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Fast Tax Facts 2005: as of Oct. 19, 2005.


Welcome to our annual at-a-glance compilation Compiling a program. See compiler.  of federal and state tax information. User-friendly user-friendly - Programmer-hostile. Generally used by hackers in a critical tone, to describe systems that hold the user's hand so obsessively that they make it painful for the more experienced and knowledgeable to get any work done.  tax rate schedules, facts, figures and assorted data make this time-saving time-saving adjque ahorra tiempo

time-saving adjqui fait gagner du temps

time-saving time adj
 section a handy companion. Keep it within arm's reach reach of the arm; the distance the arm can reach.

See also: Arm
 as you enter the upcoming busy season.

special thanks to: the CalCPA Committee on Taxation, especially Chair John DiCarlo, CPA (Computer Press Association, Landing, NJ) An earlier membership organization founded in 1983 that promoted excellence in computer journalism. Its annual awards honored outstanding examples in print, broadcast and electronic media. The CPA disbanded in 2000. ; Jeremy Jeremy (jĕr`ĭmē), English form of Jeremiah. The

Epistle of Jeremy is a title given to the sixth chapter of Baruch.
 Needelman; Lisa Edeling, CPA; and the FTB FTB Franchise Tax Board (California; they collect income and sales tax)
FTB Family Tax Benefit (Australian welfare assistance)
FTB First Time Buyer (housing) 
 for compiling com·pile  
tr.v. com·piled, com·pil·ing, com·piles
1. To gather into a single book.

2. To put together or compose from materials gathered from several sources:
 this information.

want it to go? Log on to www.calcpa.org/fasttaxfacts and download To receive a file transmitted over a network. In any communications session, "download" means receive, and "upload" means send. The download/upload often implies a big/little scenario, in which data is being downloaded from the "big" server into the "little" user's computer.  a PDF (Portable Document Format) The de facto standard for document publishing from Adobe. On the Web, there are countless brochures, data sheets, white papers and technical manuals in the PDF format. .

discuss tax topics To join CalCPA's TaxTalk Listserve, e-mail taxtalk-subscribe@yahoogroups.com.

tax news Access tax news archives archives

Repository for an organized body of records. Archives are produced or received by a public, semipublic, institutional, or business entity in the transaction of its affairs and are preserved by it or its successors.
 at www.calcpa.org/californiacpa.
2005 TAX DATA SCHEDULE

                                                        2005        2005
                                                     Federal  California

Standard Deductions

Single                                                $5,000       3,254

Married Filing Jointly or Surviving Spouse            10,000       6,508

Married Filing Separately                              5,000       3,254

Head of Household                                      7,300       6,508

Additional for 65 and Older or
  Blind--Married                                       1,000

Additional for 65 and Older
  Blind--Unmarried                                     1,250
(per individual and for each situation: age
or blind)

Taxpayer Claimed as a Dependent                          800         800

Personal/Dependent Exemption                           3,200
(SSN required: $50 penalty)

California Exemption Credits

Single/Separate or Head of Household                                 $87

Teacher's Retention Credit

This California tax credit has been suspended for taxable years 2004
and 2005.

California Renter's Credit

Joint/Head-of-Household/Surviving Spouse
  if AGI is below $50,000                                           $120

Single/Married Filing Separate if AGI
  is below $25,000                                                    60

Sec. 179 Deduction                                  $105,000     $25,000

Beginning of Personal Exemption Phaseout
Range--Based on Federal AGI

Single                                              $145,950     143,839

Married Filing Jointly/Surviving Spouse              218,950     287,682

Married Filing Separately                            109,475     143,839

Head of Household                                    182,450     215,762

Beginning of Itemized Deduction Phaseout Range--Based on Federal AGI

Single                                              $145,950    $143,839

Married Filing Jointly/Surviving Spouse              145,950     287,682

Married Filing Separately                             72,975     143,839

Head of Household                                    145,950     215,762

Rate Reduced over federal AGI limits                      3%          6%

Schedule A Threshold/Limits

Medical (of AGI)
  based on federal threshold                            7.5%        7.5%

Miscellaneous (of AGI)
  based on federal threshold                              2%          2%

Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) Rate

AMTI Less Exemption up to $175,000                       26%

AMTI Less Exemption over $175,000
 ($87,500 if Married  Filing Separately)                 28%

