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I'm single, 29 years old, and will be making $63,000/year. I have been getting a variety of responses from friends and family so I'm getting confused as to what is appropriate. Do I enter "1" for both A and B or just A or just B? (Most people have told me to enter "1" for B only).

A) Enter "1" for yourself if no one else can claim you as a dependent

B) Enter “1” if:
● You are single and have only one job; or
● You are married, have only one job, and your spouse does not work; or B
● Your wages from a second job or your spouse’s wages (or the total of both) are $1,000 or less.

2007-09-21 08:10:10 · 1 answers · asked by luvly 6 in Business & Finance Taxes United States

In the past I did standardized deductions.

I'll be starting my new job in late Oct.

Does anyone else recommend claiming 0?

2007-09-21 09:06:43 · update #1

1 answers

Enter 1 total. If you want to be sure that you don't owe any taxes and will receive a refund then put 0.

2007-09-21 08:25:01 · answer #1 · answered by Luv2Answer 7 · 1 2

Filling Out A W4

2016-10-06 03:06:25 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

By the worksheet, yes you could claim two. If you do, you'll come pretty close to even but might owe a little. If you claim one you'll most likely get a small refund.

I wouldn't recommend claiming zero. You'd get a bigger refund, but only because you had more withheld, so you've just let the government use your money all year at no interest.

2007-09-21 14:28:22 · answer #3 · answered by Judy 7 · 3 0

You'd only be claiming 1 on your W-4. But considering we don't know whether you itemize or claim the standard deduction we can't really tell you what to claim on W-4. www.paycheckcity.com though is a good paycheck calculator website that can help you determine what you should be claiming.

2007-09-21 08:51:40 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

RE:
How to fill out W4 form (I'm single)?
I'm single, 29 years old, and will be making $63,000/year. I have been getting a variety of responses from friends and family so I'm getting confused as to what is appropriate. Do I enter "1" for both A and B or just A or just B? (Most people have told me to enter "1"...

2015-08-04 07:05:56 · answer #5 · answered by ? 1 · 0 0

yes 1 & 1 and you might have a couple of other 1's also

2007-09-21 08:15:48 · answer #6 · answered by lstbob51 2 · 0 0

do you itemise or take standard deduction?

If Standard, Single 1 will give you a small refund

Single 2 will break you even or you will owe a small amount

2007-09-21 08:19:25 · answer #7 · answered by idtshadow 6 · 2 0

The w-4 worksheet is antiquated and is confusing.
The IRS has a withholding calculator, where you can put in all your numbers and come very close to your taxable amount for the end of the year, and print out your W-4

www.irs.gov, individual, withholding calculator

2007-09-21 08:21:09 · answer #8 · answered by Wood Smoke ~ Free2Bme! 6 · 1 0

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2015-01-24 10:20:50 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

If you want a large refund on your taxes claim single and "0"
If you want a small refund and little bit bigger paycheck claim single and "1"

2007-09-21 08:20:04 · answer #10 · answered by ravenbb 2 · 6 0

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