And then you think anything above that would just be tax and
ordinary income rates depending on what your auditor or accountant works out?
Not exact matches
With capital gains taxes, your earnings are taxed at either the current capital gains tax
rate or your
ordinary income rate,
depending on how long you hold the bond.
When the fund distributes capital gains from the sale of securities — this could be taxed at
ordinary income tax
rates or the more favorable long - term capital gains
rate,
depending on how long the securities were held in the fund.
Depending on your tax bracket, qualified dividends are taxed at a
rate of 0 % to 20 %, significantly lower than the
ordinary income tax
rates of 10 % to 39.6 %.
For 2017,
ordinary tax
rates range from 10 percent to 39.6 percent,
depending on your total taxable
income.
Ordinary income is taxed at different
rates depending on the amount of
income received by a taxpayer in a given tax year.
As for non-deductible IRAs and annuities, the advantage of delaying taxation can be huge
depending on time horizon even if it does mean paying
ordinary income tax
rates vs. capital gains
rates.
-- Pre-Tax / Traditional Retirement Account (401k, 403b, IRA, etc.) = currently at
ordinary income tax
rates for qualified withdrawals — Roth (401k, 403b, IRA etc.) = currently tax free for qualified withdrawals - Taxable Accounts = currently taxed
depending on asset type, etc..
Ordinary gains are taxed at the top marginal
income tax
rate of 37 percent, while capital gains tax
rates run as high as 15 percent
depending on the tax bracket.
Depending on your federal tax bracket,
ordinary income tax
rates can be as high as 37 percent whereas capital gains tax
rates top out at 20 percent.