
President Bush signed the Tax Relief and Health
Care Act into law in late 2006. The new law, which offers $45.1 billion
in tax breaks and adds more than 200 changes to the Tax Code, extended
several tax provisions that were scheduled to expire, resurrected
several tax provisions that had already expired and added a few
surprises.
For instance, the new law retroactively restored
some popular expired tax cuts to the beginning of 2006. Those included
the deduction for state and local sales taxes, the higher education
tuition deduction, the teacher’s classroom expense deduction and the
research tax credit.
The new law also enhanced some important
incentives, bolstered Health Savings Accounts, extended some expiring
energy credits and includes miscellaneous tax relief, including a
refundable credit worth up to 20 percent to certain taxpayers with
long-term unused AMT credits who have AMT income from incentive stock
options.
Here’s a recap of some of the provisions that were
extended:
Deduction of state and local general sales tax:
The American Jobs Creation Act of 2004 allowed taxpayers to deduct
either state and local income taxes or state and local general sales
taxes as an itemized deduction, according to the CCH Tax Briefing. This
deduction expired on December 31, 2005. However, the popularity of the
deduction, especially among residents of states without an income tax,
did not go unnoticed on Capitol Hill. Thus, the new law extends it
through 2007. According to CCH, taxpayers can calculate their deduction
either by saving receipts or using the Optional State Sales Tax Tables
in IRS Publication 600. According to CCH, taxpayers may alternate from
year to year between sales tax and state income tax deduction.
Similarly, in taking the sales tax deductions, alternating from year to
year between using the IRS sales tax tables and the actual expense
method is permitted, CCH reported. In some cases, taxpayers may want to
consider timing the purchase of big-ticket sales tax purchases to
achieve the best possible tax break.
Higher education tuition deduction: The new
law extends the popular above-the-line higher education tuition
deduction through 2007. For 2006, and again in 2007, a $4,000
above-the-line education deduction is available each year to single
taxpayers with adjusted gross incomes (AGI) of $65,000 or less ($130,000
for joint filers). For those single taxpayers with incomes between
$65,001 and $80,000 ($130,001 to $160,000 for joint filers) a $2000
above-the-line education deduction is available. These are the same
levels set for the deduction in 2004 and 2005.
Teacher’s classroom expense deduction:
Teachers and other education workers can deduct, above the line, up to
$250 of certain out-of-pocket classroom expenses such as paper, pens,
glue and scissors, software and books. The
position can be with any class from kindergarten through grade 12 as
long as the work covers at least 900 hours during the school year.
This deduction, which recognizes that many education professionals
purchase classroom supplies with their own money, was claimed by more
than 3 million taxpayers in 2005.
Work opportunity tax credit and welfare-to-work
tax credit: Congress created the Work Opportunity and
Welfare-to-Work tax credits to give employers tax incentives to hire
economically disadvantaged individuals. According to CCH, the new law
retroactively renews the two popular credits for 2006 and for 2007,
combines them, with enhancement, into one credit.
Energy extenders: The new law also extends
for one year a host of energy related tax provisions scheduled to expire
at the end of 2007 under current law, such as the credits for
residential energy efficient property and new energy efficient homes,
and the deduction for energy efficient commercial buildings.
Other extenders include:
-
Research tax credit;
-
Election to treat combat pay as
earned income for purposes of the earned income credit;
-
Archer medical savings accounts
(Archer MSAs).
Health savings accounts (HSA): The new law
enhances the use of health savings accounts (HSAs). Unlike the
extenders, the HSA enhancements are permanent and most take effect for
tax years beginning after 2006, according to CCH. For instance,
employees with a health flexible spending account (FSA) or a health
reimbursement account (HRA) will be allowed to make a one-time transfer
of the balance in their FSA or HRA to an HSA. The new law also allows
employees a one-time, once-in-a-lifetime, rollover of funds from their
IRAs into an HSA. The election to make the rollover is irrevocable.
The change is designed to give employees quicker access to their funds
for medical expenses. The provision applies to tax years beginning
after December 31, 2006.
The bill also has a number of tax provision that
offer even more tax relief to a wide variety of taxpayers. Those
include, according to CCH:
-
A refundable credit worth up to
20 percent for the next five years, to certain taxpayers with long-term
unused AMT credits who have AMT income from incentive stock options;
-
An itemized mortgage insurance
premium deduction available on qualified residences, with phase-out
starting at $100,000 AGI, for 2007 only. The premium must be paid or
accrued with respect to a mortgage insurance contract issued after
December 31, 2006.
And last, the bill also increases the
penalty for filing a frivolous tax return from $500 to $5,000.
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January 2007 — This column is produced by the Financial Planning Association, the
membership organization for the financial planning community.