If you’re turning 70½ this year, get ready to start taking those mandatory annual payouts (your “required minimum distributions” or RMD’s) from your IRA accounts. Unfortunately, this is not something you can afford to put off. As SmartMoney points out in a recent article, the IRS wants you to take those distributions, and pay the additional income taxes sooner rather than later, and there are stiff penalties for non-compliance. In fact, if you fail to take at least the required amount each year, the IRS can assess a 50 percent penalty on the shortfall – the difference between what you…
But the provisions in the Act are due to expire on the last day of 2012. It is unclear whether any provision will be extended into 2013 and beyond, so it is important to take advantage of the generous exemption while we are certain of its availability. If you own private business interests or other rapidly appreciating assets, and would like to gift those to the next generation at the lowest possible tax cost, you may want to act sooner rather than later. The Tax Relief Act of 2010 included a 400 percent increase in the lifetime gift tax exemption,…
Giving to charity can be a very noble thing and to many of us it comes quite naturally, unfortunately it’s also rather easy to give incorrectly, at least as far as taxes are concerned. To prevent a simple but all too common mistake, the Wall Street Journal offers a mantra: “Get the letter. Get the letter. Get the letter.” If you are making a donation of more than $250, the charity must properly acknowledge your donation before the IRS will, and that means a letter. Indeed, the IRS is surprisingly literal about this and refuses to bend or accept other…
If you, your parent, or an elderly loved one is reaching the point where living alone is no longer an option – for medical reasons or otherwise – it may be time to consider some time of assisted living, whether nursing home or retirement community Increasingly, many families are looking at the “Continuing Care Retirement Community” or CCRC option. Even though the CCRC may be the pricier option, a little-known tax strategy recently explained in Smart Money could make it more financially attractive.. What is a CCRC? As SmartMoney explains: As opposed to a traditional nursing home where you simply…
If you are a grandparent wanting to help your grandchildren with the future costs of college tuition, pay attention now. Recent tax law changes are making it easier for you to help pay education bills for your grandchildren – and even future generations. As the Wall Street Journal recently explained, generous exemption increases in the federal gift and generation-skipping taxes are in effect now through 2012. Most experts believe this federal generosity may be short-lived, so now may be an excellent time to plan. Tuition rates are rising steadily, and helping your grandchildren (or great grandchildren) obtain a good education…
We frequently hear from individuals who have gifted $12,000 each to their children and grandchildren, over the past few years. However, this gifting is a myth. In fact, the $12,000 figure is now $13,000. But this is an IRS rule regarding filing a gift tax return. This has nothing to do with Medicaid law. If you make a gift, within five (5) years of qualification of Medicaid, you will penalized. For example. If you gift to your family $68,000, within the five (5) year period, you will be penalized for TEN (10) months, before you receive Medicaid. Therefore, who will…
If you’re over age 50, have substantial assets in your qualified retirement plan, and always dreamed of being your own boss, you are not alone. In fact, you may decide to join the growing number of baby boomers who are tapping their retirement savings for start-up capital on a new business. The Wall Street Journal, along with SmartMoney, recently discussed the trend, the possibilities, and the potentially dangerous risks involved. Here is the strategy, which the IRS called a Roll Over as Business Startup (ROBS). First, you create a legal corporation with its own 401(k) plan into which you can…
If you’re a high-earning taxpayer, with an adjusted gross income of more than $500,000 – well, first, congratulations! and second – beware. It appears that the IRS may be gunning for you. As the Wall Street Journal recently reported in their MarketWatch section, the IRS is stepping up audits of wealthier taxpayers as part of their offensive to crack down on tax avoidance. According to the IRS’s most recent statistical report, audits are increasing on most high income groups and increase as the tax brackets get greater. The percentage of taxpayers who were audited increased in every category of adjusted…
If you were born after 1956, listen up: Medicare may not be there for you when you retire. Now, this is not just some statistical research mumbo-jumbo. No, The Wall Street Journal last week reported in their SmartMoney section that House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan’s solution to stem rising Medicare costs is to end the current Medicare program for people born in 1957 and after. Starting in 2022, when those American begin turning 65, they would no longer get their medical bills paid directly by the government. According to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, Medicare spent an…
If you’re a small business owner, youll be pleased to know that the Senate recently repealed the onerous 1099 filing provision created by the healthcare overhaul. As Gaebler reports and Robb Mandelbaum of The New York Times discusses, the Senate has passed a measure to repeal the expanded 1099 report provisions and President Obama has expressed that he would welcome the repeal. The burden of such expanded provisions is something that many small businesses have dreaded, requiring companies to file a 1099 form for each vendor with whom they spend more than $600 in goods or services over the tax…