|
|
|
|
|
by Macha
2115 days ago
|
|
Withholding = (Taxable income in each bracket * tax rate for each bracket) - (annual tax credits / number of annual payments from your employer). If you're married and want to be taxed as a couple, you simply send the documentation as such to the tax office after your wedding. You can tell your employer and they'll try adjust appropriately in payroll, or you can not tell them and the government will send you a tax refund at the end of the year for the partner with the higher tax bracket. It's optional to be taxed as a couple, so presumably you're opting into it because it will reduce your tax obligations, so there shouldn't be a case where you have to pay more because you're married. The same applies for tax credits that you don't want to tell your employer about. |
|
So that's one difference. I have never sent the IRS proof of our marriage, and they have never requested it. I simply updated my wife's name and our filing status in the year we got married.
> (Taxable income in each bracket * tax rate for each bracket) - (annual tax credits / number of annual payments from your employer)
> You can tell your employer and they'll try adjust appropriately in payroll, or you can not tell them and the government will send you a tax refund at the end of the year for the partner with the higher tax bracket.
I'm confused by this. Are tax brackets always individual in Ireland? The reason I need to specify additional withholding is because each of our income withholding calculations starts from the lowest bracket and tops out at a bracket below our actual top marginal rate, which is determined by adding our incomes.