Can I calculate next year's exemptions based on this year's refund/amount owed? The Next CEO of Stack OverflowWhy would you elect to apply a refund to next year's tax bill?Calculating cost effectiveness of a medical plantaxes, ordinary income, and adjusted cost basis for RSUsHow does per-annum depreciation for taxes work after the first year of depreciation?How can I file this year's tax return if I haven't got the refund from last year's return?Is it ok to stop witholding if this year's witholding is greater than last year's tax owed, which was nothing?Can I file early and use refund for last year's IRA contribution?Can I pay estimated taxes based on last year's taxes if I anticipate more income this year?How Can I Pay Next Year's Property Taxes this YearTax Avoidance: Mixing gains and losses in the same tax year?

AB diagonalizable then BA also diagonalizable

New carbon wheel brake pads after use on aluminum wheel?

Can this note be analyzed as a non-chord tone?

Expressing the idea of having a very busy time

Would a completely good Muggle be able to use a wand?

How did Beeri the Hittite come up with naming his daughter Yehudit?

Inexact numbers as keys in Association?

Regression vs Random Forest - Combination of features

Getting Stale Gas Out of a Gas Tank w/out Dropping the Tank

Does Germany produce more waste than the US?

Can Plant Growth be repeatedly cast on the same area to exponentially increase the yield of harvests there (more than twice)?

Traveling with my 5 year old daughter (as the father) without the mother from Germany to Mexico

What connection does MS Office have to Netscape Navigator?

Why is the US ranked as #45 in Press Freedom ratings, despite its extremely permissive free speech laws?

Deriving the equation for variance

Expectation in a stochastic differential equation

0-rank tensor vs vector in 1D

Decide between Polyglossia and Babel for LuaLaTeX in 2019

What happened in Rome, when the western empire "fell"?

If Nick Fury and Coulson already knew about aliens (Kree and Skrull) why did they wait until Thor's appearance to start making weapons?

Purpose of level-shifter with same in and out voltages

Do I need to write [sic] when including a quotation with a number less than 10 that isn't written out?

Is it convenient to ask the journal's editor for two additional days to complete a review?

From jafe to El-Guest



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



The Next CEO of Stack OverflowWhy would you elect to apply a refund to next year's tax bill?Calculating cost effectiveness of a medical plantaxes, ordinary income, and adjusted cost basis for RSUsHow does per-annum depreciation for taxes work after the first year of depreciation?How can I file this year's tax return if I haven't got the refund from last year's return?Is it ok to stop witholding if this year's witholding is greater than last year's tax owed, which was nothing?Can I file early and use refund for last year's IRA contribution?Can I pay estimated taxes based on last year's taxes if I anticipate more income this year?How Can I Pay Next Year's Property Taxes this YearTax Avoidance: Mixing gains and losses in the same tax year?










1















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




























    1















    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


























      1












      1








      1








      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 3 hours ago







      rrauenza

















      asked 5 hours ago









      rrauenzarrauenza

      1234




      1234




















          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          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
            3 hours ago


















          4














          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
            2 hours ago






          • 1





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

            – JoeTaxpayer
            1 hour ago











          Your Answer








          StackExchange.ready(function()
          var channelOptions =
          tags: "".split(" "),
          id: "93"
          ;
          initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

          StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
          // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
          if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
          StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
          createEditor();
          );

          else
          createEditor();

          );

          function createEditor()
          StackExchange.prepareEditor(
          heartbeatType: 'answer',
          autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
          convertImagesToLinks: true,
          noModals: true,
          showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
          reputationToPostImages: 10,
          bindNavPrevention: true,
          postfix: "",
          imageUploader:
          brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
          contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
          allowUrls: true
          ,
          noCode: true, onDemand: true,
          discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
          ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
          );



          );













          draft saved

          draft discarded


















          StackExchange.ready(
          function ()
          StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fmoney.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f107184%2fcan-i-calculate-next-years-exemptions-based-on-this-years-refund-amount-owed%23new-answer', 'question_page');

          );

          Post as a guest















          Required, but never shown

























          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes








          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          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
            3 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
            3 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 5 hours ago









          Doug DedenDoug Deden

          2615




          2615












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

            – rrauenza
            3 hours ago

















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

            – rrauenza
            3 hours ago
















          Whoops, yeah I meant remove and exemptions/allowances.

          – rrauenza
          3 hours ago





          Whoops, yeah I meant remove and exemptions/allowances.

