Business Taxation
Be sure to choose the business structure that is the best
choice from a liability and tax point of view for the type of business that you have—and
your current and long-term goals.
Be
sure you know what a w-9 form is—and know how it affects you and
your business.
Be sure you are aware of the tax laws (or hire competent professionals) that affect your business—and tax plan far in advance.
If you have a home based business you can now deduct your home office expense in a less burdensome manner—since the passage of new regulations in 2012.
Capital Gains
If you have capital gains during
the year you can offset those gains (up to $3,000) against losses—if more than
$3,000 in losses you carry the losses forward.
In 2013 the capital gain rate for many taxpayers—depending on your income—will
increase from 15% to 20%. If you have
taxable income of $400,000 (individual) and $450,000 (joint return) any amount over
that amount would be taxed at 20%.
Debt Cancellation
It is important that you realize that the cancellation and reduction of "certain debt" may be taxable to you. It is your responsibility to know this on the front end—prior to engaging in a debt settlement or debt reduction with any of your creditors!
Estate Taxes
With the January 2013 update of taxes—estate taxes receive some clarification—as the first $5 million in individual estates—and $10 million for family estates—are now exempted from the estate tax.
After that the rate will be 40%, up from
35%—and the exemption amounts are now indexed for inflation.
Excise & Other Taxes
Excise and other taxes that go by various names are also here to stay. Whether they called them fees, licensing—or the like—expect for them to increase in the future—as utilities, local, state, and federal revenue must be created to fund the operations of government.
Gift Tax
The federal gift tax applies whenever you give someone besides your spouse a gift worth more than $15,000 (as of tax year 2021).
You can give up to $15,000 to as many recipients as you want without having to pay any gift tax. If you and your spouse want to gift something that you jointly own, you can each give up to $15,000.
If something is community property in your state, you and your spouse are each responsible for half of the value.
In all cases, you and your spouse need to file individual gift tax returns.
When making a gift to a trust, each trust beneficiary is considered a recipient of your gift and you can still gift each beneficiary $15,000 per year.
NOTE: the lifetime gift tax exclusion more than doubled from 2017 to 2018 (went from 5,49 million in 2017 to 11.70 million in 2021) because of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, a tax reform act that passed in 2017.
Health Savings Accounts
What they are:
An account that is often used to pay medical expenses that occur for an individual or family—that has major tax advantages—that include the following:
How to Qualify:
How to Best Utilize:
Income Tax
You must look at your current income taxes that you pay on a local, state and federal level—and analyze (or pay a competent professional) them in a thorough manner to see if you can reduce or eliminate the taxes that you pay.
If you currently receive a large refund—you may want to adjust your w-4 (payroll withholding).
Itemized Deductions
Under the “Pease Limitations” that
reduce the value of itemized deductions there would be a limitation on the
amount of itemized deductions.
With
January 2013 legislation the limitations are permanently repealed for many
taxpayers. If you make less than
$250,000 (individual) or $300,000 (joint) you won’t be affected.
Mortgage Debt Relief Act
If you find yourself in the position
where you may have to sell your home as a result of a “Short Sale” or you faced—or are facing foreclosure—or you had a loan modification that did not work out—you
still have relief as the Mortgage Debt Relief Act of 2007 was extended to January 1st of
2014.
The extension means that if
you faced any of the above—you would be excluded from paying taxes on the debt
that was forgiven.
The Mortgage Insurance Premium Deduction for tax filers who make less than $110,000 was also extended for tax year 2013—meaning that in addition to your interest, property tax and possibly points—you can continue deducting the portion of your housing payment that goes toward the payment of the insurance premium—whether the premium is for an FHA (MIP) or Conventional loan (PMI).
Payroll Taxes (Social Security, Medicare & other Withholdings)
Although your Social Security and
Medicare withholdings are mandated by law—you may be able to control other
areas of your withholdings.
You control
your w-4
withholding—your retirement contributions (if
you have an employer who provides a match—it may be wise to contribute at a
level of the match)—and other withholdings that your employer may offer.
Be sure to consider an IRA—Traditional or
Roth.
A traditional has the potential to reduce your yearly taxes and help you
save for your future—you would be taxed at withdrawal.
A Roth provides no immediate tax reduction—but
your contributions and earnings would grow tax free—and you can withdraw your “contributions”
tax-free—at basically any time.
Property
Taxes
You must analyze your current
property taxes—and if you feel they are too high you can utilize the appeal
process to possibly get them reduced!
Be
sure that you know the property tax amount that you currently pay—and be sure
that you have properly applied for the homestead exemption—and other
exemptions that may be available in your community.
