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The Swiss Federal Tax Administration website provides a broad outline of the Swiss tax system, and full details and tax tables are available in PDF documents. The complexity of the system is partly because the Confederation, the 26 Cantons that make up the federation, and about 2 900 communes [municipalities] levy their own taxes based on the ...
By law, the thresholds for the marginal federal income tax brackets must change each year to keep pace with inflation. For 2010, those brackets are as follows: Individual Taxpayers 10% on taxable ...
Individual income tax: 1,061 936 899 Corporate income tax: 222 157 191 Social Security and other payroll tax: 940 875 865 Excise tax: 77 73 67 Estate and gift taxes: 20 17 19 Customs duties: 23 24 25 Deposits of earnings and Federal Reserve System: 22 77 76 Allowance for jobs initiatives - −12 - Other miscellaneous receipts 16 18 21 Total ...
This is a table of the total federal tax ... plus the District of Columbia and the territory of Puerto Rico by the IRS in fiscal year 2020, which ran from October 1 ...
To be clear, the following are the tax brackets and marginal tax rates for 2020, which apply to the tax returns that you’re required to file by April 15 of this year. Single Filers 10%: $0-$9,875
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").
However, taxpayers pay no tax on income covered by deductions: the standard deduction (for 2022: $12,950 for an individual return, $19,400 for heads of households, and $25,900 for a joint return), or more if the taxpayer has over that amount in itemized deductions. Amounts in excess of this are taxed at the rates in the above table.
As of 2010, 68.8% of Federal individual tax receipts including payroll taxes, were paid by the top 20% of taxpayers by income group. The top 1% paid 24.2% whereas the bottom 20% paid 0.4% due to deductions and the Earned income tax credit. With 2013 tax law changes, the top 1% will pay an even larger share. [1]