AMTI Less Exemption                                       7%

AMT Exemption Amounts

Married Filing Jointly/Surviving Spouse              $58,000     $70,531

Single, Head of Household                             40,250      52,898

Married Filing Separately                             29,000      35,263

Estates or Trusts                                     22,500      35,263

AMT Exemption Phaseout Amounts

Married Filing Jointly/Surviving Spouse             $150,000    $264,488

Single and Head of Household                         112,500     198,366

Married Filing Separately and
  Estates and Trusts                                  75,000     132,243

Self-Employed Health Insurance

Adjustment for AGI:

  Percentage of total qualifying payments
  for health insurance                                  100%        100%

Auto Standard Mileage Allowances

Business (January-August)                               .405        .405

Business (September-December)                           .485        .485

Charity Work                                            .14         .14

Medical/Moving (January-August)                         .15         .15

Medical/Moving (September-December)                     .22         .22

Maximum Rate SEP-IRA and
Keogh Profit Sharing                                     25%         25%

Beginning/Ending of U.S. Savings
Bond Interest Exclusion--Based on modified AGI

Joint Return                                 $91,850/121,850

All Other                                      61,200/76,200

California SDI
(deductible as a tax for federal purposes)
*

Wages--Total annual limit                                        $79,418

Rate                                                               1.08%

Tax                                                              857.71

* Amounts paid to a voluntary program in lieu of the state programs are
not deductible, but may be creditable on Form 540 with multiple
employers.

2005 TAX DATA SCHEDULE

Joint/Surviving Spouse                             $174

Dependent                                           272

Blind or Over 65                                     87

Senior Head of Household Credit

 2% of California taxable income,
 maximum California AGI of
 $59,730 and maximum credit of                   $1,060

Joint Custody Head of Household
Credit and Dependent Parent Credit

 Each is 30% of net tax, with maximum credit of    $346

Child and Dependent Care Credit

Percentage of federal credit California
AGI limits are From-To

0-$40,000                                           50%

$40,001-$70,000                                     43%

$70,001-$100,000                                    34%

$100,001 or more                                     0%

2005 FEDERAL TAX RATE SCHEDULE

 Taxable       But                     Of The
 Income        Not                     Amount
 Is Over      Over        Pay     +%     Over

Single Individuals

      $0    $7,300         $0    10%       $0
   7,300    29,700     730.00    15%    7,300
  29,700    71,950   4,090.00    25%   29,700
  71,950   150,150  14,652.50    28%   71,950
 150,150   326,450  36,548.50    33%  150,150
 326,450  and more  94,727.50    35%  326,450

Head-of-Household

      $0   $10,450         $0    10%       $0
  10,450    39,800   1,045.00    15%   10,450
  39,800   102,800   5,447.50    25%   39,800
 102,800   166,450  21,197.50    28%  102,800
 166,450   326,450  39,019.50    33%  166,450
 326,450  and more  91,819.50    35%  326,450

Married Individuals Filing Jointly and
Qualifying widow(er)

      $0   $14,600         $0    10%       $0
  14,600    59,400   1,406.00    15%   14,600
  59,400   119,950   8,180.00    25%   59,400
 119,950   182,800  23,317.50    28%  119,950
 182,800   326,450  40,915.50    33%  182,800
 326,450  and more  88,320.00    35%  326,450

Married Individuals Filing Separately

      $0    $7,300         $0    10%       $0
   7,300    29,700     730.00    15%    7,300
  29,700    59,975   4,090.00    25%   29,700
  59,975    91,400  11,658.75    28%   59,975
  91,400   163,225  20,457.75    33%   91,400
 163,225  and more  44,160.00    35%  163,225

Estates and Nongrantor Trusts

      $0    $2,000         $0    15%       $0
   2,000     4,700     300.00    25%    2,000
   4,700     7,150     975.00    28%    4,700
   7,150     9,750   1,661.00    33%    7,150
   9,750  and more   2,519.00    35%    9,750

2005 STATE TAX RATE SCHEDULE

Single Individuals, Married Filing Separately,
Fiduciary Tax Returns

      $0    $6,319         $0  1.00%       $0
   6,319    14,979      63.19  2.00%    6,319
  14,979    23,641     236.39  4.00%   14,979
  23,641    32,819     582.87  6.00%   23,641
  32,819    41,476   1,133.55  8.00%   32,819
  41,476  and more   1,826.11  9.30%   41,476

An additional 1% surcharge applies to taxable
income in excess of $1 million.

