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Top 1%: What they made, what they paid

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In 2012, it took at least $435,00 in adjusted gross income to be considered one of the fabled top 1% households, according to the latest data from the IRS.

In 2012, it took at least $435,00 in adjusted gross income to be considered one of the fabled top 1% households, according to the latest data from the IRS.

What does it take to make it into the top 1%?

In 2012, it took at least $435,000 in adjusted gross income to be considered one of the fabled top 1% households, according to the latest data from the IRS.

That’s a healthy jump from the $389,000 it took the year before, especially considering how low inflation has been in recent years.

The number of people admitted to this exclusive club: nearly 1.4 million households.

Collectively, the top 1% made about 22% of all income reported in 2012, but paid 38% of total federal income taxes collected.

On a per-household basis, however, the average top 1%-er paid just under 23% of their income in federal taxes, which was down slightly from the year before — and well below the more than 27% the group was paying in 2001.

Since 2012, of course, several tax increases on high-income households have gone into effect as a result of the fiscal cliff deal and the Affordable Care Act.