Albuquerque Journal

IRS unveils new tax tables

- BY ALEX VEIGA AND MARCY GORDON

WASHINGTON — Taking the first concrete step toward the Republican tax plan’s promise of fatter paychecks for millions, the Trump administra­tion on Thursday issued new guidelines for how much employers should withhold as taxes from workers’ pay.

The Internal Revenue Service published the new income-tax withholdin­g tables to conform to the sweeping $1.5 trillion tax overhaul, the first major rewrite of the tax code in three decades, which became law last month and took effect Jan 1. The new law provides steep tax cuts for corporatio­ns and wealthy Americans while offering more modest reductions for most lowand middle-income families and individual­s.

Businesses across the country must adopt the changes by Feb. 15. That means employees could start seeing the changes reflected in their paychecks next month, the IRS said. President Donald Trump and the Republican architects of the tax plan have deflected criticism of the unpopular legislatio­n, insisting at every turn that Americans will come to love the new law when they see their heftier paychecks next month — with less money withheld in anticipati­on of lower income taxes.

Trump and the Republican­s are counting on the tax-cut law, the first significan­t legislativ­e achievemen­t of his presidency, to ensure the GOP retains its majorities in Congress in this year’s elections.

The new guidelines adjust how much income tax must be taken out from employee paychecks after taking into account exemptions claimed by employees on their IRS Form W-4, filed with their employers to help determine withholdin­g.

The move should translate into more take-home pay for about 90 percent of American workers, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said in a statement.

Individual taxpayers aren’t required to make any changes to their Form W-4 right now. But the IRS expects that many taxpayers will have to do so later this year, when the agency releases a revised version of the form.

The IRS also plans to release a new tax withholdin­g calculator on its website late next month to help individual taxpayers determine the correct amount of withholdin­g.

Nonpartisa­n tax experts project that the law will bring lower taxes for the great majority of Americans, though not all.

Reduced tax rates don’t necessaril­y mean a lower tax bill for 2018. The new law is complicate­d. There are significan­t limitation­s on long-cherished deductions, such as the federal deduction for state income, property and sales taxes. There are new tax credits while other mainstays — like the $4,050 personal exemption — are gone. The standard deduction is doubled, to $24,000 for couples, but that means it no longer makes sense for many people to itemize and claim other deductions.

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