| Tax Law Changes for 2003
The new year brings a mixed bag of tax law changes, some of them tied to
the changing cost of living. While many will reap a benefit from increased
deductions and credits, others will find that they are subject to more tax, or
must take smaller deductions.
Here are the major changes that affect taxpayers, beginning January 1,
2003:
Deductions, Exemptions, Estate Tax
- Standard Deductions -- In 2003, the standard deduction amounts
rise to $7,950 (filing jointly and surviving spouse), $3,975 (marrieds
filing separately) $4,750 (single) and $7,000 (head of household). The
standard deduction for dependents claimed on another’s return stays the
same for 2003 at $750.
- Mileage Rate Deductions -- The standard per-mile rate used in
taking a deduction for business use of an automobile is 36.0 cents per
mile for 2003, down from 36.5 cents per mile in 2002. The rate for medical
use declines from 13 cents per mile to 12 cents per mile, as does the rate
used in computing moving expense. Charitable use mileage remains at 14
cents per mile.
- Exemptions -- Each personal exemption will be worth $3,050 on
2003 returns, up from $3,000 on 2002 returns.
- Estate Tax -- The top estate tax bracket and rate will go down in
2003 so that the highest rate will be 49 percent, payable on taxable
estates in excess $2,000,000.
Social Security, Withholding
- Social Security Tax Adjustment for Inflation -- The maximum
amount of wages subject to Social Security old age, survivors’ and
disability withholding increases from $84,900 to $87,000 for 2003.
- Social Security Income Limits -- In 2003, people under age 65 can
earn up to $11,520 before seeing a reduction in their Social Security
benefits. If 2003 is the year in which a person reaches age 65, he or she
may earn up to $2,560 per month until reaching age 65 without a reduction
in benefits. Once taxpayers turn 65, they can earn any amount without a
reduction in benefits.
- Nanny Tax Threshold -- You can pay a domestic worker, such as a
maid or nanny, up to $1,400 in 2003 without having to wrestle with federal
payroll tax withholding on wages.
Education
- Lifetime Learning Credit -- The limit on eligible expenses on
which the 20-percent credit is computed rises to $10,000, producing a
potential maximum credit of $2,000.
Retirement
- IRA Phaseouts -- In 2003, the ability for those covered by a
qualified plan to make a deductible contribution to an IRA will begin to
phase out at $40,000 in adjusted gross income and end at $50,000 for
single filers. For marrieds filing jointly, the phaseout range is $60,000
to $70,000.
- Retirement Plan Contributions -- In 2003, the maximum that can be
contributed to a 401(k), 403(b) or 457 plan increases to $12,000. The
limit on elective contributions for SIMPLE 401(k) plans increases to
$8,000 in 2003.
- Catch-up Contributions -- In 2003, there is an increase in
catch-up contributions for 401(k)s from $1,000 to $2,000 and SIMPLE plans
from $500 to $1,000.
Small Business
- Expense Election -- The amount that can be "expensed"
rather than depreciated under Section 179 of the Internal Revenue Code
increases to $25,000 in 2003.
Dependent Care
- Dependent Care Credit -- Allowable employment-related expenses
used in figuring the credit increase to $3,000 for one qualifying child,
$6,000 for two or more. Maximum applicable percentage increases to 35
percent. Phaseout threshold will begin at $15,000 rather than at $10,000.
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