Thursday, January 10, 2013

USA.gov - Taxpayer Relief Act, Free Credit Reports

Posted:  10 Jan 13


On Wed, Jan 9, 2013 at 1:16 PM, USA.gov Blog Team <subscriptions@subscriptions.usa.gov> wrote:
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01/09/2013 03:00 PM EST



Image description: A map of the planet Jupiter’s south pole, constructed from 36 images by NASA’s spacecraft Cassini while on its way to Saturn. The map, the most detailed to date, includes Jupiter’s Great Red Spot, a massive hurricane-like storm wider than three Earths that has been raging at least as long as the 400 years that humans have been observing the planet. Currently, the Juno spacecraft is on its way to Jupiter to unlock more of the giant’s secrets.
Learn more from the Juno mission website.
01/09/2013 01:00 PM EST

On January 2, 2013, President Obama signed the American Taxpayer Relief Act (ATRA) into law. This new law addresses many of the tax issues that were debated by Congress at the end of 2012, and which were referred to by many as the “fiscal cliff.”
Here is what the law addressed, and how it could affect you:

The “Bush-era tax cuts”

The new law permanently extended reduced tax rates on income and capital gains and dividends if you make less than $400,000 ($450,000 if you’re married and file jointly). If you make more than that, the marginal tax rate for income beyond the new levels rose from 35 percent to 39.6 percent.
This change also increased the top tax rate on long term capital gains and dividends from 15 percent to 20 percent and made changes to several other tax credits, the marriage penalty and education-related incentives.

The Estate Tax Rules

ATRA permanently extended the estate tax laws as they currently exist, except for the top tax rate, which was increased from 35 percent to 40 percent. Now up to $5 million of an estate’s worth is exempt from taxes.

The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 Tax Provisions

The child tax credit, some provisions surrounding the Earned Income Tax credit and an education tax credit, the American Opportunity Tax Credit, were all temporarily extended through 2017.

The Payroll Tax Reduction

There was a two percent reduction in the amount of money you paid through the Social Security payroll tax that Congress put in place in 2010. This tax reduction was not extended as part of ATRA. As a result, the tax rate reverted back to the original amount — 6.2 percent for employees and 12.4 percent for the self-employed. You may notice a change in the amount of your take-home pay in your first paycheck of the 2013 calendar year.
The ATRA also addressed several other issues, including unemployment, Medicare and other health provisions and the farm bill.
Learn more about what exactly the law says and how it affects you. (PDF)
01/09/2013 10:00 AM EST

How to Get Your Free Credit Report:AnnualCreditReport.com is the only website authorized to give you the free annual credit report you’re entitled to each year. Checking your credit report regularly will help you spot any problems or may alert you if you’ve been the victim of identity theft.

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