The government of India imposes an income tax on taxable income of individuals, Hindu Undivided Families (HUFs), companies (firms), co-operative societies and trusts. The Income Tax department is governed by the Central Board for Direct Taxes (CBDT) and is part of the Department of Revenue under the Ministry of Finance. Individual Income Tax There are five heads of income that are taxable[1]: # Income from Salary # Income from House Property # Income from Business and Profession # Income from Capital Gains # Income from Other Sources == All income received as a salary is taxed under this head. This includes all monies paid by a company to its employees. Employers must withhold tax compulsorily, as Tax Deducted at Source (TDS), and provide their employees with a Form 16 (this is not required from 2007)which shows the tax deductions and net paid income. In addition, the Form 16 will contain any other deductions provided from salary such as: # Medical reimbursement: Up to Rs. 15,000 per year is tax free if supported by bills. (Company pays Fringe Benefit Tax on this amount) # Conveyance allowance: Up to Rs. 800 per month (Rs. 9,600 per year) is tax free if provided as conveyance allowance. No bills are required for this amount. # Professional taxes: Most states tax employment on a per-professional basis, usually a slabbed amount based on gross income. Such taxes paid are deductible from income tax. The states which tax generally recover Rs 2500/- per annum. As a result, all employees get their salaries deducted Rs 200/- per month for the year except February where Rs 300/- gets deducted. Income from salary is net of all the above deductions. == Income from House property is computed by taking what is called Annual Value. The annual value (in the case of a let out property or a deemed let out property )may be maximum of the following: * Rent received * Municipal Valuation * Market Value Annual value in case of a self occupied house is to be taken as NIL. From this, deduct Municipal Tax paid and you get the Net Annual Value. From this Net Annual Value, deduct : * 30% of Net value as repair cost (This is mandatory deduction) * Interest paid or payable on a housing loan against this house In the case of a self occupied house interest paid or payable is subject to a maximum limit of Rs,1,50,000 (if loan is taken on or after 1st April 1999) and Rs.30,000 (if the loan is taken before 1st April 1999)
The balance is added to taxable income. == Sale of capital assets results in capital gains. A Capital asset is defined under section 2(14) of the I T Act as property of any kind held by an assessee such as real estate, equity shares, bonds, jewellery, paintings, art etc. but does not include some items like any stock-in-trade for businesses and personal effects. For tax purposes, there are two types of capital assets: Long term and short term. Long term asset are held by a person for three years except in case of shares or mutual funds which becomes long term just after one year of holding. Sale of such long term assets gives rise to long term capital gains. There are different scheme of taxation of long term capital gains. These are : # As per Section 10(38) of Income Tax Act, 1961 long term capital gains on shares or securities or mutual funds on which Securities Transaction Tax (STT) has been deducted and paid, no tax is payable. STT has been applied on all Stock Market transactions since October 2004 but does not apply to off-market transactions and company buybacks; therefore, the higher capital gains taxes will apply to such transactions where STT is not paid. # In case of other shares and securities, person has an option either to index costs to inflation and pay 20% of indexed gains, or pay 10% of non indexed gains. The indexation rates are released by the I-T department each year. # In case of all other long term capital gains, indexation benefit is available and tax rate is 20%. All capital gains that are not long term are short term capital gains, which are taxed as such: * Under section 111A, for shares or mutual funds where STT is paid, tax rate is 10% . * In all other cases, it is part of gross total income and normal tax rate is applicable. For companies abroad, the tax liability is 20% of such gains suitably indexed (since STT is not paid). == Dividends paid by Companies and Mutual Funds are exempt from tax. A 15% dividend distribution tax is paid by companies before distribution. Equity mutual funds (with more than 65% of assets invested in equities) do not pay a dividend distribution tax, though other funds do. Liquid and Money Market funds pay 25% dividend distribution tax. == The Indian Income tax act specifically exempts certain income from tax: * Money received from an Insurance company as proceeds of an insurance policy (by way of an insurance claim, or by maturity) is generally exempt. However there are three types of payments under life insurance policy that are not tax free . These are : : :* any sum received under sub-section (3) of section 80DD or sub-section (3) of section 80DDA - this refers to specific policies for disabled dependants; or :* any sum received under a Keyman insurance policy. * Maturity proceeds of a Public Provident Fund (PPF) account. Tax RatesIn India, Individual income tax is a progressive tax with three slabs. * No income tax is applicable on all income up to Rs. 110,000 per year. (Rs. 145,000 for women and Rs. 195,000 for senior citizens) * From 110,001 to 150,000 : 10% of amount greater than Rs. 110,000 (Lower limit Rs. 145,001 for women and 1,95,000 to senior citizens) * From 150,001 to 250,000 : 20% of amount greater than Rs. 150,000 & less than Rs.2,50,00(Rs 4,000+20% above amount 1,50,000 for Individual, For women: Rs. 500+20% above Rs 1,50,000 & 20% on above amount 1,95,000 to 2,50,000 For senior citizens, the lower limit is Rs. 195,000) * Above 250,000 : 30% of amount greater than Rs. 250,000 + Rs. 24,000 (Rs. 20,500 for women and Rs. 11,000 for senior citizens) A 10% surcharge (tax on tax) is applicable if the taxable income (taking into consideration all the deductions) is above Rs. 10 lakh (Rs. 1 million). All taxes in India are subject to an education cess, which is 3% of the total tax payable.
No.Income is the amount of money you made.Income tax is the amount of tax you have paid on your income.eg income $500 tax $50 your net income is 500-50 = $450.Income tax is $50
a lot of money for a 15 year old
Income Tax is a tax based on the amount of money earned.
Pre-tax income is the same as gross income OR the money you make before taxes are deducted/withheld.
Yes, the IRS can, and will, garnish an income tax refund if money is owed from an audit.
Not all income tax goes to the Federal reserve but all money that goes to the Federal reserve comes from income tax.
I think it all goes to the deficit
About 11% of your income goes to federal tax, 6.2% goes to social security and 1.45% to medicaid plus state tax which differs for each state.
As per Tax slabs defined by Income Tax Department the percentage of salary goes to Government.
Under a regressive tax your tax rate goes down as you make more money. (Total Tax Paid) / (Income) = (Percent of income paid). As the tax rate goes down, the more you make the lower this number will be.
they pay 45% of thier income
It depends on how much you make.
Your question is backwards. There is no income on tax. However, there is a tax on income. This is known as income tax. Income tax is a system created by the government that takes a percentage of your income out of your check based on how much money you earn. Generally speaking, the higher your income, the higher the percentage of it the government takes.
No such thing..no maximum on how much money you can make, no max on how much tax you can pay
2.16 trillion
No.Income is the amount of money you made.Income tax is the amount of tax you have paid on your income.eg income $500 tax $50 your net income is 500-50 = $450.Income tax is $50
Not taxed again on the after income tax money that you have saved but you are taxed on the earnings from the after income tax saved money.