Be sure you know the strength or
weakness of your local government—as they possess the power to increase or
decrease your future Millage
Rates—and by knowing the condition of
your government you can better plan for the likelihood of tax increases in the
future.
You can possibly find the tax rate in you community—or a community that you plan on moving to by Clicking Here...
Be sure to click on "calculators" and then "data tools" to get the needed rates.
You can also go to retirementliving.com to get an overview of property and other taxes in your state—or a state that you anticipate moving to.
Always realize that "property taxes" are local in nature—which means they can vary significantly from county to county--or city to city!
Rental
If you have rental properties you
can utilize them to possibly decrease your annual taxes if you file them on
schedule E (Rental Property form) or a K-1 partnership tax return.
If you have the property set up under a
schedule C—self-employed form—you can also possibly utilize the rental
properties on your personal tax return to help reduce your taxes owed or increase
your refund amount.
Rental property
deductions and the proper use of depreciation are a few of the major deductions
left for the modest income taxpayer.
If your rental properties are “corporately
held” you would possibly gain a tax advantage on your corporations return.
If you had a pass through corporation
(S-corporation) you would possibly have taxable income—on your personal tax
return. If the S corporation reported a
loss—you could possibly reduce the amount of taxes that you owe or increase
your refund amount.
Retirement
It is important that you have a realistic understanding of how your retirement income will be taxed at the State as well as Federal level!
You must have a basic understanding (right now) of how your Estate & Inheritance taxes, Social Security Benefits, IRA's, Pensions & Other Retirement Accounts will be taxed during your retirement years.
Taxation of the above is fairly consistent at the Federal level—but varies greatly from State to State. Be sure you have an understanding of the taxation of your retirement income in your State!
Do you know if estate and inheritance taxes are applicable in your state based on the size and value of your estate?
Do you know if Social Security benefits will be taxed in your State—or the State that you plan on retiring in?
Do you know the States that don't tax income at all (Alaska, Florida, Nevada, South Dakota, Texas, Washington and Wyoming)?
Do you know if there are exclusions in your state that allows some or all of your retirement income to be excluded from taxation?
For example—in my State—Georgia—there is a generous retirement income exclusion of $65,000 for taxpayers 65 and older ($130,000 if Married Filing Jointly). Those age 62 to 64 can take a $35,000 exemption per person.
Did you know that 6 States (California, Minnesota, Nebraska, North Dakota, Rhode Island and Vermont) offer no exclusions at all for retirement income?
In short, it is your responsibility to look into how your taxes will be affected during your retirement years at—both the Federal—and State level.
Sale
of Residence
The sale of your residence if
done properly could lead to a real windfall for you and your family.
If you remain at the residence for 2 plus
years and later sell your property at a gain—you can exclude $250,000 of the
gain if you are single—and up to $500,000 of the gain if you are married.
Be sure you know all of the parameters
involved—if you are considering selling your home—and you want to exclude the
gain from taxation.
Note: if a portion of your
residence is used for business and deducted on your taxes—that portion will be
subject to recapture (will be taxed at time of sale)—thus the amount of your
excluded gain will be reduced.
Sales Tax
You must realize that sales taxes are here to stay—and you must be prepared to pay them now—and in the future. Unless you live in Alaska, Delaware, Montana, New Hampshire, or Oregon you will have to pay sales tax on your purchases.
If you travel a lot—be sure that you understand that hotel and lodging taxes vary sustantially from state to state—and even city to city—in the same state. You may pay as low as 9.4% in Colorado Springs, Colorado to as high as 17.5% in Birmingham, Alabama. The average rate usually fluctuates in the 13% to 14% range—across the United States.
To find the sales tax rate in your state—or a state that you plan on moving to—Click Here...
Stepped-Up Basis
It is important that you understand the concept of "stepped-up basis"—as it simply means that you will get a break on your taxes if you inherit a house, stocks, bonds, mutual funds etcetera—from your parent(s) or spouse—due to the value being assessed at the current market price—not the value when it was purchased.
If your parent was to transition and as part of the estate you received a house currently valued at $350,000—but the property was purchased by your parent 30 years ago for $50,000—you would not owe taxes on $300,000 (the difference between purchase price and the current value if you were to sell immediately after your parents transition).
Instead, if you sold the property for $350,000—you would owe zero in taxes.
If you sold the property for $400,000 you would owe taxes on $50,000 ($400,000 minus $350,000)—meaning the value of the property was "stepped-up" to the current market value of $350,000.
