the way, it's a $12,000 standard deduction. You are thinking "married filing jointly", which is two people's tax form, and the numbers all double.



      In 2017, the government gave exemptions of $4050 per dependent (including yourself) on line 42. And separately from that, they gave a standard deduction of $6350 on line 40.



      enter image description here



      So, in 2017, the deductions on Schedule A (such as mortgage, state income tax, health and charitable deductions) became effective at only $6351, a perfectly achievable number for a huge number of Americans. (Downside: paperwork).



      In 2018 they did two things. First, they bumped the standard deduction by $1600, to $7950. That's pure win for taxpayers. Then, they eliminated the exemption for yourself and effectively moved it inside the standard deduction, raising the standard dedution to $12,000.



      It's a win if your itemized deductions were less than $7,951, because you just got a free bump in the standard deduction.




      • For instance your itemized deductions were $2000. Old way, you deduct $6350 + $4050, or $10,400. Now, you deduct $12,000.

      • For instance your itemized deductions were $7000. Old way, you deduct $7000 + $4050, or $11,050. Now, you deduct $12,000.


      However if your itemized deductions were $7,951 and above, it is a net lose because you lost your exemption.




      • For instance your itemized deductions were $10,000. Old way, you deduct $10,000 + $4050, or $14,050. Now, you deduct $12,000.

      • For instance your itemized deductions were $30,000. Old way, you deduct $30,000 + $4050, or $34,050. Now, you deduct $30,000.


      So yes. This puts itemized deductions out of reach for many Americans who could take it before (all with a $6351-$12,000 itemization). It's mostly a lose for those who itemized before, unless they are in that $6351-7949 happy zone.



      It's also a lose for public charities, because the tax incentive to donate is gone for many Americans.






      share|improve this answer
























        protected by JoeTaxpayer 1 hour ago



        Thank you for your interest in this question.
        Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



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        3 Answers
        3






        active

        oldest

        votes








        3 Answers
        3






        active

        oldest

        votes









        active

        oldest

        votes






        active

        oldest

        votes









        6














        1. Everyone gets a $24,000 deduction. Great so far.



        Yes, the married filing jointly folk have a $24k standard deduction for 2018.



        2. If you like, you can instead take your mortgage interest as a deduction. (Obviously you would not do this unless that interest is $24,001 or more.)



        The other common itemized deduction is state and local taxes paid (SALT), but mortgage interest historically was the most common item that made itemizing deductions advantageous to people. New tax law capped this SALT deduction at $10k, which is very significant for even middle-class folks in some high-tax areas.



        3. The vast majority of folks in the US with a mortgage pay about $10,000 a year in interest - nowhere near the $24k point.



        Add in $10k in state and local taxes paid and some other itemized deductions and it gets a bit closer, but part of the intent of raising the standard deduction was to make itemizing less common, simplifying tax returns.



        4. For rich people, your mortage interest is going to be more than $24,000. Let's say $50,000!



        The deduction is only good for up to $750,000 in loan balance, so $50k is unreasonable, $30k would be about the first year's worth of interest on a $750k loan at 4%, so $50k could happen if they had a terrible rate, but the $750,000 limit puts a ceiling on this deduction.



        5. Et voila, rich people get an extra ($26,000 in the example) tax break.



        Yes, itemized deductions primarily benefit those with high income. However, tax deductions reduce the amount of income that is subjected to tax, so the benefit is a fraction of the all that money spent on interest/taxes/charity/etc. I'm not sure I'd call it an 'extra' tax break. Conversely, all those that have itemized deductions below the standard deduction benefit from a higher standard deduction, but I'm not sure I'd call that an extra tax break for them either. Regardless of what is perceived to be fair we also have a progressive tax rate which results in the highest income households paying more income tax (in general).






        share|improve this answer






























          6














          1. Everyone gets a $24,000 deduction. Great so far.



          Yes, the married filing jointly folk have a $24k standard deduction for 2018.



          2. If you like, you can instead take your mortgage interest as a deduction. (Obviously you would not do this unless that interest is $24,001 or more.)



