Stock Dividends Go Mostly to Seniors
The Tax Foundation reported today on their Tax Policy Blog that “seniors earn (the) lion’s share of dividend income according to new IRS data.” Tax Foundation president Scott Hodge blogged:
“The IRS recently released some interesting new tax return data by age group for 2008. Today we'll focus on taxpayers with dividend income because the data sheds light on how seniors will be impacted if the current 15 percent tax rate on dividend income is allowed to expire at the end of 2010 and dividends revert to being taxed at the personal income tax rate, which could go as high as 39.6 percent.
“Of the roughly 142 million tax returns filed in 2008, 26.4 million returns reported nearly $159 billion in dividend income qualifying for the lower 15 percent rate. While 19 percent of all returns reported dividend income, 42 percent of taxpayers over 65 reported dividend income. The age group with the next highest share of dividend earners is those aged 55 to 65.
“Overall, taxpayers over age 55 account for 71 percent of all dividend income earned. The lion's share of dividend income - 48 percent - is earned by those over 65, and dividend income accounts for 6 percent of all the income earned by these taxpayers.”
Visit the Tax Foundation’s Tax Policy blog tomorrow for “capitol gains income by age group.”