With the arrival of fall, it’s an ideal time to begin implementing strategies that could reduce your tax burden for both this year and next.
One of the first planning steps is to ascertain whether you’ll take the standard deduction or itemize deductions for 2024. You may not itemize because of the high 2024 standard deduction amounts ($29,200 for joint filers, $14,600 for singles and married couples filing separately, and $21,900 for heads of household). Also, many itemized deductions have been reduced or suspended under current law.
If you do itemize, you can deduct medical expenses that exceed 7.5% of adjusted gross income (AGI), state and local taxes up to $10,000, charitable contributions, and mortgage interest on a restricted amount of debt, but these deductions won’t save taxes unless they’re more than your standard deduction.
You may be able to work around these deduction restrictions by applying a “bunching” strategy to pull or push discretionary medical expenses and charitable contributions into the year where they’ll do some tax good. For example, if you can itemize deductions for this year but not next, you may want to make two years’ worth of charitable contributions this year.
Here are some other ideas to consider:
These are just some of the year-end strategies that may help reduce your taxes. Reach out to us to tailor a plan that works best for you.
© 2024
Receive Free financial tips & Tax Alerts!
"*" indicates required fields
The Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), enacted in 2022, created several tax credits aimed at promoting clean energy. You may want to take advantage of them before it’s too late. On the…
If you own a growing, unincorporated small business, you may be concerned about high self-employment (SE) tax bills. The SE tax is how Social Security and Medicare taxes are collected…
Running a business is no easy feat. Every day, you’re juggling several different things—keeping customers happy, managing operations, thinking about growth—sometimes, it can feel like things are going great, and…