          The other common itemized deduction is state and local taxes paid (SALT), but mortgage interest historically was the most common item that made itemizing deductions advantageous to people. New tax law capped this SALT deduction at $10k, which is very significant for even middle-class folks in some high-tax areas.



          3. The vast majority of folks in the US with a mortgage pay about $10,000 a year in interest - nowhere near the $24k point.



          Add in $10k in state and local taxes paid and some other itemized deductions and it gets a bit closer, but part of the intent of raising the standard deduction was to make itemizing less common, simplifying tax returns.



          4. For rich people, your mortage interest is going to be more than $24,000. Let's say $50,000!



          The deduction is only good for up to $750,000 in loan balance, so $50k is unreasonable, $30k would be about the first year's worth of interest on a $750k loan at 4%, so $50k could happen if they had a terrible rate, but the $750,000 limit puts a ceiling on this deduction.



          5. Et voila, rich people get an extra ($26,000 in the example) tax break.



          Yes, itemized deductions primarily benefit those with high income. However, tax deductions reduce the amount of income that is subjected to tax, so the benefit is a fraction of the all that money spent on interest/taxes/charity/etc. I'm not sure I'd call it an 'extra' tax break. Conversely, all those that have itemized deductions below the standard deduction benefit from a higher standard deduction, but I'm not sure I'd call that an extra tax break for them either. Regardless of what is perceived to be fair we also have a progressive tax rate which results in the highest income households paying more income tax (in general).






          share|improve this answer




























            6












            6








            6







            1. Everyone gets a $24,000 deduction. Great so far.



            Yes, the married filing jointly folk have a $24k standard deduction for 2018.



            2. If you like, you can instead take your mortgage interest as a deduction. (Obviously you would not do this unless that interest is $24,001 or more.)



            The other common itemized deduction is state and local taxes paid (SALT), but mortgage interest historically was the most common item that made itemizing deductions advantageous to people. New tax law capped this SALT deduction at $10k, which is very significant for even middle-class folks in some high-tax areas.



            3. The vast majority of folks in the US with a mortgage pay about $10,000 a year in interest - nowhere near the $24k point.



            Add in $10k in state and local taxes paid and some other itemized deductions and it gets a bit closer, but part of the intent of raising the standard deduction was to make itemizing less common, simplifying tax returns.



            4. For rich people, your mortage interest is going to be more than $24,000. Let's say $50,000!



            The deduction is only good for up to $750,000 in loan balance, so $50k is unreasonable, $30k would be about the first year's worth of interest on a $750k loan at 4%, so $50k could happen if they had a terrible rate, but the $750,000 limit puts a ceiling on this deduction.



            5. Et voila, rich people get an extra ($26,000 in the example) tax break.



            Yes, itemized deductions primarily benefit those with high income. However, tax deductions reduce the amount of income that is subjected to tax, so the benefit is a fraction of the all that money spent on interest/taxes/charity/etc. I'm not sure I'd call it an 'extra' tax break. Conversely, all those that have itemized deductions below the standard deduction benefit from a higher standard deduction, but I'm not sure I'd call that an extra tax break for them either. Regardless of what is perceived to be fair we also have a progressive tax rate which results in the highest income households paying more income tax (in general).






            share|improve this answer















            1. Everyone gets a $24,000 deduction. Great so far.



            Yes, the married filing jointly folk have a $24k standard deduction for 2018.



            2. If you like, you can instead take your mortgage interest as a deduction. (Obviously you would not do this unless that interest is $24,001 or more.)



            The other common itemized deduction is state and local taxes paid (SALT), but mortgage interest historically was the most common item that made itemizing deductions advantageous to people. New tax law capped this SALT deduction at $10k, which is very significant for even middle-class folks in some high-tax areas.



            3. The vast majority of folks in the US with a mortgage pay about $10,000 a year in interest - nowhere near the $24k point.



            Add in $10k in state and local taxes paid and some other itemized deductions and it gets a bit closer, but part of the intent of raising the standard deduction was to make itemizing less common, simplifying tax returns.



