37. TOTAL ITEMIZED DEDUCTIONS
FROM FEDERAL SCHEDULE A.
GENERAL
INSTRUCTIONS
Iowa follows Federal guidelines
for Schedule A itemized deductions with certain exceptions. Enter
the total amount of itemized deductions claimed on your Federal or Iowa Schedule
A. To complete either the Federal or Iowa
Schedule A, refer to the Federal 1040 instruction booklet. Attach your
Iowa Schedule A or Federal Schedule A to your return. Taxpayers
with Federal bonus depreciation must complete and attach the Iowa Schedule
A.
New on the IA Schedule A for 2005:
Line 4: The itemized deduction for
state sales and use tax paid is allowed only if the taxpayer claimed an itemized
deduction for state sales and use tax paid on the federal return.
Line 13: The Iowa Schedule
A was printed before the IRS made its changes on line 15 of its Schedule
A. For line 13 on the Iowa Schedule A, transfer the amount on line 15a
of the federal form.
MEDICAL,
DENTAL AND INSURANCE EXPENSES
Schedule A, line 2:
Certain itemized deductions are allowed only to the extent that the deductions
exceed a percentage of Federal adjusted gross income. These include medical
and dental expenses that exceed 7-1/2% of Federal adjusted gross income,
and job expenses and miscellaneous deductions allowed to the extent the
deductions are greater than 2% of the taxpayers Federal adjusted
gross income. The Federal adjusted gross income used to determine these
deductions is the taxpayers Federal adjusted gross income plus
any bonus depreciation adjustment from line
14 of the IA 1040.
Health insurance premiums:
100% of the amount paid for health insurance premiums is deductible on line
18 of the IA 1040. It may be to your advantage to take this deduction
on line 18 instead
of Schedule A. Schedule A may not contain any health insurance premiums
which were used as a deduction on line 18.
IF
AGI EXCEEDS $145,950
($72,975 if filing married separate for Federal
purposes)
If your adjusted gross
income on line 38, Federal form 1040 (line 21, Federal form 1040A) plus
any Iowa bonus depreciation adjustment from line 14 of the IA 1040 exceeds
$145,950 ($72,975 if filing married separate for Federal purposes), you
may not be able to deduct all of your itemized deductions. If your Federal
adjusted gross income exceeds the above amounts, you must complete worksheet IA
41-104 (fillable) to determine the amount to enter on line 39.
EXCEPTIONS
TO FEDERAL SCHEDULE A
Federal bonus depreciation. If itemizing, taxpayers
that have Federal Bonus Depreciation on form IA 4562A must complete the Iowa
Schedule A rather than using a copy of the Federal Schedule A.
Health insurance premiums. 100%
of the amount paid for health insurance premiums is deductible on line
18 of the IA 1040. It may be to your advantage to take this deduction on line
18 instead of Schedule A. Schedule A may not
contain any health insurance premiums which were used as a deduction on
line 18.
Mortgage Interest Credit Deduction. Taxpayers with
the mortgage interest credit can claim on their Iowa return a deduction
on line 9b of Schedule A for all mortgage interest paid in the tax year
and not just the mortgage interest that was deducted on the Federal Schedule
A.
Vehicle Registration Fee Deduction
and Worksheet. If
you itemize deductions, a portion of the automobile or multipurpose vehicle
registration
fee you paid in 2005 may be deducted as personal property tax on your Iowa
Schedule A, line 6, and Federal Schedule A, line 7.
This deduction is for registration fees paid on qualifying automobiles
and multipurpose vehicles. If the letters MV are printed next
to the word style on the registration certificate, the vehicle
is a multipurpose vehicle and qualifies for this deduction. SUVs
are deductible only if the letters MV are printed next to the word "style" on
the registration certificate. Registration fees on the following vehicles
are not deductible: pickups, motor trucks, work vans, ambulances, hearses,
non-passenger-carrying vans, campers, motorcycles, or motor bikes.
Newer Vehicles: Use the following worksheet to calculate the deductible
amount of registration fees paid in 2005 for qualifying automobiles (model
year 1995
or newer) and multipurpose vehicles (model year 1993 or newer).
| 1. Enter
the actual registration fee paid. |
1. |
|
| 2. Take
the weight of your automobile and divide it by 250. The weight is found
on your automobile registration certificate. |
2. |
|
| 3. Subtract
line 2 from line 1. This is the deductible amount for line 37. |
3. |
|
EXAMPLE
Lola purchased
an automobile from Jennifer.
The actual fee Lola paid to register the automobile
at the courthouse was $150.
The weight of the automobile is 3,000 pounds.
The deductible amount is calculated as follows:
| 1. Enter
the actual registration fee paid. |
1. |
150 |
| 2. Take
the weight of your automobile and divide it by 250. The weight is found
on your automobile registration certificate. |
2. |
12 |
| 3. Subtract
line 2 from line 1. This is the deductible amount. |
3. |
138 |
Older Vehicles: For qualifying automobiles (model year 1994 or older) and
multipurpose vehicles (model year 1992 or older) the deductible amount is
60% of the registration fees paid in 2005.
|
Married Separate Filers:
If you used Iowa
Schedule A, enter the totals from line 29 and line 30, Iowa Schedule
A, in Columns A and B on line 39 of the IA 1040.
If you used Federal
Schedule A, you should prorate your itemized deductions between
you and your spouse in the ratio of each spouses net income
on line 26,
IA1040 to the total net income of both spouses. (However, this
allocation of itemized deductions should be done after any Iowa
income tax is subtracted from the total itemized deductions claimed
on Federal Schedule A.)
Line
38 and line
40 of the IA 1040 should also be divided between husband
and wife in the ratio of their respective net incomes.
(Examples
of how to prorate)
|
Go to
Line 36
Go to
Line 38