I am not sure what you mean by this or what kind of tax account you may be referring to.On your federal income tax return, you may deduct payments of various types of state and local taxes that are imposed on you within limitations. These include real estate, state and local income taxes, and sales taxes (but not both sales taxes and income taxes). You may not deduct federal incomes taxes. You may not deduct interest or penalties.A few states let you deduct federal income taxes on your state return.
No, this is the offset of not having to pay taxes on 401K profits. Save
yes they do. you can deduct charitable donations from the taxes that you are required to pay.
= the amount of income individuals have after they save and pay their taxes? =
Your employer will deduct 5.3% of your wages for Massachusetts income tax. Based on your pay rate and the W-4 you filled out, they will deduct about 28% for the Federal Government, plus SSIC.
Yes. If they buy the car then gift it to you, then they will have to pay upfront, and then can deduct a certain amount. But someone will pay.
Yes.
I am not sure what you mean by this or what kind of tax account you may be referring to.On your federal income tax return, you may deduct payments of various types of state and local taxes that are imposed on you within limitations. These include real estate, state and local income taxes, and sales taxes (but not both sales taxes and income taxes). You may not deduct federal incomes taxes. You may not deduct interest or penalties.A few states let you deduct federal income taxes on your state return.
No, this is the offset of not having to pay taxes on 401K profits. Save
yes they do. you can deduct charitable donations from the taxes that you are required to pay.
yes, you still made the income
No.
If the employee does not have sufficient deductions or earns more than the minimum taxable wage then you need to deduct taxes. If he has a qualifying number of dependents or his pay is lower than the minimum taxable amount then no deductions are required. Some employees, who's pay is so low that they owe no taxes have no deductions. See the first Related Link below for details.
What you do for a living means nothing. If you have a debt that is garnished, the money will be taken. If the garnishment is for taxes, you should have paid them when you were supposed to.
= the amount of income individuals have after they save and pay their taxes? =
No, (or a personal one)...but you can't also deduct the casualty loss - up to the amount of the payment...so if they paid you "in full"....thats it.
No. You cannot deduct lost income when you never claim the actual income in the first place. You are only taxed on the amount of taxable income that you received. The reason that Worker's Compensation pays you at this level is that you are not paying income taxes, state taxes, social security taxes nor medicare taxes on this income.