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For US federal income tax purposes, state and local taxes are defined in section 164(a) of the Internal Revenue Code as taxes paid to states and localities in the forms of: (i) real property taxes; (ii) personal property taxes; (iii) income, war profits, and excess profits taxes; and (iv) general sales taxes.
The SALT deduction lets people reduce the amount of their annual income that can be taxed by the federal government by subtracting out how much they pay in state income taxes and local property taxes.
While it did lower marginal income tax rates across the board, reducing the top rate from 39.6 percent to 37 percent, it also capped the deduction for state and local taxes (SALT) at $10,000 annually.
“Repealing SALT would lower the effective tax rate on the state’s top earners by 37%,” he said back in 2021. “The state’s new, top 10.9% tax rate becomes an effective 6.9% tax rate.”
The origin of the current rate schedules is the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (IRC), [2] [3] which is separately published as Title 26 of the United States Code. [4] With that law, the U.S. Congress created four types of rate tables, all of which are based on a taxpayer's filing status (e.g., "married individuals filing joint returns," "heads of households").
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The State and Local Tax (SALT) deduction, a long-standing feature of the U.S. tax code, was capped at $10,000 as part of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act – a signature piece of legislation during ...
Sen. Bernie Sanders has signaled his willingness to adjust the SALT deduction cap. The National Taxpayers Union Executive Vice President Brandon Arnold joins Yahoo Finance Live to discuss.