Tag: tax return
Does Your Teen Need to File a Tax Return?

Does Your Teen Need to File a Tax Return?

Dear Carrie: My daughter is 16 and has her first paying job. Does she need to file a separate tax return? — A Reader

Dear Reader: Congratulations to your daughter — and to you. A first job is an important milestone for both kids and parents. It’s a step toward independence and personal responsibility for your daughter. And it’s an opportunity for you to teach her some financial realities.

Taxes are definitely a part of that financial reality. So I’ll first discuss the parameters for filing a tax return. Then I’d like to get into ways you can help your daughter learn to manage her money wisely — which, to me, is the most important lesson of all.

Basic Guidelines for Filing a Teen’s Tax Return

Whether or not your daughter needs to file a separate tax return depends on three basic factors:

–Is she considered a dependent by the IRS?

–How much income does she have?

–What type of income does she have?

The IRS considers a child to be a dependent if he or she:

–Is under 19, or under age 24 and a full-time student, or permanently disabled at any age;

–Lives with you more than 50 percent of the year

–Doesn’t provide more than half of his or her own financial support.

Next, you need to look at her income, both the amount and type.  Here’s where it gets more complicated, because there are different rules and income limits for earned income from a job, unearned income from dividends, interest or investment gains — or a combination of both

For Earned Income Only

This is pretty straightforward. A dependent who doesn’t have unearned income only has to file a separate tax return if earned income is above the standard deduction — $6,300 for 2015. So if your daughter earned less than that, she wouldn’t have to file.

But it could be a good idea to do it anyway. If her employer withheld federal income tax, she might be entitled to a refund. You don’t want her to miss out on that. Plus, it’s a good learning experience.

For Unearned Income Only

Unearned income is a different story. If a child has unearned income above $1,050 for 2015, a tax return is required. But when dealing with unearned income only, you can choose to either file a separate return for your child or include that income on your own return. One caveat: If you include it on your return, it could boost you into a higher tax bracket — and possibly higher tax rates.

For a Combination of Both

The rules change again if a dependent has both earned and unearned income.

In this case, you need to file a separate return if:

–Unearned income is more than $1,050.

–Earned income is more than $6,300.

–Combined income totals more than the larger of $1,050 or earned income (up to $5,950) plus $350.

To make this a little clearer, let’s say your daughter had $100 in interest income plus $5,000 in earned income. She wouldn’t have to file a return because both her unearned and earned incomes are below the thresholds and her total income of $5,100 is less than $5,350 (earned income plus $350). However, if she had $400 in interest income, she would have to file because her total income of $5,400 would be more than her earned income plus $350.

Now let’s say your daughter had $400 in earned income and $800 in interest income. In this case, she would have to file a return because her total income of $1200 is more than $1050.

All this can be a bit confusing, so unless your daughter’s situation is fairly straightforward, I’d talk to your tax professional. Also check out IRS Publication 929 for a thorough treatment and worksheet.

A Word on the “Kiddie Tax”

You may have heard of the Kiddie Tax, so I think that’s also worth a mention. This has to do with tax rates on unearned income.

For 2015, your child’s unearned income less than $1,050 is not taxed. Unearned income between $1,050 and $2,100 is taxed at his or her rate. Unearned income above $2,100 is taxed at the parent’s highest income tax rate. If your child has a lot of unearned income, that could be pretty significant.

Going Beyond Taxes

Whether or not your daughter files a return, I’d definitely talk to her about taxes and withholding, and have her work with you as you prepare either hers or your own return.

Then take it beyond taxes and talk about responsible money management. Now that your daughter is earning her own money, help her create a budget so she can make the most of it. For instance, what do you expect her to pay for? Clothes? Entertainment? Gas? Have her keep track of her expenses monthly (an online budget calculator can help).

Suggest that she save a certain percentage of her paycheck each month for some future goal. If she hasn’t done so already, help her open both checking and savings accounts and set up an automatic deposit from one to the other. Now that she has earned income, you might even help her open a Roth IRA.

