Taxation of Social Security benefits

Since the passage of the 1983 Amendments to the Social Security Act Social Security benefits are subject to taxation.

The amount of Social Security income which is taxable depends on your taxable income. Most high-income retirees will have 85% of Social Security benefits taxable. For lower-income retirees, less than 85% will be taxable, but many retirees in a 12% tax bracket will face a marginal tax rate much higher than 12%. Social security benefits are also taxable in some states (see Figure 1.)

For social security taxes imposed on earned wages, see the Social Security article.

The formula
The full rules are in IRS Publication 915. This simplification covers most cases; there are special rules if you contribute to a Traditional IRA, receive retroactive payments for prior years, or file forms to exempt other income from taxation.

The relevant income for Social Security taxation includes all items which are normally part of your adjusted gross income, plus tax-exempt interest income, plus 50% of your Social Security benefits. (Historically, the 50% represents the fact that half of your Social Security contributions were made by your employer and thus not taxed.)

There are two relevant base amounts; unlike most income limits in the tax code, they are not adjusted for inflation. The lower base is $25,000 if you are single, $32,000 if married filing jointly. The upper base is $34,000 if you are single, $44,000 if married filing jointly.

If your relevant income is below the lower base, none of your benefits are taxable. For every $1 of relevant income between the lower and upper bases, 50 cents of your Social Security benefits become taxable, up to 50% of your total benefits. For every $1 of relevant income above the upper bases, 85 cents of your Social Security benefits become taxable, up to a total taxable amount of 85% of your benefits.

Examples
The examples below are based on tax numbers for 2018. They illustrate how tax brackets and Social Security taxation interact, creating a 22.2% marginal tax rate for most taxpayers in the 12% tax bracket, and a 40.02% marginal tax rate for some single taxpayers but only married taxpayers with very high Social Security benefits at the bottom of the 22% bracket.

Single taxpayers:

If you are single and receive $20,000 in Social Security benefits:
 * None of your benefits are taxable if your other income is less than $15,000.
 * For every dollar between $15,000 and $24,000, an additional 50 cents becomes taxable.
 * For every dollar over $24,000, an additional 85 cents becomes taxable, up to a total other income of $38,706, which makes the maximum $17,000 taxable.

The table below assumes that you take the standard deduction ($13,600 for a taxpayer over 65

In graphical form (using 2016 rates, so the tax rates are higher), assuming the non-SS income comes from tIRA withdrawals,



Married taxpayers:

If you are a married couple and receive $40,000 in Social Security benefits:
 * None of your benefits are taxable if your other income is less than $12,000.
 * For every dollar between $12,000 and $24,000, an additional 50 cents becomes taxable.
 * For every dollar over $24,000, an additional 85 cents becomes taxable, up to a total other income of $56,941, which makes the maximum $34,000 taxable.

The table below assumes that you take the standard deduction ($26,600 for a married couple over 65).

In graphical form (using 2016 rates), assuming the non-SS income comes from tIRA withdrawals,



There is no 40.2% rate in this situation because the example couple reaches the maximum taxable benefit amount well before reaching the 25% tax bracket. Every additional $1 of Social Security increases the income at the maximum taxable benefit amount by $1.35 (because the phase-in starts $0.50 earlier and ends $0.50 later, and $0.85 more SS is taxed). To reach the 40.2% marginal rate, the couple would need to exceed $49,673 in SS benefits; at $49,673 in benefits, $62,778 in other income makes the maximum $42,222 of Social Security taxable, for a total income of $104,0000 at the top of the 15% bracket.

State taxation
While most states do not tax social security benefits (shaded blue in figure; along with green shaded states which do not impose income tax), six states tax benefits to the extent they are taxed at the federal level (shaded lavender), while eight states exempt social security benefits from taxation subject to limits (shaded yellow).

The states that tax benefits to the extent they are taxed at the federal level include:
 * Minnesota
 * Nebraska
 * North Dakota
 * Rhode Island
 * Vermont
 * West Virginia

The states that tax social security benefits subject to limits include:
 * Colorado: If a household meets certain age requirements qualifying retirement income can be excluded from income if it is taxable under federal income tax.
 * Connecticut: Allows taxpayers to totally exempt social security from state income tax if income is less than $60,000 (joint filers).
 * Iowa: In 2013 exempts a certain portion of benefits from income tax. In 2014 the exemption will increase to 100%.
 * Kansas: Exempts social security benefits from state taxation if federal adjusted income is less than $75,000.
 * Missouri: Allows taxpayers with adjusted gross income of less than $100,000 (joint filers) to deduct all social security benefits from income.
 * Montana: Some social security benefits may be taxable (state advises filling out a worksheet); in general if total income is below $32,000 joint filers, benefits will not be subject to tax.
 * New Mexico : Benefits are taxable, but a person can qualify for an exemption if he or she is 65 years of age or older.
 * Utah: If a household meets certain age requirements qualifying retirement income can be offset by credit, which is phased out once income exceeds a certain level.