What Are the Different Types of “Income?”

When I was a kid, I thought income was income was income. If you get paid for something, it’s “income.”

It wasn’t until I got older that I started learning that there are different types of income; with each getting its own special tax treatment. It’s important to understand this because it can impact how much of that income you get to keep.

The three major types of income are:

  • Earned income
  • Passive income
  • Capital gains

Earned and passive income are both taxed as ordinary income but earned income is also subject to FICA taxes. Capital gains can be taxed either as ordinary income or as long term capital gains depending on how long you held the asset. If you owned the asset for over a year the appreciation is taxed at a lower rate.

Table of Contents
  1. Gross Income
    1. Adjusted Gross Income
  2. Earned Income
  3. Passive Income
    1. Dividends
  4. Capital Gains
    1. Short Term Capital Gains
    2. Long Term Capital Gains
  5. Excluded Income
  6. Summary

Gross Income

First off, let’s set the stage for a number that’s important but rarely used – your gross income.

Your gross income is all the income you earned or received in a year.

Think about your W-2 income from your job. Let’s say your salary is $50,000 a year, but your paychecks don’t actually equal $50,000 because you have a lot of deductions. You might be contributing to your 401(k), paying for health insurance, and paying taxes. 

Your actual paychecks are quite a bit less than your salary of $50,000.

Yet, in this case, $50,000 is your gross income. What you actually receive is your “net income”.

For tax purposes, your annual gross income includes your wages from your job but also bank interest, dividends from investments, capital gains, rental income, etc. If it was paid out to you, it’s gross income.

As a kid, when I thought income was income, I was thinking of gross total income. Fortunately, gross income is rarely used for tax purposes. They use a different measure, adjusted gross income.

Adjusted Gross Income

A sub-category of gross income is Adjusted Gross Income, or AGI. Your AGI is your gross income minus a series of deductions that the tax code has chosen. These include items like retirement contributions, such as to a 401(k), healthcare savings account contributions, alimony, moving expenses, education expenses, etc.

Deductions lower your taxable income. 

Adjusted Gross Income follows the same line of thinking as figuring the net pay of your paycheck. You start out with your Gross Income and then start subtracting things to find your AGI. The things you can subtract are your deductions. 

Going back to our example from above, if you put $10,000 into your 401(k) then your Gross Income is $50,000 but your AGI is now $40,000 since contributions to a 401(k) are deductible. 

If you’re looking at a Form 1040 (2023), it is on Line 11.

Earned Income

Earned income is the money you earn from doing work. You could be a full-time employee at a company with your earnings reported on a Form W-2. You could be a contractor working at a company through an agency or independently with your earnings reported on a Form 1099.

The important point is that you are paid for work that you are actively doing. If you didn’t show up or didn’t produce the work product, then you wouldn’t have gotten paid. That’s earned income.

Earned income is taxed by the federal government at ordinary income rates. This is determined by your tax bracket. Here are the current tax brackets if you want to see where you fall. 

On top of income taxes, you’ll also have to pay FICA – which stands for the Federal Insurance Contributions Act and refers to Social Security and Medicare. In total, you pay 12.4% for Social Security and 2.9% for Medicare. If you are self-employed you pay this entire amount. If you are a W-2 employee you’ll only pay half and your employer covers the other half for you. 

Note: you only pay Social Security on wages below the Social Security Wage Base ($160,200 for 2023).

Earned income is taxed at the highest possible rates because of the combination of ordinary income rates plus the FICA contributions. 

Passive Income

Oftentimes, when people talk about passive income, they mean income that requires no ongoing work. I love passive income streams.

But within the context of taxes, it has a very specific meaning because passive income is not subject to the FICA tax.

The IRS has two groupings for what it considers passive:

  • Real estate rentals – rental of property or equipment
  • Businesses – where you do not “materially participate on a regular, continuous, and substantial basis”

Some businesses may involve real estate but the point is that you made an investment, you don’t “materially participate” in the business, and you simply get a distribution check.

When you get paid from a passive activity, you will pay income taxes on that income but won’t be responsible for FICA.

If you have a savings account, you earn interest from your savings in that account. If you participated in a new account bank bonus (where you are paid hundreds of dollars to open an account with a bank), that money is reported as interest. That’s “passive” even though you did something to open the account.

A prime example of this is when I made an investment in a farm on AcreTrader. It’s a corn and soybean farm in Illinois with a projected net annual return of 9.2% (4.3% cash yield) and the structure is that I’m a limited partner in a company that owns just that farm. I do not materially participate in the business (I don’t do anything) and distributions are taxed at my ordinary income rates.

Dividends

A common form of passive income is dividends. For tax purposes, there are two kinds of dividends – ordinary and qualified. 

