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Financial Planning Checklist
Once you've finished with your tax
planning for the year, and your return is safely on its way
to the IRS, you're at an excellent point for a quick
financial check-up. Your tax return is handy, as a quick
snapshot of your financial situation, and the figures are
recent and accurate. Take a few minutes to consider these
questions:
Have you determined your
short- and long-term financial goals?
Have you consistently reviewed and updated them for any
changes?
Are you saving and
investing sufficient sums to fund your short- and long-term
goals?
By defining goals that are time and dollar specific, you can
regularly assess if you are on track to reach them.
Are you making the best
use of tax-deferred savings plans, such as IRAs, 401(k)s,
and Keoghs?
Are you contributing the maximum you can? Did you make plan
investment choices consistent with your investment time
frame and risk tolerance? Alternatively, are you satisfied
that you have worked out the most appropriate way to take
withdrawals for both yourself and your designated
beneficiaries, with a careful balancing of income tax and
estate tax considerations?
If you are an employee,
are you getting the optimum from your employee benefits?
Do you understand and use any flexible spending accounts
that you may be eligible for? Have you developed a strategy
for exercising your employer stock options and using any
deferred compensation plans?
If you are concerned about
paying for a child's education, are you saving and spending
in the most appropriate ways?
Are you using tax-deferred savings, tax-favored loans, and
tax credits? Are you striking an appropriate balance between
saving in the child's name (either outright or in trusts)
and saving in your own accounts?
Do you have an "emergency
fund?"
Many experts recommend that you have the equivalent of three
to six month's take-home pay in an account where you can get
at it quickly. An emergency fund gives you cash to weather a
squall or two without having to disturb your investment
portfolio or sell off any other assets.
Have you checked the asset
allocation of your portfolio lately?
Run-ups and downturns in the market can each disrupt the
allocation of your investments, leaving you with more or
less in any one asset class than you consider optimal.
Should you be thinking about tax-free or taxable fixed
income securities, based on your marginal tax rate and risk
tolerance?
Do you have adequate
insurance?
Adequate life insurance (to protect your family if you die
unexpectedly)? Adequate disability insurance (what if you or
your spouse couldn't work for an extended period of time)?
Appropriate household and automobile insurance? Should you
be thinking about an umbrella policy?
Do you have appropriate
legal documents in place?
An up-to-date will? Trusts for you and/or your spouse and
other heirs? A living will or other health care directives?
A durable power of attorney (for managing your assets if you
can't)? Have you told family members or trusted friends
where they can find these documents?
Is your credit under good
control?
Is the interest rate on your mortgage the best you can do,
or should you be applying for a lower rate? Should you be
shopping for a credit card with a lower interest rate, or
perhaps for a home equity loan?
Are you maximizing your
cash flow through income tax strategies?
How are you funding charitable contributions -- with cash or
securities? Do you prepay itemized deductions to accelerate
the tax benefit?
If you own your own
business, do you have a plan for smoothly passing on that
business to family members or trusted employees?
Are you aware of and planning for any income and related
estate taxes? Are you making optimum use of insurance to
safeguard your transition plans?
Have there been
significant changes in your family this year?
Births, deaths, graduations, engagements, and the beginning
and ending of marriages can all have multifaceted effects on
your financial plans. Consider their effect on your own
situation. You may want to start a college fund for a new
baby, or make a plan for investing assets you've inherited,
or make provision for your daughter's wedding next summer.
On the other hand, if you have recently divorced, you will
want to review the beneficiary designations on your
insurance policies and retirement plans.
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