Can I calculate next year's exemptions based on this year's refund/amount owed?












2















Every W4 calculator I've found makes you input a lot of data to figure out what next year's exemptions should be.



Let's say I already take 10 exemptions and I owe, say, $5000 this year.



Is there a simple formula or rule of thumb that would tell me to remove N additional exemptions from my W4 to withhold around $5000?



(For simplicity, let's assume the new exemptions would be applied to the entire new year.)










share|improve this question





























    2















    Every W4 calculator I've found makes you input a lot of data to figure out what next year's exemptions should be.



    Let's say I already take 10 exemptions and I owe, say, $5000 this year.



    Is there a simple formula or rule of thumb that would tell me to remove N additional exemptions from my W4 to withhold around $5000?



    (For simplicity, let's assume the new exemptions would be applied to the entire new year.)










    share|improve this question



























      2












      2








      2








      Every W4 calculator I've found makes you input a lot of data to figure out what next year's exemptions should be.



      Let's say I already take 10 exemptions and I owe, say, $5000 this year.



      Is there a simple formula or rule of thumb that would tell me to remove N additional exemptions from my W4 to withhold around $5000?



      (For simplicity, let's assume the new exemptions would be applied to the entire new year.)










      share|improve this question
















      Every W4 calculator I've found makes you input a lot of data to figure out what next year's exemptions should be.



      Let's say I already take 10 exemptions and I owe, say, $5000 this year.



      Is there a simple formula or rule of thumb that would tell me to remove N additional exemptions from my W4 to withhold around $5000?



      (For simplicity, let's assume the new exemptions would be applied to the entire new year.)







      united-states taxes form-w-4






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited 7 hours ago







      rrauenza

















      asked 9 hours ago









      rrauenzarrauenza

      1284




      1284






















          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          6














          Circular E, Employer's Tax Guide, aka, Pub 15, contains the tables that payroll uses. Go to the page with your income level, and confirm that your 10 allowances match to the column for withholding per paycheck.



          I'd then reduce the allowances accordingly. $5000 is the tax on about $23K (at 22% bracket), so dropping allowances by 6 (each allowance is $4000 or so) is probably what you need to do.



          Note : Doug's answer works, too. I'm a fan of first using the allowances to get to the right withholding and using the "withhold more" line to fine tune if still off by a small sum.






          share|improve this answer
























          • If you just want to withhold the $5k extra, it seems easier to me just to do it all on the extra withholding line. No need to go to the tables, just withhold $5k/24 (or 12/26/52 based on your pay period)

            – Kevin
            6 hours ago






          • 2





            And that's why I said Doug's answer works. My preference remains.

            – JoeTaxpayer
            5 hours ago



















          4














          If you want your employer to withhold more, you don't want to increase what you are calling "exemptions". (They are officially called "allowances.") If you increased them, your employer would withhold even less, so you would owe more at tax time next year, all other things being equal.



          To have you employer withhold more (so you don't owe as much at tax time next year), you can use line 6 of the W-4. Line 6 is "Additional amount, if any, you want withheld from each paycheck". Assuming you have 26 paychecks per year, and you want to have an additional $5000 withheld, enter $192.31 on line 6. ($5000 / 26 = $192.31) Because this year is already well underway, you will have to adjust the denominator to reflect the number of remaining paychecks for this year in order to achieve an additional $5000 of withholding.






          share|improve this answer
























          • Whoops, yeah I meant remove and exemptions/allowances.

            – rrauenza
            7 hours ago










          protected by JoeTaxpayer 39 mins ago



          Thank you for your interest in this question.
          Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



          Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?














          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes








          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          6














          Circular E, Employer's Tax Guide, aka, Pub 15, contains the tables that payroll uses. Go to the page with your income level, and confirm that your 10 allowances match to the column for withholding per paycheck.



