How the New Tax Cuts and Jobs Act Impact the Art World (2024)

How the New Tax Cuts and Jobs Act Impact the Art World (1)

(graphic Hrag Vartanian/Hyperallergic, original imageviaCredit Score Blog)

The tax law changes passed in 2017, officially the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA), represent the largest change to the tax code in 30 years. With so many changes, Hyperallergic wants to address — in this and future articles — how the legislation will affect the art world.

One area in particular that impacts almost everyone in the art world — from artists, to collectors and patrons, to cultural institutions — is charitable giving.

While the TCJA will affect many aspects of charitable giving, we’ll begin here with a broad picture. The effects of the new tax law will be very different depending on your income level. The wealthiest will have even more incentive to give, while the average middle class family will have less.

Interestingly, the rules for charitable giving themselves barely changed. This may be one reason why there wasn’t much fuss over the dramatic consequences the law would have on non profits while the bill was being drafted. Of course, the bill was passed at such breakneck speed, and without bipartisan input, that there was little time for public debate and the digesting of secondary effects. In my opinion as an artist, an accountant, and a citizen, the effects I outline below make a strong case for traditional protocols including a longer period for deliberation and public comment, befitting massive legislation. Tax changes can have serious ripple effects, which must be fully understood by institutions and the public before they are put into effect. This benefits everyone, regardless of political leanings; whether you’re donating to the Southern Baptist Convention or MoMA, nonprofits can’t function without your contributions.

The one direct change to charitable giving is the TCJA will benefit the very wealthy. The limit on deducting your cash charitable contributions (as opposed to property or stocks) for the year has been raised from 50% of adjusted gross income to 60%. In other words, you can now donate 60% of your adjusted gross income and get a full tax deduction this year. (You can actually donate even more, you just have to postpone the rest of the deduction to subsequent years) Obviously this limit benefits those who can afford to live on substantially less than their full income — so it tends to be relevant to only very high income people.

The TCJA also has indirect consequences for charitable giving — quite a few. The biggest comes from a basic shift in the tax structure for many Americans. Under the new tax law, many people who have previously itemized deductions on their taxes will now be taking the standard deduction. Why does this matter? Charitable contributions are only tax deductible for you if you itemize. Here’s a refresher on what it means to itemize. All taxpayers get an initial chunk of their income tax-free. You can choose to either take the standard deduction or you can itemize your deductions. The standard deduction is a fixed amount, while itemizing is variable and based on whether you have large itemizable deductions or not; the biggest three are mortgage interest, aggregate state and local taxes, and charitable contributions.

If your itemized deductions are greater than the standard deduction amount ($6,350 for an individual or $12,700 for a couple in 2017) – in other words, if you pay more in combined mortgage interest, state and local taxes, and charitable contributions than the standard deduction amount — then itemizing your deductions results in a larger tax-free amount of income.

The new law roughly doubles the standard deduction to $24,000 for a married couple and $12,000 for an individual — again, this is up from $12,700 and $6,350, respectively. But before you get too excited about this, note that the personal exemption — $4050 for each member of your household — has been eliminated across the board, which largely cancels out the benefit.

The doubled standard deduction means that many taxpayers who are used to itemizing deductions will take the standard deduction going forward, because their itemized deductions would have to be almost twice as high now for itemizing to make sense.

Another factor reducing the number of people who itemize is the TCJA’s new $10,000 limit on state and local tax deductions. This is the most overtly partisan part of the tax bill, and high tax states, such as New York and California, are scrambling to minimize the damage it will do to them. To illustrate the effects on the individual level, if you had aggregate New York state and city income taxes of $20,000, plus $10,000 of property tax, under the old laws, you could deduct that full $30,000 on your Federal income taxes. Under the TCJA, your maximum deduction is now $10,000. So, if you are married, and have $30,000 of state and local taxes, $12,000 of mortgage interest and made $1000 of charitable contributions, your itemizable deductions are now $23,000 ($10,000 capped state and local tax + $12,000 mortgage interest + $1000 charitable contribution) instead of $43,000 (full $30,000 state and local tax + $12,000 mortgage interest + $1000 charitable contribution). That’s below the new $24,000 standard deduction, so you won’t be itemizing anymore at all. And because of that, your charitable contributions are no longer tax deductible for you.

According to the nonpartisan Tax Policy Center, the TCJA will cause 21 million Americans to stop taking the charitable deduction. Among middle-income households, the share of taxpayers claiming charitable deductions will drop from 17 percent to 5.5 percent.

For the households still able to itemize deductions, the value of the charitable contribution deduction drops, because the tax rate is lower. When tax rates go down, tax savings from a deduction are lessened. While this may not stop someone from making a donation, it may reduce the dollar amount they give, and cumulatively across the US, this will reduce charitable giving.

On the collector end of the spectrum, the (almost) doubling of the estate tax exemption to $22 million for couples means that bequests made for tax-benefit reasons will drop.

How will these changes affect the art world? We don’t know yet. My guess is that smaller arts organizations that depend on donations in the $50 to $250 range will be hit hardest, as middle-income taxpayers lose their charitable giving tax incentive. Will institutions direct their focus away from the middle class and redouble their efforts to solicit high-dollar donations from wealthy donors? Will this push arts institutions further up into an ivory tower? Will museum collections suffer from the ultra-wealthy no longer making tax-free bequests to avoid the estate tax? How will arts nonprofits shift their strategies to solicit contributions? Only time will tell. Arts nonprofits do good work, and will continue to do so. And many people will continue to give to them, to support this work. But any economist will tell you that incentives matter — and, under the TCJA, the incentives for charitable giving just got worse.

