US Common Passive Income Tax Estimator
What is Passive Income?
Passive income is generally defined as income from either a trade or business in which you do not materially participate, or rental activity. Unlike earned income (from a job or active business), passive income often requires little to no active effort on your part once the income stream is established.
Common examples of passive income streams include:
- Rental income from real estate.
- Earnings from businesses where you are a passive investor (e.g., limited partnerships).
- Royalties from intellectual property you did not create through active effort.
Income from interest and dividends is often considered portfolio income, but it shares characteristics with passive income in that it typically doesn't require active participation to earn. For simplicity, this tool includes interest and dividends in the estimation.
How Common Passive Income is Taxed:
The U.S. federal tax treatment of passive and portfolio income varies:
- Interest Income: Generally taxed at your ordinary individual income tax rates.
- Ordinary Dividends: Generally taxed at your ordinary individual income tax rates.
- Qualified Dividends: May be taxed at lower long-term capital gains rates (0%, 15%, or 20%), depending on your overall taxable income.
- Net Rental Income: Reported on Schedule E. Generally considered passive income and taxed at your ordinary individual income tax rates. Deductible rental expenses (including depreciation) can offset rental income. Passive losses may be subject to limitations.
This tool focuses on estimating tax on common passive income streams. Complex rules apply, especially regarding passive activity losses (PAL) and material participation.
Enter your estimated annual passive income amounts and the marginal tax rates you expect to apply. **You need to determine your expected tax rates based on your total taxable income.**
Your rental income minus deductible rental expenses (mortgage interest, property taxes, repairs, depreciation, etc.) reported on Schedule E.
Your Estimated Marginal Tax Rates:
These rates depend on your *total* taxable income from all sources. Refer to the current year's U.S. federal income tax brackets.
Rate applicable to Interest, Ordinary Dividends, and Net Rental Income.
Rate applicable to Qualified Dividends (typically 0%, 15%, or 20%).
Tax rates vary based on your total income and filing status. Ensure the rates you enter reflect your expected marginal rates.
Estimated Federal Income Tax on Passive Income
Based on your estimated income amounts and assumed marginal tax rates.
Income Type | Estimated Income | Assumed Tax Rate | Estimated Tax |
---|---|---|---|
Interest Income | $0.00 | 0% | $0.00 |
Ordinary Dividend Income | $0.00 | 0% | $0.00 |
Qualified Dividend Income | $0.00 | 0% | $0.00 |
Net Rental Income | $0.00 | 0% | $0.00 |
TOTAL ESTIMATED TAX ON PASSIVE INCOME | $0.00 |
Important Limitations and Considerations:
- This tool provides a simplified estimate based on the rates you enter. Your actual marginal tax rates depend on your *total taxable income* from all sources, including wages, active business income, other passive income, etc.
- Passive Activity Loss (PAL) Rules: If you have a net *loss* from rental activities or other passive activities, there are strict rules limiting the amount you can deduct in the current year. This tool does not incorporate PAL rules or calculate loss limitations.
- Other types of passive income (e.g., royalties not from rental/business, income/loss from passive partnerships/S-corps) may have different reporting or limitations not covered here.
- State income taxes on passive income also apply and vary significantly.
- Tax laws and rates change annually.
This estimator helps illustrate the potential federal income tax impact of certain passive income streams based on assumed rates. It is not a substitute for professional tax advice or tax preparation software.
Estimate is based on user-inputted income amounts and tax rates. Actual tax liability depends on your overall financial situation and current tax laws.