sea_dev
sea_dev OP t1_ja8l4ll wrote
Reply to comment by jh937hfiu3hrhv9 in My income versus my effective tax rate each year since graduating college [OC] by sea_dev
I'm a software engineer, but all of my pay raises are from changing companies.
- I started 2012 working a part time job that would turn full time when I graduated, but I left for another job paying more when I graduated. ($65k salary)
- In 2013 I left that job and moved to Seattle to work for a large software company. ($100k salary)
- In 2017 I left that software company for another one. ($135k salary)
- In 2018 I left that one for another company ($165k salary)
- In 2022 I left that one for another company ($205k salary)
Every time I switched I also received signing bonuses and every job gave me stock bonuses to supplement my salary.
sea_dev OP t1_ja8j7yg wrote
Reply to comment by forengjeng in My income versus my effective tax rate each year since graduating college [OC] by sea_dev
That's just how progressive tax brackets work. For example, the 2022 brackets for married filing jointly are:
- 10% on income up to $20,550
- $2,055 + 12% on excess income up to $83,550
- $9,615 + 22% on excess income up to $178,150
- $30,427 + 24% on excess income up to $340,100
- $69,295 + 32% on excess income up to $431,900
- $98,671 + 35% on excess income up to $647,850
- $174,253.50 + 37% on excess income
So for 2022 my taxable income was $278,077 and I only took the standard deduction of $25,900. I also had 401k contributions throughout the year, but I hadn't included any of those for previous years "total income" figures in the graph. So my federal income tax that I owed was $54,409 ($30,427+0.24*[278,077-178,150]). But I got to claim $6,000 with the child tax credit, reducing that to $49,055 (nearly a 10% reduction).
Also, our government subsidizes married couples and families. Married filing jointly tax brackets are much lower than individuals and the child tax credits don't start to fall off until I think around $400,000 household income.
sea_dev OP t1_ja8bv6t wrote
Source: My tax returns
Tool: Google sheets
My effective tax rate was calculated by simply dividing the total amount I paid in taxes by my total income. I filed as married each year and we had kids in 2011, 2013, and 2017. My wife and I both graduated college in 2012 but she has stayed home with the kids since the first one was born. She returned to work for the last 3 months of 2022.
sea_dev OP t1_ja8xpbl wrote
Reply to comment by Belnak in My income versus my effective tax rate each year since graduating college [OC] by sea_dev
Schedule A is the form you use to figure out your itemized deductions, I worked through all of that and it was less than the standard deduction. The real limiting factor is that state and local taxes are capped at $10k. If I had made more charitable donations, I would have been able to have more deductions, but at the end of the day, that's still more money out of my pocket.
EDIT: Only medical expenses over 7.5% of your income is deductible and the interest I pay on my home isn't enough to eclipse the standard deduction.