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5 Tax
Saving Strategies for Individuals
If you are caring for a friend, you can
deduct their personal exemption.
This tax break is for anyone supporting a friend
financially. You may be able to deduct your friend's
personal exemption of $2,650 on your own income tax return
as long as these requirements are met; (1) You provide more
than one half of your friend's support during the year, (2)
your friend is a member of your household for the entire
year, (3) your friend's income is less than the exemption
(less than $2,650) and (4) your friend is a U.S. citizen or
resident.
Why should your friend let you use his or
her personal exemption on your income tax return? Because
when people have little or no income, their standard
deduction, by itself, is large enough to squash any income
tax they might owe. They eliminate the possibility of their
exemption going to waste by giving it to someone else.
Contact us to find out if this trick applies to you.
You can use your credit cards for year-end tax planning.
Since effective tax planning takes into account not only
what you spend your money on but on when you spend it, you
should always think about timing your tax-deductible
expenses. Look ahead to the end of the year and consider
deductible contributions to retirement plans and estimate
your state income tax payments along with your
tax-deductible purchases. The idea is to pay for them in the
order that minimizes your income tax and maximizes your
positive cash flow.
Again, timing is everything. A credit card
can give you the tax deduction that you need at year-end. If
you charge a tax-deducible purchase to a bank credit
card--not a store card--you can easily take the write-off
(even though the credit card charges will be paid after the
end of the year).
Note: Try and use your card after you have
already planned your current cash flow around other
deductions.
There are many different options for using
this strategy and they differ between employers and
employees. We recommend you call today to find out exactly
what your options are.
There is a way around your current home equity deduction
limits.
A deduction for the home equity interest you already pay can
mean big tax savings! Ordinarily, this interest deduction is
limited to home equity debt of $100,000 or less. Don't
shortchange yourself! Hidden in the IRS regulations is a way
for you to increase your home equity interest expense and
deduct more than is ordinarily allowed. You qualify for
these savings if you use a portion of your household for
business purposes, rent out a portion of your home, or if
you use a part of your house for any other business reasons.
The end result is that most taxpayers are
stuck with deducting home equity interest only up to the
$100,000 debt limit. Don't feel "stuck" if you use a portion
of your home for business. All you have to do is make a
special IRS election to treat your home equity debt as
something other than home equity debt. Doing this lets you
take a bigger home equity interest deduction.
Did you know you can use your previously funded IRA to fund
the current year's deductible contribution?
Well, you can. If you don't have enough cash to make a
deducible contribution to your IRA by April 15th, here is
how you can still take the tax deduction and have until June
12th to make the full $2,000 contribution! To get started,
all you need is an IRA funded in previous years.
Start by having $2,500 distributed to you
from your IRA on April 15th. Your bank is required to hold
20% (income tax withholding), so you'll actually receive
$2,000. Once you have the $2,000, immediately deposit it
back into your IRA. If you do this before April 15th, this
counts as your deductible contribution for the year.
The best part of this is that you have 59
days to "make up" the withdrawal-or to be taxed. Simply
redeposit $2,500 into the same IRA account by June 12th.
This "rollback" deposit lets you avoid the tax on the
original distribution made to you. This is a type of
short-term loan from your IRA to make this year's deductible
contribution before the April 15th due date.
NOTE: Not all banks realize it is required
to withhold the 20% from the original $2,500 withdrawn from
your IRA. Call to find out which way we can help you work
with this "extra" amount. There are many options, so get
informed before you miss out on the full benefits of your
retirement plan.
You can take distributions from your IRA without paying the
10% early withdrawal penalty.
We all know that our best bet is to try and keep our
retirement savings until we retire. There might be
situations that arise where you'll need to make early
withdrawals from your IRA (like helping to pay for your
child's education or caring for an elderly parent). Making
these early withdrawals puts you at risk of the early
withdrawal penalty. This penalty can seriously add up over
time and can shrivel your hard-earned retirement plan.
No matter how old you are, there is an
income tax on any distributions from your IRA. But
fortunately, there's a way around the 10% early withdrawal
penalty. You can use an IRA annuity that sets you up to make
withdrawals (the size is based on life expectancy tables
provided by the IRS) until you are 59 1/2. You have to make
withdrawals for a period of five years. You can continue to
make withdrawals, or wait, to when you are 70 1/2. At that
point you have to start making withdrawals anyway. So it is
a flexible plan we can help tailor to your needs.
This strategy works very well for people
in their 50's who have unusual expenses to meet, but do not
want to be forced into withdrawing everything from their IRA
before retirement.
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