How Does the New Tax Plan Affect Me?
Many of you are asking where we stand on
tax reform for next year and how will it affect your taxes.
Here is what we know right now…
2017 Tax Reform: Key differences between
the Senate and House tax bills
The Senate and the House have each passed
their own version of the “Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.” The two versions of the bill
have many similar provisions, but they also have a number of key differences
that will have to be reconciled by the Conference Committee as the two bills
are merged into a single piece of legislation.
It is unclear at this point how these
differences will be resolved. There is a general inclination that the
Senate's provisions carry slightly more weight since the Senate is subject to
budgetary restraints as part of the reconciliation process and there is less
flexibility to make changes to their bill.
The House voted on December 4 to go to
conference with the Senate to reconcile the two bills and the Senate is
expected to name conferees later in the week. There has also been some
speculation that the House might take up the Senate version and forego a
conference but the chance of this happening is slight considering they have an
issue with the corporate alternative minimum tax (AMT) provision in the Senate
bill (see below).
The following are some of the more
significant differences between the two versions of the bill.
Ø
Sunset provision. The
Senate bill provided an expiration date of Jan. 1, 2026 for many of the tax
breaks in its bill, especially those for individuals. The House, on the other
hand, largely made the changes in its bill permanent.
Ø
Individual rates and brackets. The
Senate bill has seven tax brackets for individuals with rates ranging from 10%
to 38.5%. The House bill has four tax brackets ranging from 12% to 39.6%,
retaining the top rate under current law.
Ø
Individual alternative minimum tax
(AMT). The House bill would repeal AMT for individuals. The
Senate bill would retain the individual AMT, with increases to the exemption
amounts.
Ø
Estate tax. Both
bills would significantly increase the estate and gift tax exemption, but the
House would also repeal the estate tax after Dec. 31, 2024.
Ø
Individual mandate. The
Senate bill would effectively repeal the individual mandate (i.e., by reducing
the penalty amount to zero). The House version has no such provision.
Ø
Mortgage interest deduction. The
Senate bill would leave the deduction for interest on acquisition indebtedness
intact but would suspend the deduction for interest on home equity
indebtedness. The House bill would allow the deduction for interest on
acquisition indebtedness, but would, for newly purchased homes, reduce the
current $1 million limitation to $500,000 ($250,000 for married individuals
filing separately), and would allow the deduction only for interest on a
taxpayer's principal residence. Interest on home equity indebtedness incurred
after the effective date of the House bill would not be deductible.
Ø
Medical expense deduction. The
House bill would repeal deductions for medical expenses outright, but the Senate bill would take a
step in the opposite direction and temporarily (and retroactively) reduce the
floor from 10% under current law to 7.5% for all taxpayers for tax years
beginning after Dec. 31, 2016 and ending before Jan. 1, 2019, after which time
the 10% floor would be scheduled to return.
Ø
Child tax credit. The
Senate bill would increase the child tax credit from $1,000 under current law
to $2,000, increase the age limit for a qualifying child by one year (for tax
years beginning after Dec. 31, 2017 and before Jan. 1, 2025), increase the
income level at which the credit phases out ($75,000 for single filers and
$110,000 for joint filers under current law) to $500,000, and reduce the earned
income threshold for the refundable portion of the credit from $3,000 to
$2,500. The House bill would increase the amount of the credit to $1,600 and
increase the income levels at which the credit phases out to $115,000 for
single filers and $230,000 for joint filers.
Ø
Both bills would also provide a
non-child dependent credit, which would be $500 under the Senate bill and $300
under the House bill. The House bill would also provide a “family flexibility
credit”; the Senate bill has no equivalent.
Ø
Effective date of corporate tax
reduction. Both bills would reduce the corporate tax rate to 20%,
but the House's version would go into effect for tax years beginning after Dec.
31, 2017, whereas the Senate's version would go into effect for tax years
beginning after Dec. 31, 2018.
Ø
Corporate AMT. The
House bill would repeal the corporate AMT. The Senate bill, however, would
retain the corporate AMT at its current 20% rate.
o
FYI- The 20% corporate AMT rate is
equal to the 20% corporate rate that would go into effect under the Senate bill
in tax years beginning after Dec. 31, 2018—which would effectively negate the
value of corporate tax breaks for many businesses.
Ø
Section 179 expensing. Both
bills would increase the expensing cap and phase-out under Sec 179 rules, but the Senate would increase the
cap to $1 million and begin the phase-out at $2.5 million (up from $520,000 and
$2,070,000 for 2018 under current law), whereas the House would increase the
cap to $5 million and start the phase-out at $20 million.
Ø
Pass-through provision. The
Senate bill would generally allow a non-corporate taxpayer who has qualified
business income (QBI) from a partnership, S corporation, or sole proprietorship
to claim a deduction equal to 23% of pass-through income. The House bill would
provide a new maximum rate of 25% on the “business income” of individuals, with
a series of complex anti-abuse rules to prevent the recharacterization of wages
as business income.
Stay tuned with
more to come!
Follow me on Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn for updates, visit our website at kinzeyarndt.com or give us a call at (417) 882-9000.
Follow me on Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn for updates, visit our website at kinzeyarndt.com or give us a call at (417) 882-9000.