Married Filing Jointly, Qualifying Widow(er)

      $0   $12,638         $0  1.00%       $0
  12,638    29,958     126.38  2.00%   12,638
  29,958    47,282     472.78  4.00%   29,958
  47,282    65,638   1,165.74  6.00%   47,282
  65,638    82,952   2,267.10  8.00%   65,638
  82,952  and more   3,652.22  9.30%   82,952

An additional 1% surcharge applies to taxable
income in excess of $1 million.

Unmarried Head of Household

      $0   $12,644         $0  1.00%       $0
  12,644    29,959     126.44  2.00%   12,644
  29,959    38,619     472.74  4.00%   29,959
  38,619    47,796     819.14  6.00%   38,619
  47,796    56,456   1,369.76  8.00%   47,796
  56,456  and more   2,062.56  9.30%   56,456

An additional 1% surcharge applies to taxable
income in excess of $1 million.

LUXURY AUTO LIMIT

Taxpayers leasing so-called "luxury" autos must add back an amount to
income to offset the full deduction of these payments. The luxury auto
limits have not changed for 2005, but see post-9/11 depreciation
section:

Year  First  Second  Third  Thereafter

2004  2,960   4,800  2,850       1,675
2005  2,960   4,700  2,850       1,675

FICA & SE TAX

                                      2004        2005

Maximum FICA Tax Rate

Wage Base                          $87,900     $90,000

FICA Tax Rate                         6.2%        6.2%

SE Tax Rate                          12.4%       12.4%

Maximum Medicare

HI Wage Base                     Unlimited   Unlimited

Medicare HI Rate                     1.45%       1.45%

Medicare HI Rate--SE                  2.9%        2.9%

Maximum Total
 FICA/Medicare or SE Tax         Unlimited   Unlimited

Earned Income Ceilings for Social Security Benefits

Under age 65
 (or full retirement age)          $11,640      $12,00

65-70 (or full retirement age)   Unlimited   Unlimited

Age 70 and older                 Unlimited   Unlimited

Medicare Part B Premium          $66.60/mo    78.20/mo

RETIREMENT PLAN LIMITATIONS

                                                    2004      2005

Maximum 401(k)/403(b) Deferral                   $13,000   $14,000

Maximum Defined Contribution Plan
  Contribution                                    41,000    42,000

Maximum Annual Benefit for
  Defined Benefit Plans                          165,000   170,000

Annual Compensation Limit
  for Computing Plan Benefits                    205,000   210,000

Annual Compensation Limit for the
  Definition of Highly Compensated
  Employee Sec. 414(q)(1)                         90,000    95,000

Compensation Minimum for SEP coverage                450       450

Maximum Contribution for SIMPLES                   9,000    10,000

401(k) Catch-up Contribution (taxpayers 50 and     3,000     4,000
older)

Simple Catch-up Contribution (taxpayers 50 and     1,500     2,000
older)

Key Employee for Top Heavy Purposes:

* Officers Earning Over                         $130,000  $135,000

* A 5-percent Owner of Employer

* A 1-percent Owner of Employer Earning Over    $150,000  $150,000

TRADITIONAL AND ROTH IRAs

                                                 2004    2005

Contribution Limit                             $3,000  $4,000

Catch-up Contribution (50 and older)              500     500

IRA Deduction Phaseout for Active Participants

  Single                                50,000-60,000
  Married filing jointly                70,000-80,000

IRA Deduction Phaseout for Spousal Contributions

  Married Filing jointly              150,000-160,000

Roth IRA Contribution

  Single                               95,000-110,000
  Married Filing Jointly              150,000-160,000
  Married Filing Separately                  0-10,000

        Roth IRA Conversion Phaseout

  Single                                     $100,000
  Married Filing Jointly                      100,000
  Married Filing Separately                Ineligible

IRA & PENSION CREDIT

Tax Credit Based on AGI for Various Pension/IRA Plans:

 Joint Filers  Head-of-Households  All Other Filers  Credit Rate

   $0-$30,000          $0-$22,500        $0-$15,000          50%
30,000-32,500       22,500-24,375     15,000-16,250          20%
32,500-50,000       24,375-37,500     16,250-25,000          10%
  Over 50,000         Over 37,500       Over 25,000           0%

ESTATE AND GIFT TAX

Phaseout and Repeal of Estate and Generation-Skipping Transfer Taxes

                             Estate/GST tax       Highest estate
Calendar Year  deathtime transfer exemption   and gift tax rates

2005                            1.5 million                  47%

2006                              2 million                  46%

2007-08                           2 million                  45%

2009                            3.5 million                  45%

2010                   N/A (taxes repealed)  top individual rate
                                                  under the bill
                                                 (gift tax only)

Gift tax:
Annual Gift Limitation of $11,000 for 2002 through 2005.

