It might not feel like it at tax time, but the Internal Revenue Service doesn’t actually tax you on every single dollar you earn. The Internal Revenue Code offers numerous deductions you can use to shave away some of your income and the IRS only taxes you on the balance.
Personal exemptions used to be one form of deduction you could use to reduce your taxable income. This in turn lowered the amount of income tax you’d have to pay because you’d be paying taxes on less money. Unfortunately, that’s not the case going forward, at least for a while.
The Personal Exemption Is Gone in 2018
The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act eliminated the personal exemption from the tax code when it went into effect in 2018. This will be the case from through the 2025 tax year when the TCJA technically expires. But it’s expiration isn’t necessarily a done deal. Congress has the option of renewing the tax law for another stretch of years at that time.
But you’re still in luck if you haven’t filed your 2017 tax return yet or if you want to go back to amend previous years’ returns. Here’s how the exemption works.
Who Is Eligible?
All tax breaks come with a whole list of rules for claiming them and personal exemptions are no exception. A taxpayer is permitted to claim one personal exemption for himself and one exemption for each person he’s able to claim as a dependent.
Married people who file jointly can claim two personal exemptions, one for each spouse, plus exemptions for each of their dependents. If they file separately, however, one spouse can claim the other spouse’s personal exemption only under limited circumstances.
You can’t claim a personal exemption for yourself if you’re someone else’s dependent because that taxpayer is already claiming your personal exemption.
How Much Is the Personal Exemption?
The personal exemption amount was indexed for inflation—it increased slightly from year to year to keep pace with the economy, although if the economy remained relatively steady, the personal exemption amount also stayed the same. This happened in tax years 2016 and 2017 when it remained stuck at $4,050 for tax years 2016 and 2017.
Here’s how the exemption worked out in previous years: