This term is used to identify the value of the medical insurance extended by your employer to your domestic partner. On the federal level and in several states, such extra coverage is considered taxable income and must be reported separately.
Imputed federal income tax would be an income tax that the IRS has calculated on some type of imputed income that was received by you and not reported on your 1040 income tax form as a part of your worldwide gross income.
i have imputed income taken out of my check because a have a significant other on my insurance can i use this as a tax deduction
Imputed income is income that is the result of you providing services to yourself, such as owning a home rather than paying rent to another person. It is not normally a payroll deduction. In some cases you can be taxed on imputed income, and that might result in a payroll deduction. The best way to find out why imputed income is coming out of your pay is to ask the person who prepares the payroll about it.
It depends on the type of imputed income. If it is imputed interest, enter it where all other interest payments go (schedule B). If it is imputed life insurance income from your employer, that should already be included in box 1 of your W-2 and you should enter it on line 7 of your W-2. You enter it wherever non-imputed income of the same nature would go.
Imputed income is not actual income, but is money that you have because you provide certain services for yourself instead of paying others for them, such as owning a house instead of renting. It is very hard to determine the value of imputed income and is only very rarely taxable, and only under certain circumstances.
Yes, imputed benefit income is subject to federal taxation. It is considered Taxable noncash compensation but is not included in gross pay.
This term is used to identify the value of the medical insurance extended by your employer to your domestic partner. On the federal level and in several states, such extra coverage is considered taxable income and must be reported separately.
When you are able to itemize your deductions using the schedule A of the 1040 tax form and you deduct the mortgage interest to help reduce your income taxes you have a type of imputed income that you have received.
Imputed Tax is on imputed income...say like a taxable employee benefit (say your employer giving you a car). The value of the benefit is included in taxable income that withholding and such is determined from...so your estimated payments are made on it...and it is included in the taxable income on your W-2, so the tax you calculate on your retur includes it as well.
On certain (most) types of imputed income...imputed income just being a term for non cash compensation....say a car benefit or over a certain amount of life insurance provided as part of your employment.....etc. FICA and other payroll taxes may or may not follow the same rules considering it a income, but generally do.
There would only be imputed income if your employer provided life insurance for your domestic partner. I don't mean that your partner would be the beneficiary - - I mean that your partner would be the insured party. If that happened, then the cost of the premium would be counted as imputed income for purposes of federal income tax and for some state taxes as well, unless your domestic partner were your dependent. If you were legally married heterosexuals, then there would be no imputed income except on the value of policies which exceed about $50,000.
It can be, however this is a matter for the judge.