That is important information to know—on the front end whether you are inheriting property—or you plan on leaving property for your heirs.
It is important to realize that in similar fashion stocks, bonds and mutual funds also receive "stepped up basis" treatment when they are inherited.
If your parent purchased stocks 20 years ago for $15,000 and at the time of their transition the stocks are worth $200,000—your basis would be stepped-up to $200,000—and if you sold immediately—you would owe zero in taxes.
If you sold the stocks 2 years later for $300,000—you would owe taxes on $100,000 ($300,000 minus $200,000) instead of $285,000 ($300,000 minus the $15,000 original basis).
Always realize that inherited IRA's whether ROTH or Traditional can be tricky—as there are certain rules, guidelines and nuances that must be adhered to if your goal is to minimize your taxes.
Be sure to utilize competent professionals if you were to inherit a home, stocks, bonds, mutual funds etcetera—whether inside or outside of a retirement account.
In addition, be aware that if your parent had income (salary, interest, dividends etc.) that was owed to them at the time of their transition—income tax could still be owed on the income—and you might be required to pay it.
NOTE: Always keep the federal and state exemption amounts in mind when you are receiving—or leaving property as a result of a loved ones transition—or your transition. Even though you may be eligible for the federal exemption if your estate is smaller than 5.34 million (2014 limit) and possibly double that amount if it was your spouse who transitioned—you may indeed owe at the state level—so always keep that in mind when doing your tax planning.
Tax Preparation
For income tax preparation you can utilize the tax professional of your choice—or if your tax situation is not very complicated you can choose among—the following:
www.HRBlock.com
www.1040Return.com
www.turbotax.intuit.com
www.onepricetaxes.com
Return From Tax Basics to Keys to Success Page
Return From Tax Basics to Taxes & Personal Finance Page
Return From Tax Basics to Realty 1 Strategic Advisors Home Page
Our Latest release © 2023, "The 3 Step Structured Approach" now available on amazon.com
NEW BOOK ©2021, 2023—1-2-3 Credit & Me—Now Available
Learn what others are saying about our latest blog (Summer 2014)
Purchase "The Wealth Increaser"
TODAY...
Learn more about "The Wealth Increaser"
Learn about what is inside of "The Wealth Increaser"...
About
This Article:
The above article was written by Thomas (TJ) Underwood. Thomas (TJ) Underwood is a former fee-only financial planner, a former top producing loan processor and is currently a licensed real estate broker in the state of Georgia.
He is the writer behind The Real Estate & Finance 360 Degrees Series of Books that include The Wealth Increaser, Home Buyer 411 The Smart Guide to Buying Your Home, Home Seller 411 The Smart Guide to Selling Your Home, and Managing & Improving Your Credit & Finances for this MILLENNIUM.
In addition he is also the writer who created The 3 Step Structured Approach to Managing Your Finances, and CREDIT & FINANCE IMPROVEMENT MADE EASY—NEW GUIDE that you can download right now "(at MIMIMAL cost $3.95)" to learn more about his writing style and how you can achieve "more" success in the current economy.
He is the creator of TheWealthIncreaser.com where he regularly blogs about helping consumers improve their credit, finance and real estate pursuits in an intelligent, consistent and proactive manner.
He’s always looking for ways to make intelligent finance improvement happen for those who “sincerely desire” success in their future. He was the first financial planner to coin the phrase "financially alert mind" and he consistently writes in a style that is designed to provide consumers the ability to take control of their lives and achieve great results.
You can contact him from a number of sources but the most direct way is to contact him through the contact us block that can be found at the bottom of this page. You can also get highly relevant tips on "living your life more abundantly" and link to TheWealthIncreaser.com and possibly earn revenue by logging on to TheWealthIncreaser.com.
He is also an IRS registered tax planning professional with over 30 years of tax experience and can be reached at:
ATLANTA TAX PREPARATION SERVICE
LOCATIONS:
Atlanta South Location:
Realty 1 Strategic Advisors, LLC
77 Prestwick Lane
Peachtree
City, GA 30269
770-719-4550 (Direct)
tj@realty-1-strategic-advisors.com
Atlanta Central Location:
Realty 1 Strategic Advisors, LLC
2940 West Stubbs Road
Atlanta, GA 30349
404-952-9284 (Direct)
tj@TheWealthIncreaser.com
IF YOU DESIRE TO LEARN MORE ABOUT THE LUXURY HOME MARKET IN THE ATLANTA METROPOLITAN AREA—MAKE THE REQUEST BELOW
Jumbo Mortgage Loan News----Atlanta Luxury Home News