Lifetime Exemption of $1 million after Dec. 31, 2001.

EDUCATION-RELATED TAX BENEFITS

Deduction for Qualified Higher Education Costs

Calendar Year  Single AGI    MFJ AGI  Deduction

2004-05          65,000    130,000        4,000
2004-05          80,000 *  160,000 *      2,000

* Taxpayers with AGI above these thresholds are not entitled to a
deduction.

Coverdell Educational Savings Accounts

Annual Contribution Limit    $2,000
Income eligibility
MFJ                        $220,000 *
Single                     $110,000

* As a couple's income increases from $190,000 to $220,000, their
contribution limit phases out. For Single Taxpayers, it's
$95,000-110,000.

Student Loan Deductions

* Deduct interest for life of loan

Beginning income phase-out range:

Single   $50,000
MFJ     $100,000

2005 ABOVE LINE DEDUCTIONS

Qualified teacher expenses deductible for AGI  $250
Deduction for clean-fuel vehicles *            $2,000

* Currently certified are the 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004 and 2005 Toyota
Prius, as well as the 2003 and 2004 Honda Civic Hybrid and Honda Insight
years 2000-2004. Return for year vehicle is first used can be amended to
take deduction. Watch for other models of hybrid gas-electric vehicles
to be certified.

VALUABLE PHONE NUMBERS

Tax Practitioner Hotlines

IRS Practitioner Priority Service       (866) 860-4259
IRS--ACS                                (800) 829-7650
FTB                                     (916) 845-7057
                                   Fax: (916) 845-6377
EDD                                     (916) 654-8316
BOE                                     (800) 401-3661

Application for Taxpayer ID Number

Tele-TIN (800) 829-4933            Fax: (215) 516-3990
Online: www.irs.gov
EDD DE 1 Account Number                 (916) 654-8706

Fast Tax Facts is designed to provide general guidance to CalCPA
members. CalCPA is not engaged in rendering accounting or other
professional advice. Numbers in Fast Tax Facts are subject to change.


The online version of Fast Tax Facts will be updated for tax law changes. Check it out at www.calcpa.org/fasttaxfacts.

RELATED ARTICLE: POST-9/11 FED BONUS DEPRECIATION

Additional 30 percent immediate write-off Write-Off

A reduction in the value of an asset or earnings by the amount of an expense or loss. Companies are able to write off certain expenses that are required to run the business, or have been incurred in the operation of the business and detract from retained revenues.
 for new property:

* Acquired after Sept. 11, 2001 and before May 6, 2003

* Recovery period must be 20 years or less

Additional 50 percent immediate write-off for new property:

* Acquired after May 5, 2003 and before Jan. 1, 2005

* Recovery period must be 20 years or less

Additional depreciation for vehicles:

* Vehicles acquired within time period mentioned above can claim an additional $4,600 (total $7,660) of depreciation in 2002 and Jan. 1, 2003-May 5, 2003 (to be adjusted for business use percentage). Vehicles placed in service May 6, 2003 or later can claim an additional $7,650 (total $10,710) of depreciation.

RELATED ARTICLE: AB 115 CONFORMITY

In October October: see month. , Gov. Schwarzenegger signed AB 115, which generally conforms California California (kăl'ĭfôr`nyə), most populous state in the United States, located in the Far West; bordered by Oregon (N), Nevada and, across the Colorado River, Arizona (E), Mexico (S), and the Pacific Ocean (W).  tax law to the federal Internal Revenue Code The Internal Revenue Code is the body of law that codifies all federal tax laws, including income, estate, gift, excise, alcohol, tobacco, and employment taxes. These laws constitute title 26 of the U.S. Code (26 U.S.C.A. § 1 et seq.  as of Jan. 1, 2005.

What, if any, effect AB 115 has on the information included in Fast Tax Facts was undetermined by press time.

To read the bill, visit http://leginfo.ca.gov/pub/bill/asm/ab_0101-0150/ab_115_bill_20050914_enrolled.html.
COPYRIGHT 2005 California Society of Certified Public Accountants
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2005, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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