Discussion:Above the line deductions

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Revision as of 04:32, 27 August 2006
Jdugancpa (Talk | contribs)
(Also, any deduct)
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Revision as of 16:45, 27 August 2006
Jc (Talk | contribs)
(But you have to)
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{{ForumReplyPost|UserID=Jdugancpa|Date=27 August 2006|Text=Also, any deduction taken "above the line" reduces Adjusted Gross Income (AGI). Since many limitations are based on AGI, (e.g, the 7.5% medical expense, 2% for miscellaneous itemized deductions) any deduction that reduces AGI will be more beneficial than one that does not.}} {{ForumReplyPost|UserID=Jdugancpa|Date=27 August 2006|Text=Also, any deduction taken "above the line" reduces Adjusted Gross Income (AGI). Since many limitations are based on AGI, (e.g, the 7.5% medical expense, 2% for miscellaneous itemized deductions) any deduction that reduces AGI will be more beneficial than one that does not.}}
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 +{{ForumReplyPost|UserID=Jc|Date=27 August 2006|Text=But you have to report the dollars paid by the corp for the individual's insurance on his W2. So doesn't the fact that you can deduct it above the line just make it a net zero transaction? Or does that income on the W2 not contribute to SS wages while it can be deducted from SS wages? What about from federal/state wages?}}

Revision as of 16:45, 27 August 2006

Discussion Forum Index --> Tax Questions --> Above the line deductions

Jc (talk|edits) said:

26 August 2006
What is the advantage of taking an above the line deduction for health insurance as an S-Corp owner by having the corp pay the premiums and report it as compensation on your W2? What's the difference between just putting it in your own name and itemizing the deduction on your personal return?

Riley2 (talk|edits) said:

26 August 2006
Assuming that you would pay those premiums at the personal level from your wages from the S corporation, you miss an opportunity to claim a legitimate from your Social Security wages.

Jc (talk|edits) said:

26 August 2006
Was I wrong in my thinking that social security tax was paid on wages pre-above the line deduction? It's paid on AGI?

Riley2 (talk|edits) said:

27 August 2006
Sorry, I mistyped my previous answer. If the premiums are paid by the corporation under a "plan", the premiums effectively reduce the amount of the shareholder's income that is subject to Social Security taxes.

Michaelstar (talk|edits) said:

27 August 2006
Also, to claim the health innsurance above the line - you will receive a dollar for dollar deduction against the income included on the W-2. If you were to include the health insurance as an itemized deducton, it most likely will be phased out at the 7.5% of agi function on schedule A and possible eliminate a large portion of the otherwise above the line deduction.

Jdugancpa (talk|edits) said:

27 August 2006
Also, any deduction taken "above the line" reduces Adjusted Gross Income (AGI). Since many limitations are based on AGI, (e.g, the 7.5% medical expense, 2% for miscellaneous itemized deductions) any deduction that reduces AGI will be more beneficial than one that does not.

Jc (talk|edits) said:

27 August 2006
But you have to report the dollars paid by the corp for the individual's insurance on his W2. So doesn't the fact that you can deduct it above the line just make it a net zero transaction? Or does that income on the W2 not contribute to SS wages while it can be deducted from SS wages? What about from federal/state wages?