DISCLAIMER: True tax advice is a two-way conversation, and your accountant needs to hear your full situation to apply the rules correctly in your case. This post is meant for general information only. Please don’t act on this alone. Hannah Colewould love to hear your tax and money questions for future articles here.

How the New Tax Cuts and Jobs Act Impact the Art World (2024)

FAQs

What was the impact of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act? ›

The Tax Cut and Jobs Act (TCJA) reduced statutory tax rates at almost all levels of taxable income and shifted the thresholds for several income tax brackets (table 1). As under prior law, the tax brackets are indexed for inflation but using a different inflation index (see below).

What were the effects of the Tax Reduction Act? ›

The Tax Reduction Act cut business taxes by increasing the invest- ment tax credit and the corporate surtax exemption and by reducing the corporate tax rate on the first $25,000 of taxable income. These tax cuts are also only temporary, and their extension is analyzed in the pamphlet on. capital formation.

How did the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 TCJA impact estate planning? ›

Be strategic about estate planning

One of the biggest changes from the TCJA involves the lifetime exemption for the estate tax. The exemption essentially doubled, which is currently $13.61 million for individuals and $27.22 million for married couples filing jointly.

How to avoid taxes with art? ›

In the U.S., tax on art sales vary from state to state, with no sales tax in Montana, New Hampshire and Oregon. If the artwork is shipped to another state after it's purchased, you'll pay use tax instead of sales tax. You can avoid sales and use tax by immediately shipping artwork to a freeport for storage.

What is the impact of the Jobs Act? ›

The JOBS Act encouraged economic activity in the public market by incentivizing smaller companies to go public.

What do tax cuts affect? ›

Tax cuts reduce government revenues and create either a budget deficit or increased sovereign debt. The federal tax system relies on several taxes to generate revenue, including income tax and payroll tax.

Are Trump tax breaks still in effect? ›

Extending the Trump tax cuts that expire at the end of 2025 — namely, the law's individual income and estate tax provisions — would provide further windfall benefits to high-income households. These cuts would come on top of the large benefits they would continue to receive from the 2017 tax law's permanent provisions.

What are taxes and how do they impact our society? ›

Taxes provide revenue for federal, local, and state governments to fund essential services--defense, highways, police, a justice system--that benefit all citizens, who could not provide such services very effectively for themselves.

How did the New Deal affect taxes? ›

President Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal programs forced an increase in taxes to generate needed funds. The Revenue Act of 1935 introduced the Wealth Tax, a new progressive tax that took up to 75 percent of the highest incomes. Many wealthy people used loopholes in the tax code.

What changes did TCJA make? ›

The TCJA created a modified territorial tax system. US corporations continue to owe US taxes on the profits they earn domestically. But TCJA exempted from taxation the dividends that domestic corporations receive from foreign corporations in which they own at least a 10 percent stake.

What were the results of the TCJA? ›

The new law simplifies taxes in some ways but creates new complexity and compliance issues in others. It will raise health care premiums and reduce health insurance coverage. It will affect activities in many sectors, including state and local public spending, charitable organizations, and housing.

What impacts did the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act have on the Affordable Care Act? ›

The law makes multiple changes to the taxation of individuals and corporations. It also repeals the Affordable Care Act's (ACA's) individual mandate penalties, which will erase some of the gains in insurance coverage achieved since implementation of the ACA's coverage expansions.

How does art affect taxes? ›

The Works of Art Exemption applies to artwork that is generally assessable except that it is loaned to a qualifying museum or art gallery. Assessable works of art include, but not limited to those displayed in a for-profit museum or gallery or those displayed in a business or office (i.e. décor).

Do artists have to pay taxes? ›

All income, including income from art sales, is taxed as ordinary income (IRC §§ 61, 64). If expenses are ordinary and necessary, they can be deducted under IRC § 162.

Do artists get tax breaks? ›

Materials & Supplies

Any hard materials you use to make your artwork can be deducted from your taxes. This includes your supplies, raw materials, electricity that might be used to create your work, and frames. These materials are generally things you use up within the year (think paint, clay, glaze, canvases, etc.)

What were the effects of the tax Reduction Act of 1964? ›

reduced top marginal rate (on income over $100,000, roughly $848,000 in 2021 dollars, for individuals; and over $180,000; roughly $1,527,000 in 2021 dollars, for heads of households) from 91% to 70% reduced corporate tax rate from 52% to 48% phased-in acceleration of corporate estimated tax payments (through 1970)

What were the goals promises of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act? ›

The TCJA was motivated by four principal objectives: tax relief for middle- income families, simplification of the personal income tax code, economic growth through business tax relief and increased domestic investment, and repatriation of overseas earnings.

How does the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act affect retirement plans? ›

The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act increases the period during which a qualified plan loan offset amount may be contributed to an eligible retirement plan as a rollover contribution from 60 days after the date of the offset to the due date (including extensions) for filing the Federal income tax return for the tax year in which ...

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