ARE YOUR DIVIDENDS REALLY ELIGIBLE FOR LOWER TAX RATES?
Do you know where your stock dividend
is?
One of the most publicized changes
of the 2003 tax act was the reduction of tax rates on stock dividends
to the point the rates equal the reduced rates on capital gains.
There's just one catch: not all dividends qualify for these reduced
rates, and even qualified dividends may not qualify if you overlook
the fine print.
Before passage of the Jobs and Growth
Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2003, all dividends, including
stock dividends, were subject to the taxpayer's ordinary income-tax
rate. The new act reduced the tax rate to 15 percent for higher-income
taxpayers and 5 percent for lower-income taxpayers for dividends
received beginning January 1, 2003 (versus May 6 for capital gains).
And for just the year 2008, the rate for lower-income taxpayers
drops to zero, before all of these lower rates expire in 2009
and revert to taxpayers' ordinary income-tax rates.
First, the fine print. For taxpayers
to even take advantage of the lower dividend rates, they must
hold the dividend-paying common stock for at least 60 days before
the stock's “ex-dividend” date. The ex-dividend date
is that date by which a stockowner must be holding shares in order
to receive the upcoming dividend. There is some question whether
this rule will apply to mutual fund shareholders, but most experts
believe it will. By the way, you, and not the stock company, are
responsible for making sure you qualify under this provision.
Now to the more complex question:
which dividends qualify for the lower rates. This is not as clear-cut
as it may appear to taxpayers.
Stocks. Dividends paid from
common stock generally qualify if the company is a domestic corporation
or a qualified foreign corporation, with the exception of tax-exempt
corporations. To qualify as a foreign corporation, the company
must be traded on established U.S. securities markets, be incorporated
in the United States or incorporated in a country with a tax treaty
with the United States.
Even dividends from companies that
don't have current earnings or profits, or that don't pay corporate-level
taxes on earnings because of sufficient tax write-offs, may still
be treated as qualified dividends. Interest payments to lenders
labeled as “dividends,” however, won't qualify.
Preferred stocks. This falls
into the “maybe” category. Some “dividends”
from preferred stock are actually interest payments and don't
qualify. You'll have to contact the company or your broker to
find out their correct classification.
S corporation dividends. Generally, S corp dividends do not qualify because earnings and profits
are passed through to the shareholders every year, where they
are taxed at the shareholders' tax rate. The exception is if the
S corporation converted from a C corporation and is paying out
accumulated earnings and profits from the old C corporation.
Stock and stock/bond mutual funds. Dividends paid to the mutual fund by the stock companies
it is invested in are passed to the fund's shareholders as qualified
dividends. Bond and other interest earned by the mutual fund do
not qualify. Future shareholder statements should reflect which
distributions qualify as dividends.
Bond and money market funds. While payments from these funds are often reported as “dividends,”
it's usually interest and will be taxed as ordinary income.
Real estate investment trusts. Most of the high “dividends” many REITs pay out will not
qualify. Most dividends from real estate mutual funds that invest
in REITs also won't qualify. But qualified stock dividends received
from corporations that REITs are invested in qualify, as well
as any earnings retained by the REIT that are taxed at the REIT
level as corporate income and later passed on to shareholders.
Others. Dividends paid by
credit unions, savings and loans, cooperatives, and mutual insurance
companies won't qualify.
Retirement accounts. Like capital gains, dividends earned inside a tax-deferred retirement account
do not qualify for the lower tax rate. All tax-deferred withdrawals
will be taxed at the owner's ordinary income-tax rates at the
time of withdrawal, regardless of the source of the income.
So when making investment decisions,
be sure you are clear whether a particular “dividend”
qualifies for preferable tax treatment. Also, many investment
experts caution against buying a stock or stock mutual fund solely
because it pays a tax-preferred dividend. The stock or fund's
underlying fundamentals should be sound and appropriate for your
investment needs.
This article was produced by the Consumer
Affairs Dept. of The Financial Planning Association
and provided to you courtesy of Terry P. Welsh,
CFP, Ketchikan, Alaska. If you have any questions
or concerns regarding this, or any other financial
topic, please call me at 1-907-225-0619, or click
on the "CONTACT US" button to arrange for a free
initial consultation.