Tax Credits Vs Deductions
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Same Word Energy, Very Different Powers
People mix up "deduction" and "credit" constantly. They sound similar. They behave nothing alike. And the difference is often hundreds of dollars.
Deduction: Reduces Taxable Income
A deduction lowers the amount of income the government can tax.
If you're in the 22% bracket and you get a $1,000 deduction:
- Your taxable income drops by $1,000;
- Your tax bill drops by $220 ($1,000 × 22%).
The benefit of a deduction depends on your bracket. Higher bracket → bigger benefit.
Credit: Reduces The Tax Itself
A credit lowers your tax bill dollar for dollar.
A $1,000 credit = $1,000 off your tax bill. Same in every bracket. Same for everyone.
Refundable Vs Non-Refundable Credits
One more layer to know:
- Non-refundable credit — can bring your tax to $0, but no further. If you owe $300 and have a $1,000 non-refundable credit, the extra $700 just disappears;
- Refundable credit — can take you below $0. The IRS sends you the difference as a refund. The Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) is the most famous one.
When you see headlines about "people who pay no federal income tax," refundable credits are usually a big part of the story.
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