Ordinary dividends are taxed as ordinary income, while qualified dividends are taxed as long term capital gains (explained below). 

Most of the dividends you will receive will be qualified. Qualified dividends meet certain IRS rules such as that the dividend was paid by a US or a qualifying foreign company. A few notable exceptions to this rule are master limited partnerships and REITS.

The IRS also requires you to hold shares of a stock for at least 60 days during the 121 days around a dividend payout date. If you don’t, then otherwise qualified dividends are treated as ordinary dividends.

Capital Gains

Capital gains are when you sell assets that have appreciated, such as stock or real estate. You will pay taxes on the appreciation – not the sale price. 

The tax rate you are charged depends on how long you’ve held the asset before you sold it. If you held the asset for less than a year, you pay short term capital gains rates. If you hold the asset for over a year, you pay long term capital gains rates. 

Short Term Capital Gains

Short term capital gains rates are charged if you hold the asset for less than a year. The appreciation of the asset is taxed at the same rate as your earned income. You do not have to pay FICA taxes, only income taxes. 

For example, if you buy a stock on January 1st for $100 and sell it on November 1st for $150 you will owe income taxes on the $50 you made from this transaction. If you are in the 22% tax bracket then you will owe $11. 

Long Term Capital Gains

Long term capital gains are charged if you hold the asset for over a year. In this case, the appreciation is taxed at long term capital gains rates, rather than at your ordinary income tax rate. 

Long term capital gains rates are 0%, 15%, or 20% depending on your income.

Filing Status0% Rate15% Rate20% Rate
SingleUp to $44,625$44,626 to $492,300Over $492,300
Head of HouseholdUp to $59,750$59,751 to $523,050Over $523,050
Married Filing JointlyUp to $89,250$89,251 to $553,850Over $553,850
Married Filing SeparatelyUp to $44,625$44,626 to $276,900Over $276,900

For 2024, the rates will be:

Filing Status0% Rate15% Rate20% Rate
SingleUp to $47,025$63,001 to $551,350Over $518.900
Head of HouseholdUp to $63,000$63,001 to $551,350Over $551,350
Married Filing JointlyUp to $94,050$94,051 to $583,750Over $583,750
Married Filing SeparatelyUp to $47,025$47,025 to $291,850Over $291,850

Additionally, there is a net investment income tax (NIIT) of 3.8% if your income is over a certain amount (for 2023):

  • Single or Head of Household filers – $200,000
  • Married filing jointly – $250,000
  • Married filing separately – $125,000
  • Qualifying widow(er) with child – $250,000

Excluded Income

There are a few other sources of income that, by tax code, are permitted to be excluded from your income. In these instances, you simply don’t include them in your return as income.

The most well known is the one related to when you sell your home. It’s sometimes called the home sale exclusion and it lets you not report up to $250,000 of capital gains ($500,000 for married couples). If you sell your primary residence and the gain is less than that amount, you simply don’t include it. It’s as if it never happened.

A lesser known exclusion is the Augusta Rule – if you rent your home out for 14 or fewer days in a year, that rental income is tax free. But these sources of income are, by tax code, excluded.

Summary

There are many types of income and each income source has its own tax rules. Earned income is the most heavily taxed as it’s taxed at ordinary income tax rates and is subject to FICA taxes. Passive income is taxed as ordinary income but is not subject to FICA taxes.

Finally, capital gains can be taxed at either ordinary income or at the more favorable long term capital gains rates, depending on how long you held the asset. 

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About Jim Wang

Jim Wang is a forty-something father of four who is a frequent contributor to Forbes and Vanguard's Blog. He has also been fortunate to have appeared in the New York Times, Baltimore Sun, Entrepreneur, and Marketplace Money.

Jim has a B.S. in Computer Science and Economics from Carnegie Mellon University, an M.S. in Information Technology - Software Engineering from Carnegie Mellon University, as well as a Masters in Business Administration from Johns Hopkins University. His approach to personal finance is that of an engineer, breaking down complex subjects into bite-sized easily understood concepts that you can use in your daily life.

One of his favorite tools (here's my treasure chest of tools,, everything I use) is Personal Capital, which enables him to manage his finances in just 15-minutes each month. They also offer financial planning, such as a Retirement Planning Tool that can tell you if you're on track to retire when you want. It's free.

He is also diversifying his investment portfolio by adding a little bit of real estate. But not rental homes, because he doesn't want a second job, it's diversified small investments in a few commercial properties and farms in Illinois, Louisiana, and California through AcreTrader.

Recently, he's invested in a few pieces of art on Masterworks too.

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Opinions expressed here are the author's alone, not those of any bank or financial institution. This content has not been reviewed, approved or otherwise endorsed by any of these entities.

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