My husband is confused about how a wage increase will affect his taxes, please help me explain to him...?
My husband is confused about how a wage increase will affect his taxes, please help me explain to him...?
My husband is making $15 an hour, and his combined taxes taken out amount to about 21% of his gross. His employer offered him a raise to $20, but my husband declined. He believes that the raise would cause his tax bracket to raise so much that he would ultimately be netting less an hour than he is at his current wage. I know that this is a widely believed myth, but I am at a loss as to how to explain it to him with my limited knowledge of taxes. Please help me explain to him that yes, his tax rate may go up a percentage point or two, but he will still see more money on his paycheck if he accepts the raise. Thank you for your help, everyone!!
I just want to thank you all. This is my first question 'asked', and I truly didn't anticipate the level of mature, informed, educated, HELPFUL answers that I would receive. I am now really excited at having this vast knowledge base at my fingertips! (And my husband, after declining the raise twice, is now going to accept it! Did I mention that he thinks I am absolutely brilliant for being so smart?)
Answers:
2006-11-28 10:24:04
2006-11-28 10:26:11
waggy_33: I wish I had employees like your husband, I could save a lot of money. Right now he is keeping .79 cents out of every dollar he earns. if the raise puts you into the 25% bracket you are still keeping .75 cents on every dollar he earns. This is a simplified example because is you are filing jointly and he is working 40 hours a week he is earning $31,200 a year which is the middle of the 15% federal tax bracket. A raise to $20 an hour at 40 hours a week would raise the annual earnings to $41,600. This is still in the 15% tax bracket. The next tax bracket is 25% and you would have to have taxable income $59,400 to get there. The increase in tax bracket means that all of the taxable dollars up to the $59,400 are taxed at 15% and only the dollars above that are taxed at 25%. From an economic point of view give me all of the money you can because even if I were in the top bracket I wold still keep .65 cents out of every dollars after taxes. Take the raise and put it into IRA accounts for the future.
2006-11-28 10:43:36
2006-11-28 10:46:57
2006-11-28 15:32:30
2006-11-28 17:09:18
2006-11-30 15:42:47