            4. For rich people, your mortage interest is going to be more than $24,000. Let's say $50,000!



            The deduction is only good for up to $750,000 in loan balance, so $50k is unreasonable, $30k would be about the first year's worth of interest on a $750k loan at 4%, so $50k could happen if they had a terrible rate, but the $750,000 limit puts a ceiling on this deduction.



            5. Et voila, rich people get an extra ($26,000 in the example) tax break.



            Yes, itemized deductions primarily benefit those with high income. However, tax deductions reduce the amount of income that is subjected to tax, so the benefit is a fraction of the all that money spent on interest/taxes/charity/etc. I'm not sure I'd call it an 'extra' tax break. Conversely, all those that have itemized deductions below the standard deduction benefit from a higher standard deduction, but I'm not sure I'd call that an extra tax break for them either. Regardless of what is perceived to be fair we also have a progressive tax rate which results in the highest income households paying more income tax (in general).







            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited 3 hours ago

























            answered 4 hours ago









            Hart COHart CO

            34.4k68096




            34.4k68096

























                2














                It is as simple as picking which one of the two is larger -



                (1) Your standard deduction, or



                (2) The sum of all your itemized deductions, taking SALT cap into consideration




                Obviously you would not do this unless that interest is $24,001 or more.




                Especially for taxpayers with a mortgage, it is very common to own a property (the one they have the mortgage for) - in which case they are able to deduct (a portion of) their real estate tax.



                For example, if I have $9000 in state and local taxes deduction, it is only sufficient for my mortgage interest to exceed $15000 for me to prefer itemizing deductions.



                However, in my opinion, your are right about mortgage interest deduction only making a difference for people with either large mortgages (expensive houses), or perhaps the ones with lots of other itemized deductions (e.g., high healthcare costs). This appears in alignment with one of the stated goals of TCJA, which was to increase the ratio of taxpayers preferring taking standard deduction over itemizing.






                share|improve this answer




























                  2














                  It is as simple as picking which one of the two is larger -



                  (1) Your standard deduction, or



                  (2) The sum of all your itemized deductions, taking SALT cap into consideration




                  Obviously you would not do this unless that interest is $24,001 or more.




                  Especially for taxpayers with a mortgage, it is very common to own a property (the one they have the mortgage for) - in which case they are able to deduct (a portion of) their real estate tax.



                  For example, if I have $9000 in state and local taxes deduction, it is only sufficient for my mortgage interest to exceed $15000 for me to prefer itemizing deductions.



                  However, in my opinion, your are right about mortgage interest deduction only making a difference for people with either large mortgages (expensive houses), or perhaps the ones with lots of other itemized deductions (e.g., high healthcare costs). This appears in alignment with one of the stated goals of TCJA, which was to increase the ratio of taxpayers preferring taking standard deduction over itemizing.






                  share|improve this answer


























                    2












                    2








                    2







                    It is as simple as picking which one of the two is larger -



                    (1) Your standard deduction, or



                    (2) The sum of all your itemized deductions, taking SALT cap into consideration




                    Obviously you would not do this unless that interest is $24,001 or more.




                    Especially for taxpayers with a mortgage, it is very common to own a property (the one they have the mortgage for) - in which case they are able to deduct (a portion of) their real estate tax.



                    For example, if I have $9000 in state and local taxes deduction, it is only sufficient for my mortgage interest to exceed $15000 for me to prefer itemizing deductions.



                    However, in my opinion, your are right about mortgage interest deduction only making a difference for people with either large mortgages (expensive houses), or perhaps the ones with lots of other itemized deductions (e.g., high healthcare costs). This appears in alignment with one of the stated goals of TCJA, which was to increase the ratio of taxpayers preferring taking standard deduction over itemizing.






                    share|improve this answer













                    It is as simple as picking which one of the two is larger -



                    (1) Your standard deduction, or



                    (2) The sum of all your itemized deductions, taking SALT cap into consideration




                    Obviously you would not do this unless that interest is $24,001 or more.




                    Especially for taxpayers with a mortgage, it is very common to own a property (the one they have the mortgage for) - in which case they are able to deduct (a portion of) their real estate tax.



                    For example, if I have $9000 in state and local taxes deduction, it is only sufficient for my mortgage interest to exceed $15000 for me to prefer itemizing deductions.



