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•April 2008

•Rebate Checks

•January 2008

•2007 Year-End Tax Legislation Alert

•October 2007

•2007 Year-End Tax Planning For Individuals

•July 2007

•2007 Business Travel

•April 2007

•2007 Planning - Standard Mileage Rates

•January 2007

•2005 Tax Legislation: Energy Act of 2005

•October 2006

•2006 YEAR-END TAX PLANNING

•July 2006

•Arranging Household Help - "Nanny Tax" Law

•April 2006

•Passive Activity Losses

•January 2006

•Paying the IRS - Planning to Pay Individual Estimated Tax

•October 2005

•Alternative Minimum Tax

•July 2005

•Business Trips That Mix Business with Pleasure

•April 2005

•Recordkeeping - Common Requirements for Business Income

•January 2005

•2004 Tax Legislation: Jobs Act - General Highlights

•October 2004

•Business Trips That Mix Business with Pleasure

•July 2004

•Keogh or SEP for the Self-Employed Person?

•April 2004

•Planning for 2003 IRA Contributions

•January 2004

•Hiring Your Spouse as an Employee

•October 2003

•Selling Investment Property - Like-Kind Exchanges

•July 2003

•Making Sure Entertainment Expenses Yield Deductions

•April 2003

•Sale of a Residence with a Home Office

•January 2003

•Exclusions on Sale or Exchange of a Principal Residence

Tax Tips

Tax Tips are provided by
Wood, Johnson, Heath, P.C.
8200 North Mopac, Suite 110, Austin, Texas 78759
Tel: 512-343-8075 - E-mail: info@wjh-cpa.com - Web: www.wjh-cpa.com
Certified Public Accountants, Financial Advisors, Management Consultants, Outsourced Service Provider

NOTE: The information in these tips is not intended to constitute legal, accounting, tax, investment, consulting, or other professional advice or services. For specific information that applies to your circumstances you should consult a qualified professional advisor.

October 2005
Alternative Minimum Tax

As if the regular federal income tax rules aren't complicated enough, you also may have to cope with a shadow tax system called the alternative minimum tax (AMT). Although it was originally designed to exact a minimum amount of tax from taxpayers who take advantage of complex tax shelters and big-yield deductions, the AMT has evolved to the point where it reaches mainstream taxpayers. Unfortunately, although the AMT had originally been enacted to prevent the super-rich from not paying any income taxes at all in any given year because of tax shelters and other deductions, the AMT now poses a threat to "ordinary" individuals, some only in the middle-class brackets. Ironically, many of the same tax breaks given to taxpayers in the massive Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001 will trigger greater AMT liability than ever before. Estimates are that the 1.1 million taxpayers now subject to AMT will grow to approximately 30 million by 2010! Here's how the AMT works in a nutshell. You begin with taxable income as computed for purposes of the regular federal income tax. Then you add back to taxable income many of the important deductions you claimed to arrive at regular taxable income. For example, state and local income and real property taxes, miscellaneous itemized deductions, and personal exemptions all may need to be added back. Depending on the types of businesses and investments you're involved in, there could be other adjustments as well. For example, certain tax breaks for incentive stock options aren't allowed for AMT purposes. After all adjustments and so-called preferences have been made, you subtract an exemption amount that varies with your income level. Then what remains is taxed at 26% or 28% to arrive at a figure called the tentative minimum tax. If this tentative minimum tax is higher than your regular income tax, you must pay the excess as AMT tax. For example, if your regular tax bill is $25,000, and the tentative minimum tax is $32,000, you will pay the regular tax bill plus an AMT tax bill of $7,000 ($32,000 less $25,000). Of course, the AMT often involves extra paperwork, more calculations and more tax forms to file. The primary AMT relief included in the Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001 is a $4,000 increase in the AMT exemption amount to $49,000 for joint filers and a $2,000 increase to $35,750 for single filers. This relief is only available for the years 2001 through 2004. Even during this period when the exemption amount increase is effective, the JCT estimates that the number of taxpayers subject to the AMT would rise to approximately 5 million taxpayers in 2004. What should you do about the AMT? The first step is to estimate whether or not you will have an AMT problem at tax return time. Then, if you may have AMT exposure, the key to lessening the damage often is timing. In particular, a mid-year and year-end analysis is useful. Most important of all, every major business and investment decision you're contemplating should be taken with the AMT in mind. The tax advantages you may be counting on to make a deal work may not be quite as robust as you expected because of the AMT.

If you have any questions as to how these rules apply to your particular situation, please do not hesitate to call the Certified Public Accountants at Wood, Johnson, Heath, P.C. at 512-343-8075.

Wood, Johnson, Heath, P.C.