Income Taxes

1440 Findings

Hours of research by our editors, distilled into minutes of clarity.

  • Pinned

    US immigrants pay billions of dollars in taxes each year

    While immigrants who are authorized workers pay taxes just like anyone else, even unauthorized workers file tax returns. These unauthorized workers use individual taxpayer identification numbers.

  • How income taxes evolved from a funding tool for war into a crucial revenue source for the federal government

    Americans have long resisted income taxes. So, how did they become permanent? This overview explains how wartime funding needs, constitutional changes, and economic shifts gave rise to the modern tax system, from the Civil War to the payroll withholding rules we follow today.

  • Most Americans take the standard tax deduction

    A tax deductible is an expense that a taxpayer or business can subtract from adjusted gross income, reducing their taxable income and therefore reducing the amount of taxes owed. Governments often use tax deductibles as a way to reward people who do things that are considered beneficial to society, like charitable donations.

  • Warren Buffett paid a lower effective tax rate than his secretary

    While wages and salaries are taxed progressively at rates up to 37%, long-term investments are taxed at lower rates: 0%, 15%, or 20%. For wealthy individuals like Buffett, whose income mainly comes from investments, this means paying a lower effective tax rate than someone earning a salary.

  • Learn how tax brackets actually work

    The US has a series of tax brackets which grow progressively larger based on the amount of income a taxpayer makes. Contrary to common belief, most people don't pay just one tax bracket, but all of them progressively until they reach their income.

  • What's your tax filing status? Find out with this video

    There are five different filing statuses taxpayers fall under when they file income taxes: single, married and filing jointly, married and filing separately, head of household, and surviving spouse. Taxpayers' status is determined by whichever category they fit into on December 31st of the tax year they're filing for.

  • Individual income taxes are the federal government's primary revenue source, see a tracker that breaks down where the rest of the budget comes from

    The US government historically makes nearly half of its total revenue last year from individual income taxes. But the US makes also makes money from a variety of other sources, including Medicare taxes and corporate income taxes. However, the federal government has run a deficit since 2001—reaching a peak of $3.13T in 2020.

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