Search Site
 
Columns


 

Business

Tax Brush-Up
Phone Users, Energy Savers Get Tax Breaks, But Parents Can Lose on Kiddie Tax

WASHINGTON (AP) — Telephone users, energy-savvy homeowners and parents of older teens should pay special attention at tax time this year. Many changes affecting 2006 tax returns are aimed squarely at you.
On balance, the news is good.
Even if you don’t have to file a tax return you can get a refund on certain telephone taxes.
And late last year, Congress reinstated several popular tax breaks for the middle class, including a deduction of up to $4,000 for higher education tuition and fees. The provision, which expired at the end of 2005, was designed to help taxpayers whose incomes put them beyond the reach of two education tax credits that primarily help moderate- and lower-income families.
Lawmakers also reinstated a deduction for state and local sales taxes that primarily benefits people living in states without an income tax. Also restored was a deduction of up to $250 for teachers’ expenses.
Congress also took something away from family pocketbooks last year — raising the age at which teens are subject to the "kiddie" tax, the tax on the child’s investment income that must be figured at the parent’s top rate instead of the child’s generally lower rate.
Before, only those under 14 were subject to the higher tax; now, those under 18 are included. That change may ensnare earnings on certain college funds or savings vehicles started before taxpayer-friendly 529 college plans became widely available.
And there’s a bit of bad news for packrats. Taking a tax deduction for donating the deteriorating junk in your attic to charity is harder. Household goods and clothing donated after Aug. 17, 2006, must be in "good used condition or better" to qualify for the deduction, available to taxpayers who itemize.

Read more in the newsstand edition of The Haitian Times, or subscribe and get the Haitian Times at your door every week!

The Haitian Times, Inc. 610 Vanderbilt Avenue, Brooklyn New York, 11238 Phone: 718-230-8700 Fax: 718-230-7172
Send Questions and Comments to info-ht@haitiantimes.com