Let’s talk
about your 2020 personal tax return and the two stimulus payments that you (may
have) received.
The first
round of stimulus checks was up to $1,200 for each spouse and $500 for each
qualifying child.
The second
round was up to $600 for each spouse and qualifying child.
So, if you
have two qualifying kids and qualified for the maximum, you would have received
$5,800 ($3,400 plus $2,400) between the two rounds.
How do you
not qualify for the maximum?
One way is
easy: you had too much income.
The second
way is nonintuitive: the child was over age 16. A qualifying child means a
child under the age of 17. Seems odd to me to exclude a high school senior, but
there it is.
Let’s talk
about the first non-qualification: income.
Let’s use a married
couple with two qualifying children as our example.
The income
limit for marrieds is $150,000. Past that point the stimulus check goes away by
a nickel on the dollar. The maximum for two spouses is $2,400, so we can
calculate this as follows:
$2,400 divided by .05 = $ 48,000
$150,000 plus 48,000 =
$198,000
All right,
the stimulus for marrieds burns-out at $198,000, right?
Nope.
Why?
Because of
the qualifying children.
Each of the
kids adds another $10,000 to the phaseout range.
We have two
kids. That means $20,000 added to the $198,000, totaling $218,000 before we burn-out
of stimulus altogether.
Are we
stilling phasing-out at a nickel on the dollar?
Let’s check.
$218,000 – 150,000 = $68,000
$3,400 divided by 68,000 equals $0.05.
Yep, nickel
on the dollar.
You received
the first stimulus check in April, 2020. Remember that tax returns were
automatically extended until July 15, 2020 because of COVID. The odds were
extremely good that the IRS was not basing its calculations on your 2019
return, because your 2019 return had not been prepared, much less filed. For
most of us, the IRS was looking at our 2018 tax return.
Let’s continue.
You received your second stimulus check very late in December, 2020 or (more likely) January, 2021 – but the income phaseout range was the same.
What did
change was the tax year the IRS was looking at. By December, 2020 you would
have filed your 2019 tax return (let’s skip paper filings that may not have
been processed by then, or we are going to drive ourselves crazy).
If your income went up from 2018 to 2019, you would have climbed the phaseout range. You might have received a first stimulus check, for example, but not qualified for a second one. It could have gone the other way, of course, if your income went down in 2019.
Now your 2020 tax return lands on my desk and we need to settle-up on the stimulus.
How do we settle-up?
We run
through the income phaseout range … again.
Using your
2020 tax return this time.
Did you
notice we are doing the calculation three times using income from three different
tax years?
Yep, it’s a
pain.
Mind you, if
you have modest income, I know that you received the maximum stimulus.
Conversely,
if you made bank, I know that you received no stimulus.
Fall in
between – or have wildly varying income – and I you need to tell me the amount
of your stimulus checks.
Let’s go through
a quick example, using our married couple with two qualifying children.
Their 2018
adjusted gross income was 201,000.
Here is the first
stimulus:
phaseout
start |
150,000.00 |
|||||||
phaseout
end |
198,000.00 |
|||||||
add:
2 children |
20,000.00 |
|||||||
218,000.00 |
||||||||
68,000.00 |
||||||||
2018
AGI |
201,000.00 |
|||||||
51,000.00 |
||||||||
First
stimulus |
2,400.00 |
|||||||
1,000.00 |
||||||||
3,400.00 |
times |
51,000.00 |
= |
2,550.00 |
||||
|
68,000.00 |
|||||||
(2,550.00) |
||||||||
850.00 |
They would have received $850.
Their 2019
adjusted gross income was $320,000.
Way over the
income limit. There was no second stimulus.
Their 2020
tax return lands on my desk. Their adjusted gross income is $104,000.
Way below
the income limit. Full stimulus.
Two qualifying
kids. The maximum over two rounds of stimulus would be $3,400 plus $2,400 =
$5,800.
They already
received $850 per above.
That means a
$4,950 credit on their 2020 individual tax return. I look like a hero.
But why?
After all, their 2019 income was over $300 grand – way above the range for
receiving any stimulus.
The quirky
thing is that the stimulus is based on one’s 2020 tax return. Congress however wanted
the money out as fast as possible. The stimulus had an income test, though, so
the first option was to do the calculation on one’s 2019 tax return. When that
option proved unworkable, the second option was to use 2018. It was messy but
quick, and one would settle-up when filing the 2020 tax return.
Congress realized
that settling-up could mean repaying some of the stimulus money. Since that
somewhat negated the purpose of a stimulus, Congress decided that the gate
would only swing one way. If one did not receive enough stimulus, then one could
claim the shortfall on the 2020 return. If one was overpaid, well … one got to
keep the money.
It was a
win:win.
Not so much
for the accountant, though.