Social Security & Taxes

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Proportional Taxes

(flat taxes) taxes for which the rate stays the same, regardless of income. EX: Property taxes

Filing Status

A category that defines the type of tax return an individual will use, primarily based on marital status; it also determines the size of your tax brackets and how much of your income is taxed at each rate

Paycheck Stub

A document attached to every paycheck that details your earnings and the amount withheld for taxes, health insurance, retirement funds, etc.

FICA Tax

A federal law that requires an employer to withhold taxes from the wages they pay their employees; the funds go toward Social Security and Medicare

Social Security

A federal program that provides monthly benefits to millions of Americans, including retirees, military families, surviving families of deceased workers, and disabled individuals

W-4

A form completed by an employee to indicate his or her tax situation (exemptions, marital status, etc.) to the employer, who then withholds the corresponding amount of taxes from each paycheck

Corporate Income Tax

A percentage of profits paid by a business to the federal and state government

Tax Bracket

A range of income amounts that are taxed at a particular rate

Standard Deduction

A standardized dollar amount that reduces your taxable income, specifically for individuals who do not receive additional benefit by itemizing their deductions into medical expenses, donations, etc.

Estate Tax

A tax on property (cash, real estate, stock, or other assets) transferred from deceased persons to their heirs

Excise Tax

A tax paid on purchases of a specific good, like gasoline or cigarettes

Audit

An inspection of a filer's tax return by the IRS

Allowances

Employee-claimed exemptions on the W-4 to determine how much of an employee's pay to withhold from his or her paycheck for taxes

Payroll Tax

Federal and state taxes that all employers must pay, based on a percentage of the employee's salary, toward social services such as Social Security and Medicare

Voluntary Compliance

Follow the tax laws without being told

W-2

Form that an employer must send to an employee and the IRS at the end of the year to report the employee's annual wages and taxes withheld from their paycheck

1099

Form that details all "non-employee" compensation, including for specific jobs like freelancers or contractors

Interest Income

Income earned through interest on savings accounts, bonds, CDs, etc.

IRS

Internal Revenue Service- main jobs are to collect taxes and enforce tax laws.

K-40

Kansas Income Tax form that individuals working in the state of Kansas use to file their income taxes.

Dividend

Money from the profits of a company that is paid out to its shareholders, typically on a quarterly basis

Capital Gain

Profit from the sale of an asset, such as a stock or a bond, calculated by subtracting the price you initially paid from the price you then sold it for

Dependent

Someone you financially support who can be "claimed" on a tax return to reduce your taxable income and lower your taxes

Mandatory Spending

Spending by the federal government required by previously existing laws, including funding programs like Social Security and Medicare/Medicaid

Income Tax

Tax paid on money earned

Progressive Taxes

Taxes that take a larger share of income as the amount of income grows. EX: Federal income taxes.

Effective Tax Rate

The actual rate you pay on your taxes, as a percentage of your overall income

Taxable Income

The amount of income that is used to calculate an individual's or a company's income tax due

Tax Rate

The percentage at which taxes are paid on each dollar of income

Withholding

The portion of an employee's wages that is not included in their paycheck because it goes directly to federal, state and local taxes

Exemption

The set amount of money, per dependent, you can subtract from your taxable income

1040

The standard Internal Revenue Service (IRS) form that individuals can use to file their annual income tax returns

Marginal Tax Rate

The tax bracket that your highest dollar of income falls into, and therefore the highest tax rate you pay

Tax Evasion

Willful failure to pay taxes. Serious crime which can result in fines and/or imprisonment

Regressive Taxes

taxes that take a smaller share of income as the amount of income grows. EX: Sales tax and Consumption taxes


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