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Take Advantage of These Tax Breaks

Here are five ways you might profit from today’s IRS rules and rates

December 14, 2011 RSS Feed Print

No one can predict the market, and with taxes on the table, it's tough to know what next year will bring on that front, too. But a number of money-saving opportunities exist through 2012; here are five ways you might profit from today's IRS rules and rates:

[See 12 Money Mistakes Almost Everyone Makes.]

1. If you have a sizable estate, this is a good time to give some of it away while you're still alive. The current estate and gift tax exemptions and rates are the most generous in many decades, says tax historian Joseph Thorndike. As recently as 2010, though no estate tax applied for that year, the gift tax exemption limited you to handing off $1 million free and clear. (If that sounds like more than you can imagine passing along, keep in mind that many people would hit it quickly, counting the value of their real estate.) But at least for 2011 and 2012, each person can give away $5 million without paying a penny in taxes—which makes now an advantageous time to set up a trust for your grandchildren, say, or to hand over part of a closely held business. "We don't know what the law will be like in 2013," says Mark Nash, a Dallas-based partner in the personal financial services practice of Price-waterhouseCoopers. "But it's unlikely it will be this generous."

2. People making money from a hobby may benefit by starting to run it as a business before the end of this year. As of last January, anyone who sells something is subject to a new kind of reporting by the companies handling the transactions. If you have more than 200 transactions totaling over $20,000 per year on eBay or on MasterCard or Visa from peddling your wares at craft fairs, say, you (and the IRS) will get a 1099-K showing your take. Handling it as a business rather than a hobby will allow you more generous deductions, says Eva Rosenberg, a tax expert who answers questions and offers professional education at www.taxmama.com. For example, expense deductions from a hobby are limited to the amount of income it brings in and reduced by 2 percent of your adjusted gross income, no matter how much you actually spent. One easy way to establish that you're truly in it for money: Write up a business plan.

3. Take some deductions early. There's a lot of talk about capping the generosity of itemized deductions as a way to raise more revenue. Those in a high tax bracket may want to prepay real estate taxes and state income taxes so as to nab the greatest benefit while it's still available. This strategy also applies to other expenses you can accelerate: the points you pay upfront to refinance a mortgage or buy a house, for example, and unreimbursed professional dues.

[See the Top 10 Individual Tax Breaks.]

4. Take advantage of the zero percent capital gains tax available through 2012 to low-bracket taxpayers; for this year, that means single taxpayers with taxable income of no more than $34,500 and joint filers with up to $69,000. Retirees who come in under these income limits may want to bump up against the ceiling by realizing some of their investment gains in 2012 rather than in 2013, says Kay Bell, who writes the popular "Don't Mess With Taxes" blog. For people in higher brackets whose stocks have appreciated significantly and who are interested in giving money to adult children or elderly parents, Rosenberg suggests thinking about giving them shares if they're in the right income range. They just can't be your dependents; if the capital gains were realized by a dependent college student, for example, they'd be taxed at your rate. "This is something that costs you little and could cost them nothing," she says.

Tags:
tax returns,
income tax,
tax deductions

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Cshut up CLAU of FL, there isn't any state income tax in FL.

And this page can take their CAPCHA and choke on it because half of the scrambled mess is covered by "THISfieldIsReQuiRed".

"THEY GETS ALL THE TAX BREAKS"...Let me guess, you never finished school.

Magnolia of AL 10:45AM April 30, 2012

We don't have a middle class any more because of inflation. I bought cheese danish for easter. several years ago it was $2.99. Then $3 something. I stopped buying it 2 years ago when it was $4.89. This Easter I looked it was $6.49. It is that way with things we need to buy on a daily bases. Gas, food, clothing, housing, education. Inflation. That's what happens when we print too much money.

noncie of ME 10:02PM April 09, 2012

I am a tax preparer and love all the whining about the rich not paying their fair share. In fact, fully 40% of our customers make less than $30,000 per year, pay NO tax, yet get refunds in the thousands every year. Taxpayers who make twice or three times that and who have supported their kids to adulthood get NO breaks whatsoever and end up footing the bill for the rest of you.

Essgee of GA 1:21PM March 15, 2012

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