Wednesday November 11, 2009 12:01 AM ET
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Published October 8, 2008  |  A A A
The Tax Guy by Bill Bischoff (Author Archive)

Bailout Act Includes Tax Breaks for the Little Guy

You might not be a big fan of the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008 (better known as the bailout bill). But it does include a bunch of federal income tax changes, most of which are taxpayer-friendly. Here’s a rundown of the personal tax changes that may affect you and members of your family.

Extensions for Personal Tax Breaks

The new law gives new or prolonged life to the personal federal income tax breaks listed below.

College Tuition Deduction
The deduction for up to $4,000 of college tuition and related fees was extended for 2008 and 2009. If you qualify, you need not itemize to benefit.

Optional Sales Tax Deduction
The optional itemized deduction for state and local sales taxes (in lieu of deducting state and local income taxes) was extended for 2008 and 2009. Your must claim itemized deductions on Schedule A of Form 1040 to gain any benefit from this break.

Real Property Tax Deduction for Non-Itemizers
Legislation passed earlier this year established a new real property tax deduction for non-itemizers. The maximum deduction is $1,000 for married joint-filing couples and $500 for others. However, the deduction can’t exceed the amount of state and local real property taxes that you actually pay during the year. This deduction was originally a one-year deal for 2008 only. The new law extends it through 2009.

Educator Expense Deduction
The deduction for up to $250 of personal expenditures by teachers and other educators to provide stuff for their schools was extended for 2008 and 2009. If you qualify, you need not itemize to benefit.

Charitable Contributions Out of IRAs
Your right to make up to $100,000 in annual charitable cash donations directly out of your IRA was extended for 2008 and 2009. This break is only available if you are over age 70½ by the end of the year.

Tax-Free Treatment for Forgiven Mortgage Debt
Legislation passed late last year allows federal-income-tax-free treatment for up to $2 million of forgiven principal residence mortgage debt. The new law extends this deal for three additional years--through 2012. So this break is now available for mortgage debts that are forgiven in 2007-2012. Individuals need not be bankrupt or insolvent to benefit from this provision.

Tax Credits for Residential Energy-Saving Expenditures
The credit for 30% of expenditures to install solar electricity generation and solar water-heating equipment and fuel-cell equipment in your residence was set to expire at the end of this year. For 2008, the maximum credit for each category of solar equipment is $2,000. For fuel-cell equipment the maximum credit is $500 per 0.5 kilowatt hour of capacity. The new law extends the credit through 2016 and makes some changes as well. For 2008-16, 30% of expenditures for wind energy equipment and geothermal heat pumps can also qualify for the credit (subject to annual dollar caps). For 2009-16, the $2,000 annual cap on the credit for solar electricity generation equipment is removed. Finally, the credit can be used to offset both your regular tax and AMT bills, starting in 2008.

The separate credit for installing energy-efficient insulation, windows, doors, roofs, and heating and cooling equipment in your residence died at the end of 2007. The new law restores it (with some minor changes) for 2009 while skipping over 2008 entirely (go figure). The maximum credit is only $500 over your lifetime, so it’s helpful if you qualify, but it’s no big deal. In any case, you won’t need to think about it again until next year.

One-Year AMT Patch (for 2008 Only)

If our beloved Congress had not taken action, millions more individuals would have been hammered with the dreaded alternative minimum tax (AMT). So the politicians put yet another one-year patch in place. As a result, if you did not owe the AMT for last year, you probably won’t owe it for this year either. The patch has two parts.

First Part: Higher AMT Exemptions
The first part of the patch grants expanded AMT exemption amounts for 2008. You subtract these exemptions from your income in arriving at the amount that will be taxed under the AMT rules. Bigger exemptions mean less chance that you have to pay the AMT with your 2008 Form 1040. The expanded exemption amounts for 2008 are as follows.

  • $69,950 for married joint-filing couples and surviving spouses (up from $66,250 for 2007).
  • $46,200 for unmarried individuals (up from $44,350).
  • $34,975 for married individuals who file separately (up from $33,125).

Unfortunately, these exemptions are phased-out for higher-income taxpayers. For married joint-filers, phase-out starts when your income under the AMT rules exceeds $150,000. For unmarried individuals, the phase-out threshold is $112,500. For married individuals who file separately, the threshold is $75,000. The new law doesn’t change the exemption phase-out rule.

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User Comments
Posted by: dkgunte
I just have to add 2 words to all of this...

JANET RENO

Enough said........
Posted by: fedupwithfed
GIVE ME A BREAK! THEY ARE DOING SOMETHING TO BENEFIT US? IT IS WASHINGTON THAT ALLOWED THIS MESS TO HAPPEN! THAT INCLUDES EVERY *&^o REPUBLICAN AND DEMOCRATE! THEY GIVE BILLIONS OF ARE MONEY TO CROOKS LIKE AIG SO THEY CAN HAVE A BIG 400K + PARTY ON ARE TAX MONEY! DO THEY DO ANYTHING ABOUT THAT? YES! THEY GIVE THEM MORE MONEY BECAUSE IT WASN'T ENOUGH! I THINK THE AMERICAN TAX PAYER IS A VICTIM AND HAS A RIGHT TO BE PISSED OFF!
Posted by: thesaver17
Once again, the savers get screwed and the irresponsible people get taken care of. Guess I should have taken a 110% mortgage loan, paid I/O for five years (which equates to tax-exempt rent); then bail, having worn out the place, and get a $2,000,000 tax-free 'forgiveness' pay-off. The greedy, stupid people (and crooked appraisers, agents, mortgage people and anyone else who created mortgage backed securities) get forgiven and the people who scrimp, save and live within their means get jack...except for higher interest rates when we go to buy a house or car, so all the banks can get their 'forgiven' money back. Not to mention lower savings rates, so the banks can get more of their 'forgiven' money back on that side of the transaction as well. Hopefully one day congress will treat us savers with some respect, since we're the only ones who can generate any money for the banks.
Posted by: Allanon
Makes me feel so much better! Congress stole from the taxpayer $700 billion dollars but are kind enough to toss us back a few peanuts! What generosity!
Posted by: JMattero
wwlldp:
I agree with you, and hopefully, that will be changed soon. Currently, you can use the capital loss to offset capital gains, but, if you have no capital gains, you can only write off $3000 per year. They are debating possibly allowing a quicker ability to write off capital losses, but I am not sure it will ever come to fruition.

Go McCain/Palin!!!!!!!!!!!
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