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February 7, 2019
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Mortgage Interest

  • February 7, 2019
  • 2 replies
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I entered $13,538 in mortgage interest and it only changed my refund by $57.  Does that seem correct?  Last year it made a bigger change in my refund.  My mortgage is several years old, primary residence, under $500,000.  Nothings changed.  Thanks for the help in advance.

    Best answer by NCPERSON1

    from the addiitonal information, appears that TT was giving you credit for the standard deduction of $24,000 but then when you added the interest of $13,538, your itemized deductions exceeded your standard deduction by only $300, so your taxable income was reduced by that same $300.  $57 of tax on $300 is reasonable based on the information provided. 

    2 replies

    IsabellaG
    February 8, 2019

    It could be correct, depending on what the rest of your itemized deductions were. The Standard Deduction for a single person is $12,000 this year, ($24,000 for Married, Filing Joint), and there no longer is a deduction for Personal Exemptions. Itemized deductions may not have the same effect on your refund this year.

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    February 8, 2019

    Thanks Isabella,  Additional information is,  married filing Jointly,  $24,300 in deductions....

    February 8, 2019
    It is possible

    If you are single , then $12,000 is standard so adding interest as noted only reduces taxable income by $1538

    There is not enough other detail to determine why it’s only $57 but it is certainly possible

    February 8, 2019

    Thanks,  Additional information is,  married filing Jointly,  $24,300 in deductions

    NCPERSON1Answer
    February 8, 2019

    from the addiitonal information, appears that TT was giving you credit for the standard deduction of $24,000 but then when you added the interest of $13,538, your itemized deductions exceeded your standard deduction by only $300, so your taxable income was reduced by that same $300.  $57 of tax on $300 is reasonable based on the information provided.