Because the Tax Cuts & Jobs Act (TJCA) was handed in 2017, few households have been topic to the Different Minimal Tax (AMT), which TCJA restructured in order that it utilized primarily to a choose variety of upper-income households. However with the anticipated sundown of TCJA in 2026 and the reversion to the pre-2018 AMT guidelines, a big subset of households will discover themselves owing AMT – a lot of whom will achieve this for the primary time.
At a excessive stage, the AMT calculation works by including various ‘adjustment objects’ to a taxpayer’s taxable revenue, mostly together with the usual deductions, the deduction for state and native taxes, curiosity from tax-exempt ‘non-public exercise’ bonds, and unrealized positive aspects on the train of Incentive Inventory Choices (ISOs). As soon as these adjustment objects have been added to the taxpayer’s common revenue sources to calculate their ‘AMT revenue’, a single massive AMT exemption is subtracted from that quantity to reach on the tax base off of which AMT is calculated. The tax itself is calculated utilizing 2 brackets of 26% and 28%, and the taxpayer owes AMT if their tax as calculated utilizing the AMT technique is increased than it’s when utilizing the ‘common’ tax calculation.
The sundown of TCJA will add again a number of frequent adjustment objects that can create potential AMT publicity for a lot of households. For instance, private exemptions and miscellaneous itemized deductions corresponding to funding advisory charges, each of which can be reinstated after TCJA’s sundown. Moreover, the elimination of the $10,000 restrict on state and native tax deductions will make that adjustment a lot increased for property house owners and households in high-tax states.
Moreover, TCJA’s sundown is ready to cut back the quantity of the AMT exemption, in addition to to drastically decrease the revenue threshold at which the exemption begins to section out. Which implies AMT can be triggered extra often in households with ‘solely’ $100,000–$600,000 of revenue. Households topic to AMT can also face a ‘bump zone’ within the phaseout vary of the AMT exemption the place any extra revenue is successfully taxed at a marginal charge of 32.5% and 35%.
For monetary advisors, understanding the upcoming rule modifications round AMT may also help with figuring out which purchasers is perhaps topic to AMT beginning in 2026. Which, from a sensible perspective, may also help with understanding whether or not the consumer wants to spice up tax withholding or estimated funds in anticipation of the AMT tax owed – however may also assist with recognizing planning alternatives to both keep away from AMT publicity or cut back its impression. For instance, purchasers with unexercised ISOs may train these choices previous to TCJA’s sundown with out AMT publicity. Nevertheless, in the event that they had been to attend till 2026, they’d owe AMT (and want to search out or borrow funds to pay the AMT triggered by the train). Though for purchasers at present within the AMT ‘bump zone’, it might truly be higher to delay recognizing the revenue as an alternative!
The important thing level is that, whereas it will not at all times be doable to keep away from AMT (since AMT itself is meant to forestall higher-income households from avoiding taxes through excessive deductions and tax-exempt revenue sources), planning for AMT’s modifications post-TCJA sundown may also help to attenuate the impression of AMT and at the least keep away from any ‘shock’ tax payments for many who do not see it coming. And since TCJA’s sundown is anticipated to overwhelmingly enhance households’ publicity to AMT, there’s not a lot draw back in being proactive to keep away from or decrease future AMT – for the reason that draw back if TCJA is in the end prolonged is that there could be little or no AMT publicity anyway!