Money Matters
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Re: Yes! Just made a...
We seriously were running the numbers thinking that doesn't make any sense. We could work things a bit to keep us in the 15% bracket, but I didn't know only the income above that bracket will be taxed at the higher rate. That makes it much better.
The way things were going to fall, me going back for a couple of weeks after maternity leave to work out my 2 week notice would have bumped us into the next bracket. But if it's only that income that will be taxed at that rate, then it doesn't even matter.
TTC since 1/13 DX:PCOS 5/13 (long, anovulatory cycles)

Clomid 50mg 9/13 = BFP! EDD 6/7/14 M/C 5w6d Found 11/4/13
1/14 PCOS / Gluten Free Diet to hopefully regulate my system.
Chemical Pregnancy 03/14
Surprise BFP 6/14, Beta #1: 126 Beta #2: 340 Stick baby, stick! EDD 2/17/15
Riley Elaine born 2/16/15
TTC 2.0 6/15
Chemical Pregnancy 9/15
Chemical Pregnancy 6/16
BFP 9/16 EDD 6/3/17
Beta #1: 145 Beta #2: 376 Beta #3: 2,225 Beta #4: 4,548
www.5yearstonever.blogspot.com
So just to use round numbers as an example, if you had taxable income of $100,000, and filed MFJ, this is roughly how the tax would break out:
First $18,550 = taxed at 10% = $1,885 owed
Next $56,750 = (income from $18,550 to $75,300) taxed at 15% = $8,512 owed
Last $25,250 = (income from $75,300 to $151,900) taxed at 25% = $6,312 owed
So the total on $100,000 would be approx. $16,709, which is a blended rate of 16.7%, not $25,000 which is what it would be if it the "tax bracket" of 25% applied to full income.
Sorry, to be clear, my calculation above takes that into account - its a rate of 16.7% on taxable income. Taxable income is after all credits and deductions. Effective rate is tax paid on gross income.
I have actually run this calculation before, and H and I have an effective tax rate of about 35% when you include federal, state, local, FICA, and property taxes.
https://smartasset.com/taxes/income-taxes#55hnlTwiIv
FICA - 7.55%
State - 3.8%
Local - 1%
Property - 1.54%
Federal - 20.8%
____________________
TOTAL - 34.69%
It amounts to so much money for us that I keep track of this from year to year when I prepare our tax return. I have a few more things to add in to our return, but this is where we are at currently. The numbers aren't going to change much.
I really should count sales tax too, which in Alabama is 8-10% on everything, but I don't track it closely enough.
To clarify: H and I are in the 33% bracket for federal taxes, which is why ours is so high. Our deductions are worth a lot, but we have income phase out for some of the bigger ones (like student loan interest), and our mortgage payment is intentionally small for our incomes, so even that doesn't help us as much as you would expect.
Sorry, but I hate to tell you that you actually pay more than that....