Establishing good money habits early is incredibly important but, in general, kids don’t learn much about managing money in school. It’s up to you. So show her how you manage for both the short- and long-term. If you take it step-by-step, and include her where appropriate in your own money strategies, you’ll set her on the path to being able to not only handle her taxes, but her financial future, as well.

Carrie Schwab-Pomerantz, CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER(tm), is president of Charles Schwab Foundation and author of The Charles Schwab Guide to Finances After Fifty, available in bookstores nationwide. Read more at http://schwab.com/book. You can e-mail Carrie at askcarrie@schwab.com. This column is no substitute for an individualized recommendation, tax, legal or personalized investment advice. Where specific advice is necessary or appropriate, consult with a qualified tax advisor, CPA, financial planner or investment manager. To find out more about Carrie Schwab-Pomerantz and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2015 CHARLES SCHWAB & CO., INC. MEMBER SIPC.

DIST BY CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC. (0216-0833)

Photo: Flickr user Cliff

Married Status Adds New Wrinkle To Tax Time For Married Gays

Married Status Adds New Wrinkle To Tax Time For Married Gays

By Stephanie Akin, The Record (Hackensack, N.J.)

Tax time has been described as anxiety-inducing and unnecessarily confusing, and its inescapability has even been equated with death. Now, it’s a reason for celebration — at least for same-sex couples who for the first time can check off the box that says “married” on their 1040s.

Tim Eustace and his husband, Kevin, marked the occasion by going out to dinner in downtown Maywood, N.J., where they live. Jeff Farlow, 30, of Pine Hill posted his refund on Facebook. And Jeff Gardner, 45, of Hawthorne described a visit to the accountant with this incongruous adjective: “Momentous.”

Filing as a newly married couple entails its own set of headaches, and filing for the first time as a same-sex married couple comes with an assortment of questions. But many said the symbolic significance is worth the hassle — at least this time around.

“It’s another act that points out that the government legally recognizes us as a legitimate couple,” said Charles Cumpston, a retired publishing executive from Fort Lee. “That’s pretty incredible.”

For many, the status means a huge reduction in paperwork, lower bills for tax preparation and a bigger refund. But the transition hasn’t been completely without its glitches — this is a tax issue, after all.

Some have dealt with setbacks familiar to any married couple, including the realization that they fall in the group that pays the so-called marriage penalty. Married people often begin to pay more than they would if they were single as a couple’s joint income increases, regardless of whether they file jointly or as a married couple filing separately.

Some couples who fall in the opposite category, those who get a bigger refund filing jointly, are working to get reimbursed for past taxes they paid as single filers while they had civil unions or marriages recognized in other states.

And couples who were legally married in one state, but work in a state that doesn’t recognize gay marriage face another challenge: filing separate state tax returns as individuals there, a reminder, they said, of why a nationwide debate is still raging.

In New Jersey, couples with civil unions have been allowed to file jointly since 2008. But they still had to file separate federal forms as single people, which in many cases almost doubled their tax preparation fees, said Ted Carnevale, a CPA and chief executive officer at Gramkow Carnevale Seifert & Co. in Oradell.

The elimination of that requirement means that the same tax rules apply to married couples claiming all their income in New Jersey, regardless of their sexual orientation. But some couples still have a lot of questions, Carnevale said.

“You could have people who have been life partners together for a long time, and now their tax (situation) has changed dramatically,” he said. “They have been used to being together and filing a certain way.”

Carnevale said some couples are also confused about whether they can file joint federal returns if they have a civil union and aren’t married — they can’t.

But not every couple has managed a seamless transition to their new tax status, said accountant Phil Goldstein of Goldstein Lieberman & Co.

One pair of longtime clients has been agonizing over the news that their marriage would eliminate one spouse’s $6,000 refund, although it would mean an $11,000 savings for the higher-earning partner, he said.

“The one who made more said, ‘If it’s costing us more to be married than if we were single, I think we should separate,’” he said. The couple eventually resolved their differences and decided to stay together.

But, he added, he saw the dispute as another sign of marriage equality: it was a version of an argument he’d seen between dozens of heterosexual couples over the years.

“It doesn’t make a difference if it’s a heterosexual couple or a gay couple,” he said. “Money is money, and people fight over it.”

AFP Photo/Scott Olson