          – rrauenza
          3 hours ago













          4














          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
            2 hours ago






          • 1





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

            – JoeTaxpayer
            1 hour ago















          4














          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
            2 hours ago






          • 1





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

            – JoeTaxpayer
            1 hour ago













          4












          4








          4







          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 5 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
            2 hours ago






          • 1





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

            – JoeTaxpayer
            1 hour 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
            2 hours ago






          • 1





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

            – JoeTaxpayer
            1 hour 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
          2 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
          2 hours ago




          1




          1





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

          – JoeTaxpayer
          1 hour ago





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

          – JoeTaxpayer
          1 hour ago

















          draft saved

          draft discarded
















































          Thanks for contributing an answer to Personal Finance & Money Stack Exchange!


          • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

          But avoid


          • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

          • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

          To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




          draft saved


          draft discarded














          StackExchange.ready(
          function ()
          StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fmoney.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f107184%2fcan-i-calculate-next-years-exemptions-based-on-this-years-refund-amount-owed%23new-answer', 'question_page');

          );

          Post as a guest















          Required, but never shown





















































          Required, but never shown














          Required, but never shown












          Required, but never shown







          Required, but never shown

































          Required, but never shown














          Required, but never shown












          Required, but never shown







          Required, but never shown







          Popular posts from this blog

          Bett Inhaltsverzeichnis Geschichte | Bettformen | Bettgrößen | Andere Bezeichnungen | Bettenmangel | Betten in der bildenden Kunst | Schlafmedizinische Gesichtspunkte | Siehe auch | Literatur | Weblinks | Einzelnachweise | NavigationsmenüBett, Bettstatt, BettstelleCommons: BettBabybetten: Anwendung, Ausstattungsmerkmale und VergleichskriterienWasserbetten. Vorurteile im TestHapfnNursch10.1007/s11818-012-0584-74006250-8AKS4329276-8

          Luksemburg Sisukord Nimi | Asend | Loodus | Riigikord | Haldusjaotus | Rahvastik | Riigikaitse | Majandus | Taristu | Ajalugu | Eesti ja Luksemburgi suhted | Haridus | Kultuur | Vaata ka | Viited | Välislingid | Navigeerimismenüü50° N, 6° EÜlevaade Luksemburgi kaitsealadest.Luksemburgi rahvaarv. Statistikaamet.World Bank'i andmebaasÜlevaade Luksemburgi loodusest.Ülevaade Luksemburgi metsadest.Guy Colling. "Red List of the Vascular Plants of Luxembourg." Travaux scientifiques du Musée national d’histoire naturelle Luxembourg. 2005.Luxembourg’s biodiversity at risk.Maailma kahepaiksete andmebaas.Denis Lepage. "Luxembourg." Avibase.Ülevaade temperatuuridest. Luksemburgi meteoroloogiateenistus.Ülevaade Luksemburgist. Euroopa Liidu esinduse koduleht.Système politique. TerritoireÜlevaade Luksemburgi rahvastikust. Luksemburgi statistikaamet.Luksemburgi rahvastik. Luksemburgi statistikaamet.The World FactbookMonique Borsenberger, Paul Dickes. "Religions au Luxembourg. Quelle évolution entre 1999-2008". Luksemburgi statistikaamet. 2011.Luksemburgi peapiiskopkond. Catholic-Hierarchy.Luksemburgi armee koduleht.Luksemburgi armee relvastus.Eesti Välisministeerium.Luksemburgi rahvastik. Luksemburgi statistikaamet.Luksemburgi Eesti Seltsi koduleht.Helen Eelrand. "Raadio, mis muutis maailma." Eesti Päevaleht. 13. märts 2004.Ülevaade Luksemburgi haridussüsteemist.Ülevaade Luksemburgi keskkoolidest.Luksemburgr

          Valle di Casies Indice Geografia fisica | Origini del nome | Storia | Società | Amministrazione | Sport | Note | Bibliografia | Voci correlate | Altri progetti | Collegamenti esterni | Menu di navigazione46°46′N 12°11′E / 46.766667°N 12.183333°E46.766667; 12.183333 (Valle di Casies)46°46′N 12°11′E / 46.766667°N 12.183333°E46.766667; 12.183333 (Valle di Casies)Sito istituzionaleAstat Censimento della popolazione 2011 - Determinazione della consistenza dei tre gruppi linguistici della Provincia Autonoma di Bolzano-Alto Adige - giugno 2012Numeri e fattiValle di CasiesDato IstatTabella dei gradi/giorno dei Comuni italiani raggruppati per Regione e Provincia26 agosto 1993, n. 412Heraldry of the World: GsiesStatistiche I.StatValCasies.comWikimedia CommonsWikimedia CommonsValle di CasiesSito ufficialeValle di CasiesMM14870458910042978-6