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#1
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![]() 2011 W-2 Tax Forms and Obamacare
If this doesn’t get to you, then check your pulse. You may be a flat line... Should you want to verify this, go to http://www.thomas.gov/, enter "HR 3590" in the search box and look for "CRS Summaries." This is what you'll find. Title IX Revenue Provisions—Subtitle A: Revenue Offset "(Sec. 9002) Requires employers to include in the W-2 form of each employee the aggregate cost of applicable employer-sponsored group health coverage that is excludable from the employee's gross income (excluding the value of contributions to flexible spending arrangements)." Starting in 2011—next year—the W-2 tax form sent by your employer will be increased to show the value of whatever health insurance you are provided. It doesn't matter if you're retired. Your gross income WILL go up by the amount of insurance your employer paid for. So you’ll be required to pay taxes on a larger sum of money that you actually received. Take the tax form you just finished for 2009 and see what $15,000.00 or $20,000.00 additional gross income does to your tax debt. That's what you'll pay next year. For many it puts you into a much higher bracket. This is how the government is going to buy insurance for fifteen (15) percent that don't have insurance and it's only part of the tax increases, but it's not really a "tax increase" as such, it a redefinition of your taxable income. Also, go to Kiplinger's and read about the thirteen (13) tax changes for 2010 that could affect you.
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Horses are like strawberries....they can go bad overnight. Charlie Whittingham |
#2
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![]() Honu -- to be honest, I did exactly what you said we should do and looked up the bill, and it says nothing at all about everyone paying taxes on their employer's contributions to their healthcare plans.
Where did the last paragraph in your post come from? On CRS summary, the only mention of W-2s in the bill says this: Quote:
$8,000/yr is an awful lot of money, and it won't affect very many people is my best guess. My old employer had EXCELLENT health insurance that covered basically everything with no deductible, and they only contributed about $5,000/yr to it.... So like I said, it's okay to have a problem with that, but your post makes it sound like every American with employer-sponsored health insurance is going to start paying income taxes on the employer's contributions, which as far as I can tell, is 100% false, if I've read the above provisions correctly, as it simply says that the value of those contributions will be noted on the W-2, *not* included in the gross earnings -- as obviously it would have to be noted on a W-2 in order to determine who qualified for the excess tax listed above...they can't just guess. At least, I hope I'm right. |
#3
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![]() Go to the bill itself scroll down to section 9002, it clearly states that people will have what their employers pay in insurance for them added to their W2. For me its no big deal because trainers dont provide health insurance for their employees but for my partner it could be a pretty big addition to her payroll.
Maybe I misunderstand it then, to me it seems that bill states that what the employer spends on insurance will be added to the employees taxable earnings, Id love to be wrong about this.
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Horses are like strawberries....they can go bad overnight. Charlie Whittingham |
#4
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![]() Quote:
The way I read it, those whose employers pay more than $8K/yr for one employee or $23K/yr for employee + family, would be subject to a 40% tax on the premium paid ABOVE that amount. But how would the government know what the employer paid in premium contributions? They would know because it will be included on the W-2, which is, by my reading, what Sec. 9002 says. I don't interpret that in any way to say that the employer contributions will be rolled into gross income (thereby making them taxable income for EVERYONE), but rather that they will be included on the W-2 as a piece of information relevant for tax purposes. See what I'm saying with that? I hope I'm right, or I'll be right there with you blasting this....but I think I'm right on this one. |
#5
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![]() Quote:
Dude Im so hoping I am wrong and you are right and I guess when we file our taxes for 2011 we will find out.
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Horses are like strawberries....they can go bad overnight. Charlie Whittingham |
#6
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![]() Quote:
If the government knows, but the tax preparer doesn't know, then taxes will be underpaid, the IRS will go nuts, and it'll be a BIG issue because nobody will know what they really need to pay. And they'd include it on a "taxable wage form," because for SOME people, it would be taxable (above a certain threshold in very expensive plans). My honest understanding is that there's nothing in here to include it in "earnings," but rather it will be included as a subset of information on the W-2, much like taxes withheld are, so that people aren't blindsided. And like you, I hope I'm right, because though it won't affect me right now, that'd be way too problematic. But I'd imagine I am right, because for as much as anyone thinks voting for healthcare is political suicide in the first place, if you're right, this is a vote to OUTRIGHT raise every person with employer sponsored healthcare's taxes to a ridiculous degree, and for as stupid as our Pols are, I'm not sure they're THAT stupid. |
#7
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![]() i'm pretty sure that if everyones employee provided health insurance was now taxable the death panel crowd would have noticed and headlined it.
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#8
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![]() That was awesome!!
(What the fucl< did he say?) |
#9
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![]() http://www.factcheck.org/2010/05/hea...and-w-2-forms/
Q: Does the new health care law require workers to pay income tax on the value of employer-provided health insurance? A: No. The value will appear on employees’ W-2 forms for information purposes, but will not be considered taxable income. The e-mail’s author correctly quotes a Congressional Research Service summary of the bill that became law (H.R. 3590), noting that Section 9002 "Requires employers to include in the W-2 form of each employee the aggregate cost of applicable employer-sponsored group health coverage." But the author then goes on to conclude — quite incorrectly — that this amount will be "added to your gross pay" and that "[y]ou will be taxed on the total." The CRS did not say that, and neither does the legislation itself. In fact, the value will continue to be untaxed, just as in the past. The e-mail’s author also claims that an article written by Joan Pryde, a senior editor of the Kiplinger letters, backs up the claim: "Go to Kiplingers and read about 13 tax changes that could affect you. Number 3 is what I just told you about." But the truth is that the Kiplinger letters actually contradicts the claim. Pryde’s article is dated April 5 and is headlined "Health Care Reform: Tax Hikes on the Way — Here are 13 changes in the massive overhaul that could impact your tax bill, for better or worse." Among them: 3. A requirement that businesses include the value of the health care benefits they provide to employees on W-2s, beginning with W-2s for 2011. The amount reported is not considered taxable income. The author of this false e-mail seems to have missed the second sentence in that paragraph — the part that says the amount "is not considered taxable income." |