What Is This Alternative Minimum Tax?
Posted: Tuesday, July 10, 2007
by Ron Piner
Ron Piner, CPA
I know you must be frustrated with this alternative minimum tax but do you really know what it is all about? Chances are you don’t fully understand. I will attempt to explain the alternative minimum tax to you and offer some tax planning strategies to help you endure.
The alternative minimum tax (AMT) is a tax calculation that is run simultaneously with the regular income tax calculation. The AMT is was originally designed to keep taxpayers from taking too much advantage of income tax deductions and potentially limiting the amount of income tax to be paid. If a taxpayer had certain deductions or exercised incentive stock options without selling the stock, there would quite likely be exposure to the AMT. The funny thing is, these days a taxpayer doesn’t have to have a bunch of deductions or a complicated tax structure to all into the AMT. In fact, many who are in the AMT are married filing joint returns with just the normal course of itemized deductions. When the married filing joint tax tables were adjusted to reflect twice the single tax rates(an attempt to eliminate the marriage penalty), more of these tax returns were in the AMT as a result of phasing out the lower income tax brackets. The lower income tax brackets of 10% and 15% were phased out by applying the AMT rate of 26% form most taxpayers. Throw in the fact that taxes taken as itemized deductions and miscellaneous deductions subject to the 2% adjusted gross income floor are add backs to arrive at alternative minimum taxable income, its no wonder that more Americans found themselves in this predicament.
These are a few of the ways to help cope with what I call operational AMT. Operational AMT does not require the use of amazing tax attributes and finds its way to the taxpayer by virtue of where the tax bracket falls and the type of normal deductions taken. Situational AMT involves specific transactions like exercising ISO’s or the sale of Internal Revenue Code 1202 stock. Situational AMT will often provide a credit that can be carried forward to offset regular tax in a future year, subject to limitations. I will discuss this more in a later article. For the time being, it is important to know how one’s income will fall over the next few years in order to plan for operational AMT. Calculate your own exposure to AMT by filling out form 6251 for the current year as well as the next three or four years. If you need help, you know where to find me.
Ron Piner, CPA
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