Although it's too early to know what your taxable
income will be in 2005, it's not too late to plan strategies
to lower it by means of legitimate tactics that can impact
your total income, the expenses you may deduct against it,
or both.
You might want to hold down your taxable income for 2005
by deferring income to 2006 and accelerating expenses when
you have the opportunitiesespecially if you expect
to be in a lower tax bracket next year. But you would
want to do the opposite accelerate income and defer
expensesto lift your 2005 taxable income if you expect
to be in a higher bracket next year.
Even if you expect your tax bracket to be the same, it would
be smart to consider other moves to hold down your tax bills.
To determine which strategies are suitable for you, consider
them in the sequence in which topics appear in IRS Form 1040,
starting with Line 7, "Wages, salaries, tips, etc."
Salary reduction. There is usually little
that you can do about the compensation portion of your taxable
income with one very important exception: putting more money
into a tax-deferred retirement plan:
- Sign up to participate in your employer's 401(k)
plan, if you have not already done so.
- Raise the portion of compensation that you may defer
and have invested in a 401(k), if you have not already
authorized your employer to withhold the maximum for this
purpose ($14,000 this year, $15,000 next year).
- Invest additional money in an IRA, if you meet the income
requirements, so that you can deduct it on Line 25. The
contribution for traditional IRA's will be fully
deductible if your income is $70,000 or less if you are
married filing jointly, or $50,000 or less if filing individually.
The contribution amount for a traditional IRA is $4,000
or $4,500 if you are 50 or older.
Taxable and tax-exempt interest. If you
are now or plan to be invested in taxable bond funds or individual
bonds outside a tax-deferred retirement plan, determine whether
you would be better off in tax-exempt bonds or bond funds.
Calculate whether your income from tax-exempt securities
would be more, or less, than your after tax return on
income from taxable issues. To make your determination meaningful,
be sure to compare funds and bonds of comparable credit
quality and maturities.
Dividends. You may have no control over
whether dividends which you receive from equity funds or
stocks are classified as "ordinary" or as "qualified," which
are taxed at a lower rate. If you get the latter, be sure
to confirm that you are differentiating these amounts on
your return. Locate the amount in your payers' Forms
1099DIV the amount to use in Line 9b of your Form
1040. Whichever class of dividends you get, avoid "buying
dividends" by not buying stocks or funds just before
their year-end distributions.
Income from a Business. If you operate
a business from your home and report your receipts and expenses
on Schedule C, you may also be able to deduct a portion of
your home's insurance, repairs and maintenance and
utilities costs. You can report them on its Form 8829 attachment.
Capital Gains and Losses. If you want to
sell individual securities or fund shares on which you have
gains and which you have owned for less than a year, you
have a choice: hold them until you have owned them for more
than a year and pay taxes at the long-term capital gains
rate or swallow the higher short-term rate. If you own securities
which are worth less than they cost or their adjusted basis,
you may want to sell them in order to take a loss to offset
the gains. Capital losses are netted against capital gains.
If you have more realized losses than gains, you can take
an additional $3,000 of loss to offset your ordinary income.
More than that and you will need to rollover that loss to
be used in future years. If you do sell a security to realize
a loss to offset a gain, note that you must not buy back
that security for 30 days to avoid disallowing the loss.
Note also that you are allowed to use losses to offset the
capital gains on the sale of your home as well as the sale
of securities.
Deductions. If you itemize deductions and
you expect income to be higher next year, you may have some
opportunities to defer or accelerate expenses before year end
or defer outlays to 2006. Among them: costly medical and dental
procedures, real estate tax payments due early next year and
charitable contributions. Or vice versa if you are looking
to accelerate expenses into the current year. Paying January's
mortgage payment in December will add mortgage interest to
your deductions. If an individual is subject to AMT the early
payment of property taxes is not effective in reducing taxable
income.