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February 7, 2019
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Taxes Owed

  • February 7, 2019
  • 2 replies
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Tax owed for Turbo tax  taxable income of 76,475(from Line 10 - 1040) = 8,676(from Line 11a - 1040).

 

IRS 2018 Tax(tax tables - jointly) owed for Turbo tax  taxable income of 76,475 = 8,796

 

Why the difference?

    Best answer by BarbL

    Do you have Qualified Dividends?  That's generally what generates this question because Qualified Dividends are taxed at a lower rate than regular income.  

    2 replies

    February 7, 2019

    I a, having trouble understanding which of the two numbers calculated below are from Turbo tax and which one you calculated on your own.  Can you please clarify that. 

     

    I "dummied' a return in TT and got $8796 which is exactly what the IRS tables have, see page 13 of the link below

     

    https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-dft/i1040tt--dft.pdf

     

    where did $8,676 come from? if you calculated that on your own, please share the calculations.  If that is what you are getting in TT, please look at Schedule 3 and Schedule 5 - are there credits there that reflect the $120 difference

     

     

     

    DaveLAuthor
    February 7, 2019

    Yes, the 8676 is from TT. I do have qualified dividends and I also have long and short term capital gains.  Schedule 3 & schedule 5 are OK with respect to credits. I am thinking that the answer is in the dividends and capital gains though I didn't know that qualified dividends had a different rate like ST Cap gains.  That would make sense if different rates were applied and explain the number on the TT form. I will attempt to break those off of the Taxable Income number and apply the appropriate rates and see what happens.

     

    Thanks everyone!

    February 8, 2019

    in Forms View (not sure if this is in the online version, but certainly in the Desktop Deluxe), 

     

    pull up this form:  "qualified dividends and Capital gains tax' - it will show the math on how the tax is calculated.  

     

    Form 1040, Line 3a is 15% while 3b MINUS 3A is based on the tax table 

    Schedule 1 Line 13 is also at 15%

     

    On the schedule I referenced, you'll see that your qualified dividends and cap gains are subtracted from your taxable income on lines 2 and 3 and then it's taxed @ 15% on line 20 while everything else is taxed based on the tax table.... it's a lot of math, but that is the end result. 

    BarbL
    BarbLAnswer
    February 7, 2019

    Do you have Qualified Dividends?  That's generally what generates this question because Qualified Dividends are taxed at a lower rate than regular income.  

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