          I'd then reduce the allowances accordingly. $5000 is the tax on about $23K (at 22% bracket), so dropping allowances by 6 (each allowance is $4000 or so) is probably what you need to do.



          Note : Doug's answer works, too. I'm a fan of first using the allowances to get to the right withholding and using the "withhold more" line to fine tune if still off by a small sum.






          share|improve this answer
























          • If you just want to withhold the $5k extra, it seems easier to me just to do it all on the extra withholding line. No need to go to the tables, just withhold $5k/24 (or 12/26/52 based on your pay period)

            – Kevin
            6 hours ago






          • 2





            And that's why I said Doug's answer works. My preference remains.

            – JoeTaxpayer
            5 hours ago
















          6














          Circular E, Employer's Tax Guide, aka, Pub 15, contains the tables that payroll uses. Go to the page with your income level, and confirm that your 10 allowances match to the column for withholding per paycheck.



          I'd then reduce the allowances accordingly. $5000 is the tax on about $23K (at 22% bracket), so dropping allowances by 6 (each allowance is $4000 or so) is probably what you need to do.



          Note : Doug's answer works, too. I'm a fan of first using the allowances to get to the right withholding and using the "withhold more" line to fine tune if still off by a small sum.






          share|improve this answer
























          • If you just want to withhold the $5k extra, it seems easier to me just to do it all on the extra withholding line. No need to go to the tables, just withhold $5k/24 (or 12/26/52 based on your pay period)

            – Kevin
            6 hours ago






          • 2





            And that's why I said Doug's answer works. My preference remains.

            – JoeTaxpayer
            5 hours ago














          6












          6








          6







          Circular E, Employer's Tax Guide, aka, Pub 15, contains the tables that payroll uses. Go to the page with your income level, and confirm that your 10 allowances match to the column for withholding per paycheck.



          I'd then reduce the allowances accordingly. $5000 is the tax on about $23K (at 22% bracket), so dropping allowances by 6 (each allowance is $4000 or so) is probably what you need to do.



          Note : Doug's answer works, too. I'm a fan of first using the allowances to get to the right withholding and using the "withhold more" line to fine tune if still off by a small sum.






          share|improve this answer













          Circular E, Employer's Tax Guide, aka, Pub 15, contains the tables that payroll uses. Go to the page with your income level, and confirm that your 10 allowances match to the column for withholding per paycheck.



          I'd then reduce the allowances accordingly. $5000 is the tax on about $23K (at 22% bracket), so dropping allowances by 6 (each allowance is $4000 or so) is probably what you need to do.



          Note : Doug's answer works, too. I'm a fan of first using the allowances to get to the right withholding and using the "withhold more" line to fine tune if still off by a small sum.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered 9 hours ago









          JoeTaxpayerJoeTaxpayer

          146k23236474




          146k23236474













          • If you just want to withhold the $5k extra, it seems easier to me just to do it all on the extra withholding line. No need to go to the tables, just withhold $5k/24 (or 12/26/52 based on your pay period)

            – Kevin
            6 hours ago






          • 2





            And that's why I said Doug's answer works. My preference remains.

            – JoeTaxpayer
            5 hours ago



















          • If you just want to withhold the $5k extra, it seems easier to me just to do it all on the extra withholding line. No need to go to the tables, just withhold $5k/24 (or 12/26/52 based on your pay period)

            – Kevin
            6 hours ago






          • 2





            And that's why I said Doug's answer works. My preference remains.

            – JoeTaxpayer
            5 hours ago

















          If you just want to withhold the $5k extra, it seems easier to me just to do it all on the extra withholding line. No need to go to the tables, just withhold $5k/24 (or 12/26/52 based on your pay period)

          – Kevin
          6 hours ago





          If you just want to withhold the $5k extra, it seems easier to me just to do it all on the extra withholding line. No need to go to the tables, just withhold $5k/24 (or 12/26/52 based on your pay period)

          – Kevin
          6 hours ago




          2




          2





          And that's why I said Doug's answer works. My preference remains.

