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Top 7 Ways to Minimize Your Income Taxes.
Are you paying too much in income taxes? Are you getting all the credits and
deductions you are entitled to? Here are 7 tips to help you minimize taxes
and keep more in your pocket:
1. Participate in company retirement plans. Every dollar you contribute will
reduce your taxable income and thus your income taxes. Similarly, enroll in
your company's flexible spending account. You can set aside money for
medical expenses and day care expenses. This money is "use it or lose it" so
make sure you estimate well!
2. Make sure you pay in enough taxes to avoid penalties.
Uncle Sam charges interest and penalties if you don't pay in
at least 90% of your current year taxes or 100% of last
year's tax liability.
3. Buy a house. The mortgage interest and real estate taxes
are deductible, and may allow you to itemize other deductions
such as property taxes and charitable donations.
4. Keep your house for at least two years. One of the best
tax breaks available today is the home sale exclusion, which
allows you to exclude up to $250,000 ($500,000 for joint
filers) of profit on the sale of your home from your income.
However, you must have owned and lived in your home for at
least two years to qualify for the exclusion.
5. Time your investment sales. If your income is higher than expected,
sell some of your losers to reduce taxable income. If you will be selling
a mutual fund, sell before the year-end distributions to avoid taxes on
the upcoming dividend or capital gain. Also, you should allocate tax
efficient investments to your taxable accounts and non-efficient
investments to your retirement
accounts, to reduce the tax you pay on interest, dividends and capital
gains.
6. If you're retired, plan your retirement plan distributions carefully.
If a retirement plan distribution will push you into a higher tax bracket,
consider taking money out of taxable investments to keep you in the lower
tax bracket. Also, pay attention to the 59-? age limit. Withdrawals taken
before this age can result in penalties in addition to income taxes.
7. Bunch your expenses. Certain expenses must exceed a minimum before you
can deduct them (medical expenses must exceed 7.5% of your adjusted gross
income and miscellaneous expenses such as tax preparation fees must exceed
2% of your AGI). In order to deduct these expenses, you may need to bunch
these types of expenses into a single year to get above the minimum. To
achieve this, you might prepay medical and miscellaneous expenses on
December 31 to get above the minimum amount.
The most important thing is to be aware of the tax deductions and credits
that apply to you and to plan for taxable events. And don't be afraid to
ask for help. The benefits from consulting an experienced tax professional
far outweigh the cost to hire that professional. |
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