Is there a taxable income reduction idea you can use?
Many tax experts talk about shifting your tax burden from one year to the next. While it may make sense in theory, how can you make it work for you in practice? Let’s take a look at your tax bill and come up with some taxable income reduction ideas.
Looking at your tax bill
Since the tax code is complex in its construction, there are often opportunities to reduce your tax burden by controlling the amount of your taxable income. This is because:
- Income tax rates vary from 0% to 37% depending on your income and filing status
- Many tax breaks have income limits
- Tax breaks have income phase-out ranges
- Incremental taxes like the alternative minimum tax are triggered by income level
So if you can shift your income and expenses from one year to the next, you could create a net tax obligation for both years that might be lower than if you did nothing. Here are six great ideas to accomplish this.
Six taxable income reduction ideas
- Know the rules. Identify whether you are a good candidate for using shifting as a tax planning strategy. The income tax rate for singles increases by 80% or more on earnings over $47,150. For married couples, that increase occurs with adjusted gross income over $94,300. However, other tax benefits are lost at different income levels. Common tax breaks subject to income limits are child tax credits, earned income credits, educational credits, premium health care credits, and many educational tax benefits.
- Load up your contributions. If you itemize your deductions, consider loading up your cash and non-cash contributions into the year, which lowers more highly taxed income. For example, you could shift next year’s donations to your church into this year. This bunching of itemized deductions into one year makes even more sense with the higher standard deductions introduced in 2018.
- Leverage the cash basis concept. You can take a deduction when you pay for it. A credit card receipt is good on the date you run the transaction and not when you pay your monthly bill to the credit card company. Knowing this, you could pay a property tax statement or a house payment either early or late to change whether that deduction occurs this year or next.
- Stop working. There are many cases when this technique is an important tax-shifting tool. The most common example applies to those under the full retirement age and receiving Social Security benefits. If this applies to you, consider actively managing your part-time work, or you could end up paying taxes on some of your Social Security benefits or even losing some of them. Work can also hurt your tax situation when a dependent’s wages put you over the earnings threshold to receive the Health Insurance Premium Tax Credit. It may make sense to stop working or arrange to delay your last paycheck into the following year.
- Manage retirement plan distributions. Those over age 59½ can use distributions from pre-tax retirement plans to tightly control their taxable income. Your withdrawal calculation should include evaluating how to maximize the tax efficiency of your income. An analysis may indicate it is better to take out a little more this year to tax these retirement earnings at a lower rate than if you wait until the following year.
- Manage your stock and investment sales. You have up to $3,000 in investment losses that can offset your higher-taxed ordinary income. Use this to your advantage when deciding whether to take a stock loss this year or next. If done correctly, you can match your stock loss against ordinary income, which is taxed at a higher rate.
Shifting your taxable income to the right level can reduce your tax bill. Please call if you wish to have your situation reviewed. Contact our RRBB advisors if you have questions or need assistance with the next steps.
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