tax · 2026-05-01
Project potential Alternative Minimum Tax exposure given AMT income, exemption phase-out, and the 26%/28% AMT rate.
| AMTI (Alternative Minimum Taxable Income) | $280,000 |
| Regular federal tax | $60,000 |
| Filing status | Single (or HoH): exemption $85,700 |
| Total AMT calculation | $50,518 |
| Exemption after phase-out | $85,700 |
| AMT base after exemption | $194,300 |
The Alternative Minimum Tax was created to ensure high-income filers pay at least a minimum tax, regardless of how many deductions they claim. You compute regular tax AND AMT — pay whichever is higher.
The 2017 TCJA gutted AMT exposure for most filers by raising exemptions and phase-out thresholds dramatically. Pre-TCJA: ~5M filers owed AMT. Post-TCJA: ~200,000.
The remaining AMT-prone profiles:
AMTI = AGI + AMT preferences/adjustments
exemption = $85,700 single (2024) [phase-out at $609k+]
AMT base = AMTI − exemption (after phase-out)
tentative AMT = 26% on first $232,600, 28% above
AMT owed = tentative AMT − regular tax (if positive)
Exercising Incentive Stock Options without selling triggers AMT. The "bargain element" (FMV − strike price × shares) becomes an AMT preference. You can owe AMT on PHANTOM income — money you never received because you didn't sell. This is why early-employee ISO exercises often need careful coordination with tax timing.
AMT paid creates a credit (Min Tax Credit) usable in future years when regular tax exceeds AMT. So an ISO-AMT year produces a credit you can recover on subsequent stock sales when LTCG drives regular tax above AMT.
Most modern tax software (TurboTax, FreeTaxUSA) calculates AMT in parallel automatically. The two-minute check: if your AGI > $300k AND you're either exercising ISOs or living in a high-tax state with big SALT addbacks, AMT is plausible. AGI < $300k post-TCJA: rarely owe AMT.
Yes — Min Tax Credit (Form 8801). AMT paid one year creates a credit usable in future years against regular tax to the extent regular tax exceeds AMT. So an ISO-AMT hit in year 1 followed by stock sale at LTCG in year 5 typically recovers most of the AMT via the credit.
For 2024: exemption phases out $1 for every $4 of AMTI over $609,350 single / $1,218,700 MFJ. Exemption fully phased out at AMTI of ~$952k single / ~$1.75M MFJ. Above those, no exemption shelter at all — AMT applies to full AMTI minus zero exemption.