Tax Season Bumped Back by IRS

The IRS announced that it was moving back the beginning of tax filing season due to the government shutdown. Apparently, workers finalizing tax forms and systems for the end of the 2013 tax year and getting them ready for the 2014 filing season were not part of the essential government workers that kept working during the recent government shutdown. As a result, the IRS is about two weeks behind on getting ready for the tax filing season. The original date when taxpayers were first allowed to file tax returns was supposed to be January 21, 2014. However, after having basically making no progress during the 16-day shutdown, that date is being moved back. Although no official date has been set for when the IRS will begin accepting 2014 returns, the agency announced a “one- to two-week delay.” That means that the earliest date would be January 28, 2014 and the latest start date would be February 4, 2014. The delay is not due to big changes to paper forms, but rather to ensuring that the electronic systems for filing, as well as the electronic tax preparer data provided to firms like TurboTax, are up to date. In addition, the IRS …

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Tax Due Date 2012

Taxes for 2011 are almost due. As always, the IRS tax filing deadline for 2012 is April 15th, only it isn’t. April 15th is a Sunday and taxes are not due on weekends, especially Sundays. You don’t expect government bureaucrats to work on the weekend, do you? Not to mention, you can’t get a postmark on Sunday because the Post Office is closed. So, your taxes should be due on April 16th, but they aren’t due then either. Just like last year, the Monday your taxes would normally be due on is a holiday. It isn’t a Federal holiday, but it is a holiday in Washington D.C. and when it comes to the Internal Revenue Service, the holiday schedule includes those D.C. holidays. After all of that, it comes down to for 2012 taxes are due on Tuesday April 17th. Technically, of course, that means that your taxes must be postmarked by midnight April 17th. As always, there will be certain post offices open late, some until midnight, where you can mail your taxes right up to the deadline and still get that all important postmark. If you don’t file your taxes on time, you’ll owe penalties and interest. If …

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Lower Your Taxes – Increase Tax Deductions 2010

Here comes the end of the year! (Yikes, already?) As 2010 draws to a close, it is time for the annual publishing of the end of year tax tips articles. Or, for the mainstream media, it’s time to re-publish pretty much the same thing that was published last year, rehashing the same old annual tax savings strategies. I thought we’d go ahead and get a jump on them (Isn’t that what good personal finance blogs are for?) by pre-posting all of the standard, run of the mill, year-end tax tips before Thanksgiving. Of course, if you are serious about tax planning, you’ve already done all of this and more. Don’t worry, we’ll be publishing new, little-known, tax tips and end of year tax tricks for 2010 soon. Here they are the Common 10 Tax Reduction Strategies for 2010 (and 2011, 2012, 2013, etc…) Donate To Charity – Definitely a good write off for high-income taxpayers and everyone else. Of course, the only tax deduction more well known than donating to charity is deducting mortgage interest on your home. Deduct Your Medical Bills – This is wasteful advice for most taxpayers. The medical expenses deduction only applies to medical and dental …

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End Of Year Tax Tips – Save Money On Taxes By Donating Clothing and More

As the end of the year races toward us, the opportunities to find and take advantage of tax deductions and loopholes to save money on income taxes are growing scarce. Fortunately, there are still plenty of tax saving strategies that you can implement even with just a few weeks to go until the end of the tax year. One of the most effective ways for typical households to lower their tax bill is by donating items to charities. Unlike cash donations, donating used goods to charity is a free way to reduce the income taxes you pay. A quick trip to the basement or storage closet could turn up several trash bags worth of used clothing that no longer fits your children, or you. Other items like shirts, pants, suits, jackets, shoes and more may just be out of style, or no longer fit your current dressing manner. For example, workers who used to have to wear a suit and tie to the office may now work in a business casual environment. Unless you live on the East Coast, suit and tie occasions don’t come up all that often. Hold onto one dark suite for funerals and formal weddings, and …

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More Tax Deductions for Small Business Owners and Sole-Proprietorships

A great tax saving strategy, particularly for higher-income taxpayers is to start a small business. Many expenses that are not deductible for regular Federal Income Taxes are deductible to a business. For example, the mileage deduction is not deductible for personal driving purposes, and mileage driving to work is also not deductible. However, mileage driven for business purposes is tax deductible. While starting a phony small business is not a good idea, no matter how big of tax savings can be achieved, there are many legitimate businesses that people can start. The key aspect of being legally considered a business for tax purposes is that there must be a profit motive to the activity. That profit motive must outweigh other reasons for engaging in the activity, otherwise, the enterprise could be considered a hobby instead of a business. Formally incorporate the business with the Secretary of State in your state. Set up a LLC, it makes a great business structure for single-owner small businesses and is typically cheap and easy to setup. Filling out an online form and paying a registration fee is usually all that is required. Then, get an Employee Identification Number, or EIN from the IRS. Unofficially …

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End Of Year Federal Income Tax Advice Tips and Tricks

Here they come.  Articles, columns, emails, and websites by the dozens (hundreds? thousands?) each offering tax advice in the guise of tips and tricks while actually offering up nothing more than the same old retread of a supposed gold mine of tax savings. This is the true, cold, hard fact: There is virtually nothing you can do to lower the amount of taxes you pay on earnings that come in the form of a steady paycheck.  Sorry, but it is true. Tax Advice and Tips and Tricks So, what exactly is in these so called advice articles?  Mostly things that will not apply to most people, or nickel and dime savings that won’t make much of a dent.  But, tax advice articles are popular, especially at year end.  Let’s take a look at the most common advice. Pay Your Next Mortgage Payment By December 31 – This doesn’t lower your taxes so much as borrow a deduction from next year’s taxes.  The idea is that by paying your January 1st mortgage payment in December, you get to deduct 13 moths worth of interest, instead of 12.(Mortgage payments used to be due on the 1st of the month, that isn’t always …

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Muni Taxes Stay the Same

The U.S. Supreme Court in a 7-2 decision upheld the central tenant of most state’s municipal bond tax policy, specifically that a state can exempt it’s own muni bonds from taxes while taxing the interest on other state’s muni bonds. So, nothing changes from before. If you live in California, the only way to avoid state tax on bond interest is to buy California Municipal Bonds. If you buy bonds from Texas, they can tax that interest. Taxes and Bonds Because interest on bonds is taxed as ordinary income, avoiding taxes on that interest is more important to investors than avoiding taxes on dividends paid by stocks. Most corporate bonds are taxed at both the federal and state level which reduces the real rate of return to the investor. Municipal bonds issued by states are exempt from federal income tax because one branch of the government cannot tax another branch. Whether or not the state municipal bonds are exempt from state income tax is determined by the laws of the states they are issued in. Most states make their own bonds tax-free as a way to make them more attractive for purchase. This tax-free status, plus the relative safety of …

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