How the new senate tax bill could affect you
How the new senate tax bill could affect you"
- Select a language for the TTS:
- UK English Female
- UK English Male
- US English Female
- US English Male
- Australian Female
- Australian Male
- Language selected: (auto detect) - EN
Play all audios:
HEALTH CARE PREMIUMS. By ending the Affordable Care Act provision requiring most Americans to have health insurance, the Senate bill would cause health insurance premiums for millions of
older Americans to surge. People ages 50 to 64 would face average premium increases of up to $1,500 in 2019 as a result of the bill, according to a study by AARP’s Public Policy Institute.
(The House bill does not include this Affordable Care Act provision.) Medicare.The Senate plan would cost about $1.5 trillion over the next decade. Absent additional congressional action,
under a 2010 law known as Pay-as-You-Go, a projected deficit of that amount would trigger automatic spending cuts in many mandatory federal programs, including Medicare. Individual benefits
— and premiums, deductibles and copays — would remain the same, but the reduction in spending could have a major impact on patient access to health care. (The House bill also would increase
the deficit by at least $1.5 trillion over the next decade.) TAX BRACKETS. The bill would revamp individual income tax brackets, lowering the top rate to 38.5 percent and setting other
brackets at 10 percent, 12 percent, 22 percent, 24 percent, 32 percent and 35 percent. The Senate would sunset the new brackets after 2025. (The House bill also would revamp the tax
brackets, but to different rates.) STANDARD DEDUCTIONS. The Senate plan would ends personal exemptions, currently $4,050 for each taxpayer and each dependent claimed. Instead, standard
deductions would increase from $6,350 to $12,000 for individuals and from $12,700 to $24,000 for married couples. The Senate plan would sunset the increased deductions after 2025. (The House
plan would also eliminate personal exemptions and raise standard deductions.) DEDUCTIONS FOR TAXPAYERS 65 AND OLDER. The Senate plan would maintains the added standard deduction for
taxpayers 65 and older. (The House plan would repeal this deduction.) STATE, LOCAL AND PROPERTY TAXES. Federal deductions for state and local taxes would no longer be allowed. (The House
would allow deductions of up to $10,000 of local property taxes.) Mortgage interest.Homeowners would still get to deduct interest on mortgages of up to $1 million. (The House would cap
deductible interest on a primary home mortgage of up to $500,000.) STUDENT LOAN INTEREST. The Senate plan would continue to allow taxpayers to deduct up to $2,500 annually in student loan
interest payments. (The House would repeal this deduction.) Alternative minimum tax.The Senate bill would repeal this tax, which generally hits high-income earners, but would revive the
alternative minimum tax after 2025. (The House proposal also would abolish this tax.) Home equity loans. Interest on home equity loans — popular among millions of borrowers for the tax break
— would no longer be deductible. (The House plan also would eliminate this deduction.) Home sellers. Individual filers would continue to get up to $250,000 and joint filers up to $500,000
tax free from the sale of a home, but the bill would require sellers to live in the property five of the eight years before the sale, up from the current requirement of two of the last five
years. This provision would sunset after 2025. (The House plan shares the same provision.) CHAINED CONSUMER PRICE INDEX. Tax provisions that are indexed annually for inflation would be
indexed using a chained consumer price index (CPI). Compared to the current measure of inflation, chained CPI would subject more income to higher tax rates through bracket creep. Tax values
that are recalculated for 2018, such as the bracket thresholds and standard deduction, would be indexed by chained CPI beginning after Dec. 31, 2018. Other indexed values in the code would
be indexed by chained CPI beginning after Dec. 31, 2017. (The House would adopt the same measure of inflation for the tax code.) Some of these provisions could change this week before the
full Senate vote. If the Senate passes the tax bill, it would still need to settle the differences between its measure and the House bill — or the House would have to accept the Senate
version without changes — before a single piece of legislation could be sent to President Trump.
Trending News
Video 'Big Little Lies' star Laura Dern teases possible return to 'Jurassic Park' - ABC NewsABC NewsVideoLiveShowsShopStream onSisters found dead Trump-Putin call Michelle Obama LatestLatest'Diddy' trial Gaza Wil...
A bore-hole to the earth's mantle: amsoc's moholeAccess through your institution Buy or subscribe This is a preview of subscription content, access via your institution ...
Efficacy of school‐based interventions for improving muscular fitness outcomes in children: a systematic review and meta‐analysisThe World Health Organization recommends that children should engage in an average of 60 min of moderate-to-vigorous phy...
Union cabinet approves caste enumeration in upcoming censusUnion Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw on Wednesday, April 30 announced that the Union Cabinet has approved the inclusion of ca...
How singaporeans legitimise a reserved election they rejected?So it seems that the dust has settled for now. Only weeks ago, the indignation felt by many Singaporeans — over a Malays...
Latests News
How the new senate tax bill could affect youHEALTH CARE PREMIUMS. By ending the Affordable Care Act provision requiring most Americans to have health insurance, the...
Letters | don’t let coronavirus leave weaker students without a sayI am glad to see that Chief Executive Carrie Lam has introduced several measures to further expand social distancing. Ad...
The four c’s of academic success (opinion)> “Although some students show up at school as ‘intentional > learners’—people who are already interested in doing...
Hyderabad woman orders chicken manchurian, zomato sends chicken 65 & says, ‘please have it'Imagine ordering your favorite dish and getting something totally different, only to be told to enjoy it anyway. Well, t...
Princess eugenie baby: how royal baby may not see the queen for monthsBut with Frogmore Cottage empty since Harry and Meghan relocated to the US, the couple moved in to the newly-renovated c...