SOME
PLANNING FOR INDIVIDUAL TAXPAYERS
AMT for
Individuals
ince
1969 the Internal Revenue Code has included an
alternative minimum tax (AMT), originally
designed to prevent wealthy taxpayers from
claiming so many deductions that they wound up
paying little or no taxes.
Under the AMT,
taxpayers with large amounts of regular tax
deductions and credits (known as
preferences) have to add back these
preferences, subtract flat exemption amounts,
adjust for long-term capital gains taxes and
recompute the tax (under a two-tiered rate) on
the totals. If the result is more than their
regular tax liability (before certain credits),
they must pay this amount in addition to their
regular tax liability.
Preferences that
must be added back include (but are not limited
to) the standard deduction, personal exemptions,
a portion of medical expenses, state and local
taxes, some mortgage interest, a portion of
miscellaneous itemized deductions, net operating
loss deductions, passive income or loss
deductions, a portion of accelerated depreciation
and some income from the exercise of incentive
stock options. Exemption amounts differ,
depending on the taxpayers filing status,
and are phased out if AMT income exceeds certain
limits.
MANAGING AMT
Because so many of the dollar amounts used in
calculating the AMT were not indexed for
inflation until recently, and because more and
more credits and allowances that lower regular
tax liabilities have been added to the tax code,
an increasing number of middle-income taxpayers
are finding themselves liable for the AMT this
year. These individuals are looking for
legitimate ways to minimize (or avoid) this
additional tax.
Taxpayers should
first understand whether they are at risk for the
AMT. Then they should understand which credits
and incentives affect this determination.
Note that any AMT
planning should involve multiyear projections, to
determine both the regular tax and AMT
liabilities over a number of years and to decide
what actions will provide the best results over
the long run.
SOME STRATEGIES
Postpone (or prepay) some itemized
deductions. If there are regular tax deductions
that will be added back for AMT purposes and that
a taxpayer has flexibility in paying (for
example, state and local taxes), delay paying
these taxes until next year to avoid a
current-year AMT liability. Likewise, if a
taxpayer is not subject to AMT in the current
year but likely will owe AMT next year, he or she
might try to manage that AMT liability and
consider prepaying some of next years state
and local taxes.
Some employees may be able to negotiate with
their employers for earlier payments of income
that would normally be paid shortly after yearend
(such as bonuses). By doing this a taxpayer may
be able to have this income taxed at whichever
rate (AMT or regular tax) is lower for a given
year.
Pay off home-equity loans where the proceeds were
not used to improve the home. The only mortgage
interest eligible for AMT purposes is from a
mortgage whose proceeds were actually
used to build, buy or substantially improve a
taxpayers main or second home. If a
taxpayer has taken a home-equity loan and used
the proceeds to pay off credit card debt, go on
vacation or buy a new car, the interest is not
deductible for AMT purposes.
For more
information, see Darla Decore, CPA, and Amy
Leach, CPA, Tax Clinic, Navigating the
AMT, in the April 2006 issue of The Tax
Adviser. 
Nick
Fiore
The Tax Adviser
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