                    However, in my opinion, your are right about mortgage interest deduction only making a difference for people with either large mortgages (expensive houses), or perhaps the ones with lots of other itemized deductions (e.g., high healthcare costs). This appears in alignment with one of the stated goals of TCJA, which was to increase the ratio of taxpayers preferring taking standard deduction over itemizing.







                    share|improve this answer












                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer










                    answered 4 hours ago









                    void_ptrvoid_ptr

                    1,14249




                    1,14249























                        1














                        Yes, you understand it correctly. Here's what changed.



                        And by the way, it's a $12,000 standard deduction. You are thinking "married filing jointly", which is two people's tax form, and the numbers all double.



                        In 2017, the government gave exemptions of $4050 per dependent (including yourself) on line 42. And separately from that, they gave a standard deduction of $6350 on line 40.



                        enter image description here



                        So, in 2017, the deductions on Schedule A (such as mortgage, state income tax, health and charitable deductions) became effective at only $6351, a perfectly achievable number for a huge number of Americans. (Downside: paperwork).



                        In 2018 they did two things. First, they bumped the standard deduction by $1600, to $7950. That's pure win for taxpayers. Then, they eliminated the exemption for yourself and effectively moved it inside the standard deduction, raising the standard dedution to $12,000.



                        It's a win if your itemized deductions were less than $7,951, because you just got a free bump in the standard deduction.




                        • For instance your itemized deductions were $2000. Old way, you deduct $6350 + $4050, or $10,400. Now, you deduct $12,000.

                        • For instance your itemized deductions were $7000. Old way, you deduct $7000 + $4050, or $11,050. Now, you deduct $12,000.


                        However if your itemized deductions were $7,951 and above, it is a net lose because you lost your exemption.




                        • For instance your itemized deductions were $10,000. Old way, you deduct $10,000 + $4050, or $14,050. Now, you deduct $12,000.

                        • For instance your itemized deductions were $30,000. Old way, you deduct $30,000 + $4050, or $34,050. Now, you deduct $30,000.


                        So yes. This puts itemized deductions out of reach for many Americans who could take it before (all with a $6351-$12,000 itemization). It's mostly a lose for those who itemized before, unless they are in that $6351-7949 happy zone.



                        It's also a lose for public charities, because the tax incentive to donate is gone for many Americans.






                        share|improve this answer






























                          1














                          Yes, you understand it correctly. Here's what changed.



                          And by the way, it's a $12,000 standard deduction. You are thinking "married filing jointly", which is two people's tax form, and the numbers all double.



                          In 2017, the government gave exemptions of $4050 per dependent (including yourself) on line 42. And separately from that, they gave a standard deduction of $6350 on line 40.



                          enter image description here



                          So, in 2017, the deductions on Schedule A (such as mortgage, state income tax, health and charitable deductions) became effective at only $6351, a perfectly achievable number for a huge number of Americans. (Downside: paperwork).



                          In 2018 they did two things. First, they bumped the standard deduction by $1600, to $7950. That's pure win for taxpayers. Then, they eliminated the exemption for yourself and effectively moved it inside the standard deduction, raising the standard dedution to $12,000.



                          It's a win if your itemized deductions were less than $7,951, because you just got a free bump in the standard deduction.




                          • For instance your itemized deductions were $2000. Old way, you deduct $6350 + $4050, or $10,400. Now, you deduct $12,000.

                          • For instance your itemized deductions were $7000. Old way, you deduct $7000 + $4050, or $11,050. Now, you deduct $12,000.


                          However if your itemized deductions were $7,951 and above, it is a net lose because you lost your exemption.




                          • For instance your itemized deductions were $10,000. Old way, you deduct $10,000 + $4050, or $14,050. Now, you deduct $12,000.

                          • For instance your itemized deductions were $30,000. Old way, you deduct $30,000 + $4050, or $34,050. Now, you deduct $30,000.


                          So yes. This puts itemized deductions out of reach for many Americans who could take it before (all with a $6351-$12,000 itemization). It's mostly a lose for those who itemized before, unless they are in that $6351-7949 happy zone.



