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I understand the max. taxable income for soc. security this year is $97,500. Is that per person if you're married filing jointly, or total household income?

2007-11-24 07:04:11 · 6 answers · asked by Geekman 2 in Business & Finance Taxes United States

6 answers

Social Security taxes are ALWAYS levied per person. Your filing status does not matter at all for SS withholdings.

2007-11-24 07:51:26 · answer #1 · answered by Bostonian In MO 7 · 1 0

Per person. Being married and filing jointly has no effect on the social security payments.

2007-11-24 10:06:07 · answer #2 · answered by Judy 7 · 1 0

yes, it's per person - has nothing to do with your tax return unless you worked 2 jobs and went over that limit of Soc sec taxable wages in 2007( 401k and section 125 deductions decrease your taxable wages compared to that limit). The limit increases to 102,000 for 2008

2007-11-24 08:32:07 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

Per person

2007-11-24 10:38:11 · answer #4 · answered by StephenWeinstein 7 · 1 0

i believe individually. and are you sure thats the max for soc sec or just for fderal income tax?

2007-11-24 07:08:06 · answer #5 · answered by GG 7 · 0 1

we made 34977.62 will we be taxed?

2016-01-09 06:31:58 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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