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What Is AGI (Adjusted Gross Income)? Your 2024 Guide

Adjusted Gross Income (AGI) is your total gross income minus specific “above-the-line” deductions. It's the number on Line 11 of your Form 1040. Your AGI determines eligibility for dozens of tax credits, deductions, and programs — and lowering it is one of the best tax strategies available.

What Is AGI?

The IRS uses AGI as a starting point for calculating your actual tax bill. The name tells you exactly what it is:

  • Gross Income — everything you earned (wages, self-employment, investment income, etc.)
  • Adjusted — minus certain deductions you can take even if you don't itemize

After calculating AGI, you then subtract either the standard deduction or itemized deductions to arrive at your taxable income.

The Tax Calculation Chain

Gross Income → subtract above-the-line deductions → AGI → subtract standard/itemized deductions → Taxable Income → apply tax brackets → Tax Owed

Above-the-Line Deductions That Reduce AGI

Deduction2024 Limit
Traditional IRA contributions$7,000 ($8,000 if 50+)
401(k) contributions (via payroll)$23,000 ($30,500 if 50+)
HSA contributions$4,150 (self) / $8,300 (family)
Student loan interestUp to $2,500
Self-employment tax (half)50% of SE tax paid
Self-employed health insurance100% of premiums
SEP IRA / SIMPLE IRA contributionsVaries
Alimony paid (pre-2019 divorces)Amount paid
Educator expensesUp to $300
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Why Your AGI Matters So Much

Your AGI acts as a gatekeeper for dozens of tax benefits. Many credits and deductions phase out as your AGI rises:

  • Roth IRA eligibility — phases out at $146,000–$161,000 (single) in 2024
  • Child Tax Credit — phases out at $200,000 (single) / $400,000 (married)
  • American Opportunity Credit — phases out at $80,000–$90,000 (single)
  • IRA deductibility — phases out based on income and plan participation
  • Student loan interest deduction — phases out at $75,000–$90,000 (single)
  • Medicare premium surcharges (IRMAA) — triggered by high AGI

AGI vs. MAGI: What's the Difference?

MAGI (Modified Adjusted Gross Income) is your AGI with certain deductions added back. For most people with straightforward finances, AGI and MAGI are the same or very close. But for Roth IRA eligibility and ACA marketplace subsidies, MAGI is the number that counts.

How to Lower Your AGI

Reducing AGI is a multiplier strategy — it simultaneously lowers your tax bracket AND unlocks more deductions and credits.

  • Maximize 401(k) traditional contributions — biggest single lever for most workers
  • Contribute to an HSA — triple tax advantage
  • Fund a traditional IRA — if you're eligible for the deduction
  • Self-employed? Contribute to a SEP IRA — up to 25% of net self-employment income
  • Contribute to a 403(b) or 457(b) if your employer offers one