                          It's also a lose for public charities, because the tax incentive to donate is gone for many Americans.






                          share|improve this answer




























                            1












                            1








                            1







                            Yes, you understand it correctly. Here's what changed.



                            And by the way, it's a $12,000 standard deduction. You are thinking "married filing jointly", which is two people's tax form, and the numbers all double.



                            In 2017, the government gave exemptions of $4050 per dependent (including yourself) on line 42. And separately from that, they gave a standard deduction of $6350 on line 40.



                            enter image description here



                            So, in 2017, the deductions on Schedule A (such as mortgage, state income tax, health and charitable deductions) became effective at only $6351, a perfectly achievable number for a huge number of Americans. (Downside: paperwork).



                            In 2018 they did two things. First, they bumped the standard deduction by $1600, to $7950. That's pure win for taxpayers. Then, they eliminated the exemption for yourself and effectively moved it inside the standard deduction, raising the standard dedution to $12,000.



                            It's a win if your itemized deductions were less than $7,951, because you just got a free bump in the standard deduction.




                            • For instance your itemized deductions were $2000. Old way, you deduct $6350 + $4050, or $10,400. Now, you deduct $12,000.

                            • For instance your itemized deductions were $7000. Old way, you deduct $7000 + $4050, or $11,050. Now, you deduct $12,000.


                            However if your itemized deductions were $7,951 and above, it is a net lose because you lost your exemption.




                            • For instance your itemized deductions were $10,000. Old way, you deduct $10,000 + $4050, or $14,050. Now, you deduct $12,000.

                            • For instance your itemized deductions were $30,000. Old way, you deduct $30,000 + $4050, or $34,050. Now, you deduct $30,000.


                            So yes. This puts itemized deductions out of reach for many Americans who could take it before (all with a $6351-$12,000 itemization). It's mostly a lose for those who itemized before, unless they are in that $6351-7949 happy zone.



                            It's also a lose for public charities, because the tax incentive to donate is gone for many Americans.






                            share|improve this answer















                            Yes, you understand it correctly. Here's what changed.



                            And by the way, it's a $12,000 standard deduction. You are thinking "married filing jointly", which is two people's tax form, and the numbers all double.



                            In 2017, the government gave exemptions of $4050 per dependent (including yourself) on line 42. And separately from that, they gave a standard deduction of $6350 on line 40.



                            enter image description here



                            So, in 2017, the deductions on Schedule A (such as mortgage, state income tax, health and charitable deductions) became effective at only $6351, a perfectly achievable number for a huge number of Americans. (Downside: paperwork).



                            In 2018 they did two things. First, they bumped the standard deduction by $1600, to $7950. That's pure win for taxpayers. Then, they eliminated the exemption for yourself and effectively moved it inside the standard deduction, raising the standard dedution to $12,000.



                            It's a win if your itemized deductions were less than $7,951, because you just got a free bump in the standard deduction.




                            • For instance your itemized deductions were $2000. Old way, you deduct $6350 + $4050, or $10,400. Now, you deduct $12,000.

                            • For instance your itemized deductions were $7000. Old way, you deduct $7000 + $4050, or $11,050. Now, you deduct $12,000.


                            However if your itemized deductions were $7,951 and above, it is a net lose because you lost your exemption.




                            • For instance your itemized deductions were $10,000. Old way, you deduct $10,000 + $4050, or $14,050. Now, you deduct $12,000.

                            • For instance your itemized deductions were $30,000. Old way, you deduct $30,000 + $4050, or $34,050. Now, you deduct $30,000.


                            So yes. This puts itemized deductions out of reach for many Americans who could take it before (all with a $6351-$12,000 itemization). It's mostly a lose for those who itemized before, unless they are in that $6351-7949 happy zone.



                            It's also a lose for public charities, because the tax incentive to donate is gone for many Americans.







                            share|improve this answer














                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer








                            edited 2 hours ago

























                            answered 2 hours ago









                            HarperHarper

                            24.7k63788




                            24.7k63788

















                                protected by JoeTaxpayer 1 hour ago



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