Jeff and Maggie deduct the entire self-employed health insurance premiums on the federal return; therefore, they do not include those expenses in the calculation of the subtraction. They can only include the $8,900 of medical expenses claimed on Schedule A, line 1, to calculate the subtraction ($1,200 for Jeff, $4,200 for Maggie, $1,500 for Maggie's mother, and $2,000 in long-term care insurance premiums for Jeff and Maggie).
For Jeff and Maggie, a reasonable method to calculate their joint expenses is to divide by two the total long-term care insurance premiums paid ($2,000) to arrive at $1,000 for each individual. Add the additional medical expenses attributable to Jeff and Maggie to arrive at total eligible expenses before calculating the subtraction. Jeff's expenses total $2,200 ($1,200 + $1,000) and Maggie's expenses total $5,200 ($4,200 + $1,000).
Jeff's expenses claimed on the Schedule A are 24.7% of the total expenses ($2,200 divided by $8,900). Maggie's expenses claimed on the Schedule A are 58.4% of the total expenses ($5,200 divided by $8,900). Jeff and Maggie could not deduct $5,500 of their expenses on Schedule A because of the AGI limitation. Jeff's portion of the expenses that were not deducted are $1,359 ($5,500 x 24.7%; rounded). Maggie's portion of the expenses that were not deducted is $3,212 ($5,500 x 58.4%). Based on their federal AGI, each of their expenses may not exceed $1,400 for this subtraction. Jeff's expenses are less than the limit, so his subtraction is limited to $1,359. Maggie's expenses are more than the limit, so her subtraction is $1,400. They will claim a $2,759 special Oregon medical subtraction on their return.
Or. Admin. Code § 150-316-0550
Stat. Auth.: ORS 305.100 & 316.693
Stats. Implemented: ORS 316.693