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2018 Tax Law Changes

2018-Estate and Gift Tax Changes

Asked Wednesday, December 19, 2018 by an anonymous user
For decedents dying and gifts made after 2017 and before 2026 the basic exemption equivalent exclusion amount is increased to $10,000,000 (with inflation adjustments).

For 2018, the exclusion amount is $11,200,000 per taxpayer or with proper planning $22,400,000 for a married couple.
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2018 Tax Law Changes

2018-Individual health care mandate and premium tax credit

Asked Wednesday, December 19, 2018 by an anonymous user
For 2018, you are required to have minimum essential health coverage through an employer plan, a government program, or other plan, or pay a penalty unless you are exempt from this requirement.

The penalty amount for 2018 is the higher of (1) 2.5% of household income above your filing threshold, or (2) $695 per person in your household ($347.50 per dependent child under age 18), up to a maximum of $2,085. The mandate does not apply after 2018.

To help those of modest means pay premiums for coverage obtained from a government exchange (Marketplace), there’s a premium tax credit. Eligibility for this advanceable, refundable tax credit depends on your household income and other factors.

The credit continues to be available even though the individual mandate ends after 2018.

If you claimed the credit in advance when you obtained coverage for 2018, you have to reconcile what you already applied toward your premiums with what you are actually entitled to; the difference is reported on your tax return.

If you did not receive the credit in advance but are eligible for a credit, you can claim it on your return.

If you do not claim the premium tax credit and qualify for Trade Adjustment Assistance (TAA), you may qualify for the health coverage tax credit of 72.5% of premiums (25.14).
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2018 Tax Law Changes

2018-Premium tax credit

Asked Wednesday, December 19, 2018 by an anonymous user
For 2018, you are required to have minimum essential health coverage through an employer plan, a government program, or other plan, or pay a penalty. The mandate does not apply after 2018.

To help those of modest means pay premiums for coverage obtained from a government exchange (Marketplace), there’s a premium tax credit . Eligibility for this advanceable, refundable tax credit depends on your household income and other factors.

The credit continues to be available even though the individual mandate ends after 2018.
If you claimed the credit in advance when you obtained coverage for 2018, you have to reconcile what you already applied toward your premiums with what you are actually entitled to and the difference is reported on your tax return.

If you did not receive the credit in advance but are eligible for a credit, you can claim it on your return. If you do not claim the premium tax credit and qualify for Trade Adjustment Assistance (TAA), you may qualify for the health coverage tax credit of 72.5% of premiums
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2018 Tax Law Changes

2018-IRS mileage allowance

Asked Wednesday, December 19, 2018 by an anonymous user
The IRS standard business mileage rate for 2018 is 54.5 cents a mile
.
The rate for medical expense and moving expense for certain military personnel deductions is 18 cents a mile.

For charitable volunteers the mileage rate is unchanged at 14 cents a mile.
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2018 Tax Law Changes

2018-Adoption expenses

Asked Wednesday, December 19, 2018 by an anonymous user
For 2018, the limit on the adoption credit as well as the exclusion for employer-paid adoption assistance is $13,810. The benefit phaseout range is modified adjusted gross income between $207,140 to $247,140.
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2018 Tax Law Changes

2018- Itemized deductions-Deduction limits for long-term care premiums

Asked Wednesday, December 19, 2018 by an anonymous user
The maximum amount of age-based long-term care premiums that can be included as deductible medical expenses for 2018 (subject to the AGI floor is $420.

If you are age 40 or younger at the end of 2018; $780 for those age 41 through 50; $1,560 for those age 51 through 60; $4,160 for those age 61 through 70; and $5,200 for those over age 70.
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2018 Tax Law Changes

2018-Distribution from 529 plans and ABLE accounts

Asked Wednesday, December 19, 2018 by an anonymous user
Distributions from 529 plans to pay tuition in primary and secondary school up to $10,000 is not a taxable distribution.

Distributions from 529 plans can be rolled over tax free to ABLE accounts (up to annual contribution limits). Also annual contributions to ABLE accounts can be increased under certain circumstances.
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2018 Tax Law Changes

2018-Ordinary Income Tax Rates

Asked Tuesday, December 18, 2018 by an anonymous user
For tax years beginning after December 31, 2017 and before January 1, 2026, seven brackets will apply to individuals: 10%, 12%, 22%, 24%, 32%, 35% and 37%.

No change has been made to the filing statuses that apply to individuals.
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2018 Tax Law Changes

2018-Personal exemptions

Asked Tuesday, December 18, 2018 by an anonymous user
For tax years 2018 through 2025 the deduction for personal and dependency exemptions is effectively suspended by the Act reducing those amounts to zero.
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