I know a lot of you guys are old and wise so hopefully you can explain something about taxes to me. I won't reveal my salary since I am American now and apparently it's not acceptable to disclose that information. Anyways.
On the 1040 form. Let's say I make an even $25,000. There is something called a standard Deduction. Since no one can claim me, Standard deduction is $10,150. Now the field under it, says "Taxed income" which now says $14,850. Following me so far? Okay. So what I understand now is that Taxed Income is what amount of money I made that will be taxed, right? Well, not according to Turbo Tax.
The field next says "Federal Tax Withheld: $2,000." So basically they withheld $2,000 from the $25,000 I made. Now my total says $0, I don't get a refund nor do I owe money. Why? I don't know.
My effective tax rate is %7.6 according to the instructions. However, 7.6% of $14,850 is $1,128. Which means I should be owed ~$800, Right? The more keen mathematician can however see that ~$2,000 is how much taxes I would have to pay if I multiplied ALL my 25,000 salary by 7.6%.
Long story but my question is why does the field "Taxable Income" exist if I still have to pay my whole effective rate for my whole income and not the "Taxable Income."
Help will be appreciated. I already filed all my taxes but I'm very curious about this.
Thanks, everybody!
On the 1040 form. Let's say I make an even $25,000. There is something called a standard Deduction. Since no one can claim me, Standard deduction is $10,150. Now the field under it, says "Taxed income" which now says $14,850. Following me so far? Okay. So what I understand now is that Taxed Income is what amount of money I made that will be taxed, right? Well, not according to Turbo Tax.
The field next says "Federal Tax Withheld: $2,000." So basically they withheld $2,000 from the $25,000 I made. Now my total says $0, I don't get a refund nor do I owe money. Why? I don't know.
My effective tax rate is %7.6 according to the instructions. However, 7.6% of $14,850 is $1,128. Which means I should be owed ~$800, Right? The more keen mathematician can however see that ~$2,000 is how much taxes I would have to pay if I multiplied ALL my 25,000 salary by 7.6%.
Long story but my question is why does the field "Taxable Income" exist if I still have to pay my whole effective rate for my whole income and not the "Taxable Income."
Income: 25,000
Taxable Income: 10,150
Withheld: 2,000
Owed/Refund = $0
$14,850 x .076% = $1,128
$25,000 x .076% = ~$2,000
Taxable Income: 10,150
Withheld: 2,000
Owed/Refund = $0
$14,850 x .076% = $1,128
$25,000 x .076% = ~$2,000
Thanks, everybody!
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