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LINCOME TAX RELIEF

Hoops star Jeremy Lin saves $1 million per year in taxes moving to Texas.

Jeremy Lin took the NBA by storm in 2012, rising from undrafted Harvard grad to one of the most popular New York Knicks players in a decade. Lin led the Knicks to wins in his first six starts, and became the first player in NBA history to score 20 points and record seven assists in each of his first five starts. After a last-second game-winning three pointer against the Toronto Raptors, his rise to stardom was known ubiquitously as “Linsanity.”

After signing a three year, $25.1 million contract with the Houston Rockets, Lin moves from one of the highest taxed states in the country to one of the lowest. As a Knick, Lin paid a top state income tax rate of 8.82 percent, with New York City piling on at 3.876 percent. As a Houston Rocket, however, he will have no state or local tax burden.

At an average salary of $8,366,667, Lin will save over $1 million annually in state and local income taxes.

NEW YORK INCOME STATE TAX BURDEN

$717,382.03 PER YEAR

NEW YORK INCOME CITY TAX BURDEN

$323,034.01 PER YEAR

TEXAS STATE INCOME TAX BURDEN

$0 PER YEAR

HOUSTON INCOME CITY TAX BURDEN

$0 PER YEAR

TOTAL INCOME TAX SAVINGS

$1,040,416.04 PER YEAR

In total, Jeremy Lin will save over $3.12 million in income taxes over the life of his contract with the Rockets. Factoring in his endorsement earnings, the number climbs even higher.

Just as the Rockets will compete against the Knicks on the basketball court, Texas and New York are competitors in the economic sphere. New York’s crushing tax burden is a compelling factor in chasing elite athletic talent to states like Texas, just as it has steadily pushed job creators and families out of the state.

This should not be a surprise, as the nine no-income tax states have consistently outperformed the high-tax states, like New York, over the past decade. According to the 2012 American Legislative Exchange Council’s Rich States, Poor States report:

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Posted by Joshua Culling on Wednesday, July 18, 2012 10:43 AM EDT

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Printed from: http://www.atr.org/lincome-tax-relief-a7050?print=true