          – JoeTaxpayer
          5 hours ago





          And that's why I said Doug's answer works. My preference remains.

          – JoeTaxpayer
          5 hours ago













          4














          If you want your employer to withhold more, you don't want to increase what you are calling "exemptions". (They are officially called "allowances.") If you increased them, your employer would withhold even less, so you would owe more at tax time next year, all other things being equal.



          To have you employer withhold more (so you don't owe as much at tax time next year), you can use line 6 of the W-4. Line 6 is "Additional amount, if any, you want withheld from each paycheck". Assuming you have 26 paychecks per year, and you want to have an additional $5000 withheld, enter $192.31 on line 6. ($5000 / 26 = $192.31) Because this year is already well underway, you will have to adjust the denominator to reflect the number of remaining paychecks for this year in order to achieve an additional $5000 of withholding.






          share|improve this answer
























          • Whoops, yeah I meant remove and exemptions/allowances.

            – rrauenza
            7 hours ago
















          4














          If you want your employer to withhold more, you don't want to increase what you are calling "exemptions". (They are officially called "allowances.") If you increased them, your employer would withhold even less, so you would owe more at tax time next year, all other things being equal.



          To have you employer withhold more (so you don't owe as much at tax time next year), you can use line 6 of the W-4. Line 6 is "Additional amount, if any, you want withheld from each paycheck". Assuming you have 26 paychecks per year, and you want to have an additional $5000 withheld, enter $192.31 on line 6. ($5000 / 26 = $192.31) Because this year is already well underway, you will have to adjust the denominator to reflect the number of remaining paychecks for this year in order to achieve an additional $5000 of withholding.






          share|improve this answer
























          • Whoops, yeah I meant remove and exemptions/allowances.

            – rrauenza
            7 hours ago














          4












          4








          4







          If you want your employer to withhold more, you don't want to increase what you are calling "exemptions". (They are officially called "allowances.") If you increased them, your employer would withhold even less, so you would owe more at tax time next year, all other things being equal.



          To have you employer withhold more (so you don't owe as much at tax time next year), you can use line 6 of the W-4. Line 6 is "Additional amount, if any, you want withheld from each paycheck". Assuming you have 26 paychecks per year, and you want to have an additional $5000 withheld, enter $192.31 on line 6. ($5000 / 26 = $192.31) Because this year is already well underway, you will have to adjust the denominator to reflect the number of remaining paychecks for this year in order to achieve an additional $5000 of withholding.






          share|improve this answer













          If you want your employer to withhold more, you don't want to increase what you are calling "exemptions". (They are officially called "allowances.") If you increased them, your employer would withhold even less, so you would owe more at tax time next year, all other things being equal.



          To have you employer withhold more (so you don't owe as much at tax time next year), you can use line 6 of the W-4. Line 6 is "Additional amount, if any, you want withheld from each paycheck". Assuming you have 26 paychecks per year, and you want to have an additional $5000 withheld, enter $192.31 on line 6. ($5000 / 26 = $192.31) Because this year is already well underway, you will have to adjust the denominator to reflect the number of remaining paychecks for this year in order to achieve an additional $5000 of withholding.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered 9 hours ago









          Doug DedenDoug Deden

          2615




          2615













          • Whoops, yeah I meant remove and exemptions/allowances.

            – rrauenza
            7 hours ago



















          • Whoops, yeah I meant remove and exemptions/allowances.

            – rrauenza
            7 hours ago

















          Whoops, yeah I meant remove and exemptions/allowances.

          – rrauenza
          7 hours ago





          Whoops, yeah I meant remove and exemptions/allowances.

          – rrauenza
          7 hours ago





          protected by JoeTaxpayer 39 mins ago



          Thank you for your interest in this question.
          Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



          Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?



          Popular posts from this blog

          Lallio

          Unable to find Lightning Node

          Futebolista