Hey- I often look here when I want to find people who just know random money related tidbits so I thought I would ask this.
Usually federal tax is fairly straight forward as far as you make more, you keep more- things phase out over large amounts, tax rates graduate rather that being a flat rate over your entire income, etc.
With the multiple stimuluses, unemployment that isn't taxable, various credits and stimulus that phase over smaller amounts, it is the first time I've seen that you can REALLY be ahead by making less. (usually it's more like "if I overanalyze, if I made $30K less I would only be down by 2/3 of it" this year you could be AHEAD by making less)
Anyone else know another time since the US had federal tax that this has been an issue? Is this a thing in other countries?
A great example, a single parent with 4 kids making $80K in 2020 would have 80K minus taxes. (lets ignore standard deduction to make this less of a headache) A single parent with 4 kids making 75K would have (75K-taxes plus $5,600) - they are ahead by the $5,600 plus the amount of the taxes on it. Plus they get a higher amount of various credits and the other stimulus payments, pay less for insurance, etc... it sort of snowballs. Plus if the lower income parent had collected 10K in umemployment on top of that- you're looking at someone making an extra 5K through their employer and being around 12K BEHIND (10.6K + taxes) the "lower income earner" at the end of the day. It snowballs even more if you're looking at older kids with FAFSA or young kids with childcare deductions (if those are still a thing?)
I know I'm overthinking, that's what I do.
Usually federal tax is fairly straight forward as far as you make more, you keep more- things phase out over large amounts, tax rates graduate rather that being a flat rate over your entire income, etc.
With the multiple stimuluses, unemployment that isn't taxable, various credits and stimulus that phase over smaller amounts, it is the first time I've seen that you can REALLY be ahead by making less. (usually it's more like "if I overanalyze, if I made $30K less I would only be down by 2/3 of it" this year you could be AHEAD by making less)
Anyone else know another time since the US had federal tax that this has been an issue? Is this a thing in other countries?
A great example, a single parent with 4 kids making $80K in 2020 would have 80K minus taxes. (lets ignore standard deduction to make this less of a headache) A single parent with 4 kids making 75K would have (75K-taxes plus $5,600) - they are ahead by the $5,600 plus the amount of the taxes on it. Plus they get a higher amount of various credits and the other stimulus payments, pay less for insurance, etc... it sort of snowballs. Plus if the lower income parent had collected 10K in umemployment on top of that- you're looking at someone making an extra 5K through their employer and being around 12K BEHIND (10.6K + taxes) the "lower income earner" at the end of the day. It snowballs even more if you're looking at older kids with FAFSA or young kids with childcare deductions (if those are still a thing?)
I know I'm overthinking, that's what I do.