End of Year Tax Strategies – Calculate Dollar Amount of Tax Moves

year-end-tax-strategies-2009-graphic Ah, November, when the American mind turns toward Thanksgiving, Christmas shopping, and strategies to avoid paying too much taxes. Yes, you should be doing tax planning year round to achieve the maximum savings on taxes, but reality isn’t always so kind. Still, there are some end of year tax moves that are smart and some that just aren’t worthwhile tax strategies when you add up your tax savings. Figuring out which is which is a critical part of personal finance.

To avoid making tax moves that aren’t worth the trouble, there is a simple strategy.

Always calculate the real dollar amount of any tax strategy prior to implementation.

Tax Savings Strategy Example #1:

The Top 10 End of Year Tax Strategy Tips lists always include the barely usable advice to pay your January mortgage early. By paying your January mortgage bill in December, you get to deduct the interest from your payment in 2009.

There is a big, fat catch, however. Although you do get to deduct 13 months worth of mortgage interest in 2009, you will only get to deduct 11 months worth of interest in 2010 unless you make sure to make that January payment in December again next year. This will be true until you finally bite the bullet and take just 11 months worth of deductions, or you pay off your mortgage. Is it worth it? Maybe.

Calculate the real dollar amount of tax savings from paying your Jan. 2010 mortgage in December, 2009.

Grab a mortgage statement and find out how much of your monthly mortgage payment goes to interest. What you find might surprise you. If you pay your homeowners insurance and property taxes through your mortgage company (a common practice) a substantial chunk of your monthly payment goes toward those, and you do not get to deduct those items by paying them early. Likewise, if you have had the same mortgage for many years, or you have a 15-year mortgage, a big hunk of that monthly bill might actually be going toward principal. (The horror! 🙂

A $2,000 monthly mortgage payment might breakdown as $500 per month into escrow (for the taxes and insurance) and $500 per month going toward principal, leaving just $1,000 per month paying interest.

For a taxpayer in the 25% tax bracket, paying that extra mortgage payment a year earlier will result in a tax savings of $250 in real dollar numbers. Conversely, that will be the approximate cost of forgetting to do the same thing next year. Even worse, is if the taxpayer forgets to do the same thing next year, AND forgets to properly account for the fact on their 2010 taxes.

Tax Savings Blunder Example:

Assume our taxpayer pays 13 mortgage payments in 2009 thanks to the advice in a year-end tax savings tips article. He saves $250 on his 2009 taxes.

Let’s that come 2010, our taxpayer is very busy at year end racking up sales and commissions to increase his income. He doesn’t have time to read any of those tax advice year-end articles and isn’t really thinking about Federal income taxes as he flies around the country trying to make sales.

Come April 13th, he fires up TurboTax or some other tax preparation software and types in all the numbers. In the tax deductions section he inputs his mortgage information. If he used TurboTax to file taxes in 2009 or imported his 2009 tax returns, he might get a flag about entering his mortgage info, and maybe not. Even if he does, there is no guarantee that he will pay any attention to it as he rushes to complete his taxes. After all, entering in the mortgage information from the 1099-DIV the mortgage company sends is a no brainer, right?

Unfortunately, he includes all 12 months worth of interest on his 2010 income taxes. Since he did not pay the January 2011 mortgage payment in December 2010, he actually can only deduct the remaining 11 interest payments in 2010.

In 2011 or 2012, or taxpaying hero gets a phone call from the IRS. It’s informational audit time and the IRS would like to see additional documentation regarding his 2009, and 2010, mortgage deductions. The taxpayer does the smart thing and runs to a tax attorney, accountant, or enrolled agent, and finds out to his dismay that he owes back taxes and a penalty. Chances are, he’ll get out of any fraud trouble, but it still won’t be cheap to pay up, especially if it takes two or three years to get around to the audit and that interest payment has added up.

Tax Advice Worth It?

Is it worth a $250 savings to follow this tax advice? You bet it is! Why pay extra when you don’t have to. But, if the above example sounds a lot like you, you might want to think twice, or make a really big note in your 2010 Taxes file.

But, what if the taxpayer is in the 10% tax bracket? Don’t laugh, it’s possible for high-income taxpayers to save enough money through deductions to get down to a tax bracket of 10%.

Then, the above example is worth just $100. Many other tips and advice will produce raw dollar amounts of tax savings of even less, sometimes just $10 or $20 for a complicated strategy that involves collecting a lot of receipts and getting a bunch of tax forms just right.

In the end, you are the judge of what anything is worth to you. The important thing is that you know what its real value to you is before you waste time and money on something that has limited value.

Tax Deductions Value

One final, very important thing to consider when determining the cash value of any tax savings advice is its possible impact on other tax deductions. To determine whether or not this need concern you, pay attention to any tax credits or tax deductions that are phased out or that have income limits. Depending upon the tax deduction or credit and where the tax savings created by the strategy used occur (above the line or below the line) the value of a tax-savings tip may actually be much higher than just the amount directly created by the tax avoidance strategy.

 

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