Processing Your Payment

Please do not leave this page until complete. This can take a few moments.

December 31, 2015

Cuts to Maine's income, estate taxes now in effect

Courtesy of Pixabay

New laws going into effect this year will lower the amount most working Mainers pay in income taxes and give tax cuts to heirs of wealthy or land-rich residents.

The changes, among dozens of new laws going into effect Jan. 1,  were part of the two-year, $6.7 billion state budget passed by lawmakers in June.

The Portland Press Herald reported that the state’s top income tax rate will fall from 7.95% to 7.15%. The income threshold for the top rate will also increase from $20,900 to $37,500, leading to residents making between $21,050 and $37,500 to see their income tax rate drop down to 6.75%. Those making less than $21,050 will be taxed at 5.8%, according to the Press Herald.

The other major tax law change going into effect Jan. 1 is a more than doubling of the exemption threshold of Maine’s estate tax. Estates valued at nearly $5.5 million will be exempt from the tax. Currently, estates valued at $2 million or more are subject to the tax.

Molly Liddell, a partner in Pierce Atwood LLP’s trusts and estates group, told the Press Herald the law is “easily the most significant change in Maine estate tax policy in a decade.”

To help pay for the tax cuts, lawmakers kept the sales tax at 5.5%, as it’s been since October 2013, instead of allowing it to fall back to 5% as originally planned. Lawmakers also increased the lodging tax on hotel rooms from 8% to 9% and eliminated sales-tax exemptions on hundreds of goods and services.

Read more

Mainers should buy beef jerky, gummy bears and marshmallows before Friday

Mainers should buy beef jerky, gummy bears and marshmallows before Friday

Sign up for Enews

Comments

Order a PDF