Income averaging

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  • Jesse
    Senior Member
    • Aug 2005
    • 2064

    #1

    Income averaging

    Was there a time when income averaging could be done for great increases/decreases in income?

    Is there anything now?

    Our local bartenders and barbers must be educating themselves somewhere because I've had an awful lot of people all of a sudden wanting to average their income. Some claim they had an accountant, who ha since passed, do this for them in past years.???
    http://www.viagrabelgiquefr.com/
  • WhiteOleander
    Senior Member
    • Jun 2005
    • 1370

    #2
    Yes there used to be income averaging, but that went away in the 80's. Farmers/Ranchers can still do some type of it. I've only seen one in many past years. I think they use Sch J?. Anyway, The Barbers/Bartenders School of Tax Prep is way behind the times.
    You have the right to remain silent. Anything you say will be misquoted, then used against you.

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    • jimmcg
      Senior Member
      • Aug 2005
      • 633

      #3
      Originally posted by Jesse
      Was there a time when income averaging could be done for great increases/decreases in income?

      Is there anything now?

      Our local bartenders and barbers must be educating themselves somewhere because I've had an awful lot of people all of a sudden wanting to average their income. Some claim they had an accountant, who ha since passed, do this for them in past years.???
      1. Yes there "was a time." For those of us old folks I believe it was in the Reagan era.

      2. Only for certain qualified farmers and fishermen.

      3. Define "passed years."

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      • taxmom34
        Senior Member
        • Nov 2008
        • 732

        #4
        isn't there still in effect a five year averaging for retirement lump sum income? forgot what it is called, it's been years since i've used it. (back then you had a choice of 5 or 10 year averaging)

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        • Jesse
          Senior Member
          • Aug 2005
          • 2064

          #5
          Originally posted by jimmcg
          1. Yes there "was a time." For those of us old folks I believe it was in the Reagan era.

          2. Only for certain qualified farmers and fishermen.

          3. Define "passed years."
          I told one person, could have been, but my guess is it went away in 1986, isn't that when an entire tax code "overhaul" was done.
          http://www.viagrabelgiquefr.com/

          Comment

          • jimmcg
            Senior Member
            • Aug 2005
            • 633

            #6
            Originally posted by Jesse
            I told one person, could have been, but my guess is it went away in 1986, isn't that when an entire tax code "overhaul" was done.
            You got it! As the infamous lyrics go "those were the days my friend."

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            • Burke
              Senior Member
              • Jan 2008
              • 7068

              #7
              Originally posted by taxmom34
              isn't there still in effect a five year averaging for retirement lump sum income? forgot what it is called, it's been years since i've used it. (back then you had a choice of 5 or 10 year averaging)
              See Form 4972 and instructions for lump sum distributions from retirement plans. (Everybody these days rolls them over.) You have to have been born before 1936, I believe, to use it. Most of them now gone. Yes, I think income averaging bit the dust in the Great Tax Overhaul of 1986. Before that, we used it a lot even for what could be considered not-so-large increases.

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              • Davc
                Senior Member
                • Dec 2006
                • 1088

                #8
                Originally posted by taxmom34
                isn't there still in effect a five year averaging for retirement lump sum income? forgot what it is called, it's been years since i've used it. (back then you had a choice of 5 or 10 year averaging)
                For that one you needed to be born before a certain date and those that qualified are mostly dead now.

                Comment

                • FEDUKE404
                  Senior Member
                  • May 2007
                  • 3646

                  #9
                  Memories

                  The real "income averaging" was done by means of a Form 1040 Schedule G. IIRC, it involved using the current year and then the income from the last four years. Under the right circumstances (job promotion/stock windfall/etc) it could save the client big bucks.

                  There was a lot of number-crunching involved. At that "green place" we were required to record certain information each year on the tax return records so it would be available down the road.

                  This was all prior to computers and even calculators were just beginning to appear.

                  Our office even had a bonus for those persons who prepared the most Schedule G's!!

                  The Form 4972 does have an option for something resembling "ten-year averaging" but the rules/restrictions for that are so severe that I doubt if anyone will encounter those in the future.

                  The only remaining form involving averaging is in fact the "farmers and fisherman" Schedule J. My client base has no one that would fit into either category.

                  FE

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                  • Gary2
                    Senior Member
                    • Aug 2010
                    • 2066

                    #10
                    According to that bastion of historical reference material, Wikipedia, income averaging was eliminated by the second of Reagan's big tax cuts, the Tax Reform Act of 1986. I'm not sure when it was introduced, but I'm pretty sure it was available in the 60s, and probably earlier.

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                    • DaveO
                      Senior Member
                      • Dec 2005
                      • 1453

                      #11
                      I remember doing it once in the early 80's when I got a good promotion. But I get asked about it several times every tax season. Wish people's memory of the facts was a good as for the urban legends.
                      In other words, a democratic government is the only one in which those who vote for a tax can escape the obligation to pay it.
                      Alexis de Tocqueville

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