• Check on your refund — and find out why the IRS might not send it

    It’s that time of year when many people who filed their tax returns in April are checking their mail or bank accounts to see if their refunds have landed. According to the IRS, most refunds are issued in less than 21 calendar days. However, it may take longer — and in rare cases, refunds might not come at all. Your refund status If you’re curious [...]

    Published On: May 9, 2019Categories: Featured, Individual Tax
  • Seniors: Medicare premiums could lower your tax bill

    Americans who are 65 and older qualify for basic Medicare insurance, and they may need to pay additional premiums to get the level of coverage they desire. The premiums can be expensive, especially if you’re married and both you and your spouse are paying them. But one aspect of paying premiums might be positive: If you qualify, they may help lower your tax bill.   Medicare [...]

    Published On: April 10, 2019Categories: Featured, Individual Tax
  • Still working after age 70½? You may not have to begin 401(k) withdrawals

    If you participate in a qualified retirement plan, such as a 401(k), you must generally begin taking required withdrawals from the plan no later than April 1 of the year after which you turn age 70½. However, there’s an exception that applies to certain plan participants who are still working for the entire year in which they turn 70½.The basics of RMDsRequired minimum distributions (RMDs) [...]

    Published On: April 4, 2019Categories: Featured, Individual Tax
  • Stretch your college student’s spending money with the dependent tax credit

    If you’re the parent of a child who is age 17 to 23, and you pay all (or most) of his or her expenses, you may be surprised to learn you’re not eligible for the child tax credit. But there’s a dependent tax credit that may be available to you. It’s not as valuable as the child tax credit, but when you’re saving for college [...]

    Published On: March 21, 2019Categories: Featured, Individual Tax
  • The 2018 gift tax return deadline is almost here

    Did you make large gifts to your children, grandchildren or other heirs last year? If so, it’s important to determine whether you’re required to file a 2018 gift tax return — or whether filing one would be beneficial even if it isn’t required. Filing requirementsGenerally, you must file a gift tax return for 2018 if, during the tax year, you made gifts: That exceeded the [...]

    Published On: March 20, 2019Categories: Featured, Individual Tax
  • Vehicle-expense deduction ins and outs for individual taxpayers

    It’s not just businesses that can deduct vehicle-related expenses. Individuals also can deduct them in certain circumstances. Unfortunately, the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) might reduce your deduction compared to what you claimed on your 2017 return. For 2017, miles driven for business, moving, medical and charitable purposes were potentially deductible. For 2018 through 2025, business and moving miles are deductible only in much [...]

    Published On: March 11, 2019Categories: Featured, Individual Tax
  • Careful tax planning required for incentive stock options

    Incentive stock options (ISOs) are a popular form of compensation for executives and other employees of corporations. They allow you to buy company stock in the future at a fixed price equal to or greater than the stock’s fair market value on the ISO grant date. If the stock appreciates, you can buy shares at a price below what they’re then trading for. But careful [...]

    Published On: February 26, 2019Categories: Featured, Individual Tax
  • Some of your deductions may be smaller (or nonexistent) when you file your 2018 tax return

    While the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) reduces most income tax rates and expands some tax breaks, it limits or eliminates several itemized deductions that have been valuable to many individual taxpayers. Here are five deductions you may see shrink or disappear when you file your 2018 income tax return:1. State and local tax deduction. For 2018 through 2025, your total itemized deduction for [...]

    Published On: February 22, 2019Categories: Featured, Individual Tax
  • Why you shouldn’t wait to file your 2018 income tax return

    The IRS opened the 2018 income tax return filing season on January 28. Even if you typically don’t file until much closer to the April 15 deadline, this year consider filing as soon as you can. Why? You can potentially protect yourself from tax identity theft — and reap other benefits, too. What is tax identity theft?In a tax identity theft scheme, a thief uses [...]

    Published On: February 15, 2019Categories: Featured, Individual Tax
  • 3 big TCJA changes affecting 2018 individual tax returns and beyond

    When you file your 2018 income tax return, you’ll likely find that some big tax law changes affect you — besides the much-discussed tax rate cuts and reduced itemized deductions. For 2018 through 2025, the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) makes significant changes to personal exemptions, standard deductions and the child credit. The degree to which these changes will affect you depends on whether [...]

    Published On: February 13, 2019Categories: Featured, Individual Tax
  • Does prepaying property taxes make sense anymore?

    Prepaying property taxes related to the current year but due the following year has long been one of the most popular and effective year-end tax-planning strategies. But does it still make sense in 2018? The answer, for some people, is yes — accelerating this expense will increase their itemized deductions, reducing their tax bills. But for many, particularly those in high-tax states, changes made by [...]

    Published On: December 20, 2018Categories: Featured, Individual Tax
  • Play your tax cards right with gambling wins and losses

    If you gamble, be sure you understand the tax consequences. Both wins and losses can affect your income tax bill. And changes under the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) could also have an impact.Wins and taxable incomeYou must report 100% of your gambling winnings as taxable income. The value of complimentary goodies (“comps”) provided by gambling establishments must also be included in taxable income [...]

    Published On: August 29, 2018Categories: Featured, Individual Tax
  • Keep an eye out for extenders legislation

    The pieces of tax legislation garnering the most attention these days are the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) signed into law last December and the possible “Tax Reform 2.0” that Congress might pass this fall. But for certain individual taxpayers, what happens with “extenders” legislation is also important. Recent historyBack in December of 2015, Congress passed the PATH Act, which made a multitude of [...]

    Published On: August 17, 2018Categories: Featured, Individual Tax
  • The TCJA prohibits undoing 2018 Roth IRA conversions, but 2017 conversions are still eligible

    Converting a traditional IRA to a Roth IRA can provide tax-free growth and tax-free withdrawals in retirement. But what if you convert your traditional IRA — subject to income taxes on all earnings and deductible contributions — and then discover you would have been better off if you hadn’t converted it? Before the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA), you could undo a Roth IRA [...]

    Published On: August 16, 2018Categories: Featured, Individual Tax