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okieh56
2 years ago

Of course, the part of the widow’s pension to be taxed is also counted, it is his income. But he has a free allowance for both pensions.

Taxes payable if his taxable income (grossors minus allowances) minus pension expenses (sickness and nursing insurance) and the allowances to be deducted are the basic amount of the current € 10.347 exceeding.

There are more and more pensioners who are taxable by the widow/ widower’s pension, because the allowance for the pension does not increase – so every pension increase is fully taxable.

DerHans
2 years ago

If it is taxable, this is of course the sum of both pensions. In fact, however, only the “income share” is taxable. This depends on how old it was when the insurance case came.

Stefan1248
2 years ago

Yes, the widow’s pension is also part of the tax payable. It is treated as the “own” pension

kevin1905
2 years ago

The gross pension is decisive, not the net pension which the pensioner receives.

I also cannot imagine that the tax burden is so high in view of the allowances.

  • What year was the start of retirement?
  • How high is the annual gross pension?
  • How high was the gross pension in the year of the first full pension cover?
  • What health insurance?
  • Are there any other income (renting, capital income, side jobs, etc.)?
lowad
2 years ago

Yes is partially counted. The tax-free part is determined in the following year of the first pension cover of the widow’s pension. It is then written to life. The rest of the pension is then subject to taxation.

wollyuno
2 years ago

It is expected that, in my opinion, no other