Tax Data, Charts, and Maps
Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT)
The original role of the Alternative Minimum Tax, introduced in 1969, was to prevent a small group of high-income taxpayers from combining so many deductions and exemptions that they owed little or no income tax. The AMT identifies taxpayers who have taken "excessive" advantage of legal tax breaks and forces them to re-calculate their income tax. They must add back in some of the previously untaxed income, take a special AMT exemption and pay tax on this new definition of taxable income at different rates. In theory, the AMT serves as a tax backstop, taxing income that would have escaped taxation. Recently there have been calls for AMT reform, but the key to reforming it lies in the regular tax code: curtailing the myriad exclusions, deductions, exemptions, and credits in the code would make it possible to expand the tax base and raise the same revenue with lower tax rates.
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Tax Data from The Tax Foundation
- Impact of the Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) by County, 2005, September 24, 2007
- Impact of the Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) by Major City Areas, 2005 , September 24, 2007
- Impact of the Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) by Congressional District, 2005 , September 24, 2007
- Impact of the Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) by State, 2005 , July 18, 2007
- Impact of Bush Tax Cuts on AMT and Non-AMT Returns for 2007 Under Current Law, May 31, 2007
- History of Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) Returns and Liabilities, 1970-2005, February 22, 2007