Taxation of Social Security Benefits
This entry was posted on 3/23/2007 10:44 PM and is filed under uncategorized.
From Fox News: "If you are receiving Social Security benefits, at tax time you have to perform an additional computation to come up with your "base amount" of income. First, figure your adjusted gross income. Then add any municipal bond interest you earned over the past year (you won't pay federal income tax on this, but it still counts toward your "base amount"), plus one-half of the Social Security benefits you received. (1)
If this number exceeds the threshold of $25,000 in the case of a single individual or $32,000 for a couple filing married/joint, then up to 50 percent of your Social Security benefit must be added to your AGI. This entire amount will be subject to income tax." Social Security
I agree with two of the authors points: It is a stealth tax, and the threshold amounts have never been indexed for inflation.