Wisconsin recently passed a new law that allows seniors to reduce their state taxable income by excluding a portion of their retirement income. Starting after December 31, 2024, individuals who are at least 67 years old by the end of the 2025 tax year can subtract up to $24,000 of eligible retirement income on their Wisconsin state 2025 income tax return when filing in early 2026. If you’re married filing jointly and both you and your spouse are 67 or older, you may subtract up to $48,000. Eligible retirement income includes payments from qualified retirement plans, such as a 401 (k), and Individual Retirement Accounts (IRA), as long as they aren’t already excluded under other state or federal rules. For part-year residents of Wisconsin, the amount you can subtract is a prorated amount. Nonresidents cannot claim this subtraction. This subtraction directly reduces your Wisconsin taxable income, but it does not reduce federal income.
Question: A church owns a parsonage, but the pastor does not use it as he owns his own home. The church rents the parsonage to a tenant other than a minister or employee of the church. Will the church be responsible for paying income tax on these monies as Unrelated Business Income (filing a Form 990-T) even if the money is used to carry on the business of the church? Answer: Whether the money is used for church purposes is irrelevant. IRS Publication 598 states: "If an exempt organization regularly carries on a trade or business not substantially related to its exempt purpose, except that it provides funds to carry out that purpose, the organization is subject to tax on its income from that unrelated trade or business." Fortunately, in the case of rental income from real property, such income is "excluded in computing unrelated business taxable income" (Publication 598). Caution: see content below regarding debt-financed property. However, a second concern not a...

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