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Tax Base

19 Dec 2022 00:00:00 | Update: 19 Dec 2022 01:16:19
Tax Base

A tax base is a total amount of assets or income that can be taxed by a taxing authority, usually by the government. It is used to calculate tax liabilities. This can be in different forms, including income or property.

A tax base is defined as the total value of assets, properties, or income in a certain area or jurisdiction. The rate of tax imposed varies depending on the type of tax and the tax base total. Income tax, gift tax, and estate tax are each calculated using a different tax rate schedule.

Let’s take personal or corporate income as an example. In this case, the tax base is the minimum amount of yearly income that can be taxed. This is taxable income. Income tax is assessed on both personal income and the net income generated by businesses.

Using the formula above, we can calculate a person’s tax liability with some figures using a simple scenario. Say Margaret earned $10,000 last year and the minimum amount of income that was subject to tax was $5,000 at a tax rate of 10 per cent. Her total tax liability would be $500—calculated using her tax base multiplied by her tax rate.

In real life, you would use Form 1040 for personal income. The return starts with total income and then deductions and other expenses are subtracted to arrive at adjusted gross income (AGI). Itemized deductions and expenses reduce AGI to calculate the tax base, and the personal tax rates are based on the total taxable income.

An individual taxpayer’s tax base can change as a result of the alternative minimum tax (AMT) calculation. Under AMT, the taxpayer is required to make adjustments to his initial tax calculation so additional items are added to the return and the tax base and the related tax liability both increase.

As an example, interest on some tax-exempt municipal bonds is added to the AMT calculation as taxable bond income. If AMT generates a higher tax liability than the initial calculation, the taxpayer pays the higher amount.

Taxpayers are taxed on realized gains when assets (such as real property or investments) are sold. If an investor owns an asset and does not sell it, that investor has an unrealized capital gain, and there is no taxable event.

Assume, for example, an investor holds a stock for five years and sells the shares for a $20,000 gain. Since the stock was held for more than one year, the gain is considered long term and any capital losses reduce the tax base of the gain. After deducting losses, the tax base of the capital gain is multiplied by capital gain tax rates.

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