What the New Tax Bill Deal Means for You
December 17, 2010
Despite objections raised by Democrats, and a lengthy delay of the final vote until late Thursday, the House of Representatives has passed an extension of the Bush-era tax cuts, keeping payroll tax rates for all wage earners at current levels.
The $858 billion bill, a product of negotiations between President Obama and Republican lawmakers in the Senate, also continues a cut in Social Security taxes. That means you’ll continue to bring home more in your paycheck.
The tax-cut plan extends through 2012 the Bush-era reductions on income, capital gains and dividends taxes. The bill also extends unemployment insurance benefits through 2011, providing relief to thousands of jobless Americans who stopped receiving unemployment checks as of Dec. 1.
Among other ways the extension of the Bush tax cuts affects you:
- Your tax rates will remain at their current levels — 10%; 15%; 25%; 28%; 33%; and 35%, based on your income. It also maintains lower tax rates on your investments for the next two years.
- If you make less than $90,000 a year, the bill provides an extension of the $2,500 credit you’ve been receiving to help pay for college tuition, which was begun under last year’s economic stimulus bill.
- It will be easier for you to provide for your children. Under the Bush bill, you got a child tax credit of $500. That has now increased to $1,000.
