10 Tips For Lowering Your Taxes
This list of ten tips to reduce taxes was published nearly a year ago, but they're still relevant, and we thought now would be a good time to share them before Kiplinger releases its new "10 Ways" list later this month. Among the tips: make sure you load up your retirement accounts and flexible spending accounts, and remember that the government gives you a 2 ½ month grace period on reimbursing yourself from an over-funded flex account.
Another tip is to donate appreciated assets instead of cash to a charity.
Let's say you have $1,000 worth of mutual fund shares that you bought more than a year ago for $500. If you sold those shares, you'd owe $75 in tax on the profit even at the special 15% capital gains rate. But if you donate those shares, the charity gets the full $1,000 (it doesn't have to pay tax on the profit when it sells), you avoid that $75 tax bill, and you still get to deduct the full 1,000 bucks. It's a win, win, win situation. (This only works when the assets are held in a taxable account, not an IRA or other retirement account.)And no, it doesn't work if the investment has lost money—"You would be better off selling the stock, making a tax-deductible contribution of $400 in cash to the charity and claiming a $600 capital loss."What if you don't want to part with your investment? Give it away, anyway, and use the cash you would have donated to re-invest. The maneuver is perfectly legal and simply wipes out the tax bill that's built up so far.
"Ten Ways to Lower Your Tax Bill" [Kiplinger]
(Photo: Getty)






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