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Ask the Editor: Four Reader Tax Questions, March 28, 2025


Each week, in our new Ask the Editor series, Joy Taylor, The Kiplinger Tax Letter Editor, answers questions on topics submitted by readers. This week, since we are in the middle of tax filing season, she’s looking at questions related to filing of tax returns and paying taxes. (Get a free issue of The Kiplinger Tax Letter or subscribe.)

Q1: 20% QBI Deduction

I left my full-time job early last year and now work as an independent freelance consultant. I will report my business income and expenses on Schedule C. I heard about a 20% deduction. Can you explain what this is and whether I can claim it on my 2024 Form 1040 for my self-employment earnings?

Owners of LLCs, S corporations and other pass-through entities, as well as self-employed individuals, can deduct 20% of their qualified business income (QBI). QBI is income less deductions from your business. An important limitation applies to high earners in certain service fields. They include health, law, accounting, consulting, financial and brokerage services, performing arts, athletics, actuarial science, investing or trading in securities, or any business where the principal asset is the reputation or skill of its employees. If you’re in one of the affected fields and your total taxable income on your 2024 Form 1040 (before the QBI deduction) exceeds $383,900 for joint filers or $191,950 for single filers and head-of-household filers, the 20% deduction begins to phase out (the 2025 amounts are $394,600 and $197,300).

When filling out your 2024 Form 1040, you would complete either Form 8995 or 8995-A and attach it to your return. Most people use the simpler, one-page Form 8995. The 8995-A is for taxpayers with incomes over the thresholds set forth above. You then claim the 20% QBI deduction on line 13 of your Form 1040.

Note that this deduction ends after 2025, unless Congress acts before then. It was first enacted in the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) to provide some federal income tax parity between C corporations, which are taxed at a 21% federal income tax rate, and pass-through businesses, in which the individual owners pay federal income tax on their earnings up to a 37% tax rate.
— Joy Taylor, Editor The Kiplinger Tax Letter

Q2: Estimated Tax Payments


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