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Tax
Tip of the Week
For
the week of
March 17th, 2008
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Itemizing deductions: Three facts you should know
You know the general rule about itemized
deductions: Compare your total allowable expenses against your standard
deduction, and use the amount that provides the greatest tax benefit.
Illustration. Itemizing may
reduce your 2007 tax bill if you're under age 65, married filing
jointly, and your qualifying deductions are greater than the basic
standard deduction of $10,700 ($5,350 for single filers).
Here are three other facts about itemizing you may
be less familiar with.
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There's a special rule when
you're married and file separate returns. If either of
you itemizes, the other's standard deduction amount is usually
considered to be zero. When this situation applies, you'll generally be
better off itemizing no matter the amount of your allowable expenses.
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Your itemized deductions may
be limited. For instance, unreimbursed medical expenses
are deductible only if the amount you spent exceeds 7.5% of your
adjusted gross income (AGI). Miscellaneous deductions such as certain
legal fees must equal more than 2% of AGI to be deductible.
In addition, once your AGI reaches $156,400, the total amount of your
itemized deductions is reduced.
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You can itemize even though
your standard deduction is higher. Why would you want
to? One reason: The standard deduction isn't considered in the
computation of the alternative minimum tax (AMT), but some itemized
deductions are. If you're subject to the AMT, in certain cases your
overall tax liability may be less if you choose to itemize.
Other rules may apply to your situation. For help
with the calculations or with any of your tax filing concerns, give us
a call.
Click
here to view previous tax tips.
"Tax Tips" are published weekly to
provide useful tax information. Return to this site every week for
helpful tax-cutting suggestions, tax reminders, and current tax
information.
The information contained in this site is of a general nature and
should not be acted upon in your specific situation without further
details and/or professional assistance.
If you would like more information on anything in "Tax Tips," or if
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information from time to time, please contact our office. We're here to
help.
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