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49 tagged with "Insurance"

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Schedule F: Farm Tax Reporting, Disaster Deferrals, and Income Averaging Explained
·mike

Schedule F: Farm Tax Reporting, Disaster Deferrals, and Income Averaging Explained

A practical walkthrough of Schedule F for farmers and ranchers, covering crop insurance deferral under Section 451, weather-related livestock relief (Section 451(g) and 1033(e)), Section 175 soil and water conservation deductions capped at 25% of farm gross income, Section 179 and bonus depreciation, and Schedule J income averaging using elected farm income across three base years.

schedule-f
tax-planning
self-employment-tax
depreciation
+4
Section 165(i) Disaster Loss Election: How Homeowners and Small Businesses Pull Casualty Refunds Forward One Year
·mike

Section 165(i) Disaster Loss Election: How Homeowners and Small Businesses Pull Casualty Refunds Forward One Year

Section 165(i) lets disaster-affected taxpayers deduct a current-year casualty loss on the prior year's return, turning an 8-to-16-week refund into rebuild cash. A practical guide to Form 4684, the six-month election deadline, the 2026 OBBBA changes, and the recordkeeping that holds up under IRS audit.

tax
tax-planning
tax-deductions
small-business
+4
Section 165(i) Disaster Loss Election: Pulling Casualty Losses Into the Prior Year for a Faster Refund
·mike

Section 165(i) Disaster Loss Election: Pulling Casualty Losses Into the Prior Year for a Faster Refund

How Section 165(i) lets taxpayers in federally declared disaster areas deduct casualty losses on the prior year's return via Form 4684 and Form 1040-X — election mechanics, the six-month deadline, safe-harbor valuations, and when the prior-year election actually beats waiting.

tax
tax-deductions
tax-planning
small-business
+4
Section 7702B Long-Term Care Insurance: Deduct Premiums, Trade Old Policies, and Keep the Estate Intact
·mike

Section 7702B Long-Term Care Insurance: Deduct Premiums, Trade Old Policies, and Keep the Estate Intact

Section 7702B defines tax-qualified long-term care insurance — age-indexed premium deductions up to $6,200 per person in 2026, tax-free benefits under the per diem cap, Section 1035 exchanges from old life or annuity contracts, and hybrid life-LTC structures for aging owners and retirees.

insurance
tax-deductions
tax-planning
estate-planning
+4
Section 7702B Qualified Long-Term Care Insurance: Age-Indexed Deductions, Hybrid Life-LTC Policies, and Section 1035 Exchanges
·mike

Section 7702B Qualified Long-Term Care Insurance: Age-Indexed Deductions, Hybrid Life-LTC Policies, and Section 1035 Exchanges

Section 7702B sets the federal rules that decide whether a long-term care policy delivers deductible premiums, tax-free benefits, and tax-free 1035 exchanges. This guide breaks down the 2026 age-indexed deduction limits, the $430 per-diem cap, hybrid life-LTC mechanics, and the planning patterns that move trapped cash value into care coverage without recognizing gain.

tax-planning
insurance
health-insurance
estate-planning
+4
Section 7702 and the Modified Endowment Contract Trap: How Overfunding Cash-Value Life Insurance Triggers LIFO Taxation and a 10% Penalty
·mike

Section 7702 and the Modified Endowment Contract Trap: How Overfunding Cash-Value Life Insurance Triggers LIFO Taxation and a 10% Penalty

Section 7702A's 7-pay test reclassifies overfunded cash-value life insurance as a modified endowment contract, switching lifetime distributions to LIFO ordering, taxing policy loans as ordinary income, and adding a 10% penalty before age 59½. The classification is permanent and cannot be reversed after the 60-day refund window.

insurance
tax-planning
estate-planning
personal-finance
+3
Section 79 Group-Term Life Insurance: The $50,000 Tax-Free Limit, IRS Table I, and W-2 Code C
·mike

Section 79 Group-Term Life Insurance: The $50,000 Tax-Free Limit, IRS Table I, and W-2 Code C

How Section 79 actually works in 2026 — the $50,000 employer-paid group-term life exclusion, the IRS Table I rates (unchanged since 1999) that turn excess coverage into W-2 Box 12 Code C imputed income, plus the straddle rule, the $2,000 dependent de minimis, and the 2% S-corp shareholder trap.

tax
payroll
employee-benefits
insurance
+4
ERISA Fiduciary Duties for 401(k) Plan Sponsors: Personal Liability and the 3(38) Investment Manager
·mike

ERISA Fiduciary Duties for 401(k) Plan Sponsors: Personal Liability and the 3(38) Investment Manager

ERISA Section 409 imposes personal liability on 401(k) plan fiduciaries, and the corporate veil does not shield small business owners. This guide explains the prudent-expert standard, the Tibble v. Edison duty to monitor, and how hiring a Section 3(38) investment manager shifts investment discretion — and most related liability — away from the plan sponsor.

retirement-plans
employee-benefits
small-business
compliance
+4
Representations and Warranties Insurance in Middle-Market M&A: Coverage, Claims, and Costs in 2026
·mike

Representations and Warranties Insurance in Middle-Market M&A: Coverage, Claims, and Costs in 2026

A practitioner's guide to representations and warranties insurance (RWI) for middle-market M&A in 2026 — how buy-side and sell-side policies work, premiums around 2.5–3% of limit with retentions near 0.5%, the top breach categories driving claims, and when traditional escrow still wins.

mergers-and-acquisitions
insurance
business-insurance
business-acquisition
+4
Directors and Officers (D&O) Insurance for Startups in 2026: Coverage Limits, Premium Benchmarks, and When Investors Require It
·mike

Directors and Officers (D&O) Insurance for Startups in 2026: Coverage Limits, Premium Benchmarks, and When Investors Require It

D&O insurance for startups in 2026 typically runs $3,500–$10,000 per year for $1M–$3M of coverage; Series A term sheets routinely require $3M–$5M within 60–90 days of close. The most common claims at sub-100-person companies come from employment disputes, not securities allegations.

insurance
business-insurance
startup
liability-protection
+4
EPLI Insurance for Small Businesses: Why a Five-Person Team Can Still Get Hit with a Six-Figure Discrimination Claim
·mike

EPLI Insurance for Small Businesses: Why a Five-Person Team Can Still Get Hit with a Six-Figure Discrimination Claim

Employment Practices Liability Insurance costs small businesses roughly $800 to $3,000 a year, but a single uncovered discrimination, harassment, or wrongful termination claim averages $80,000 in defense costs—here is what EPLI covers, how carriers price it, and how to buy it without overpaying.

insurance
business-insurance
small-business
legal
+4
Section 45S Paid Leave Credit: A 2026 Guide for Small Employers After OBBBA
·mike

Section 45S Paid Leave Credit: A 2026 Guide for Small Employers After OBBBA

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act made the Section 45S paid family and medical leave credit permanent, lowered the eligibility threshold to six months, and added a premium-based method that lets small employers claim 12.5%–25% of PFML insurance premiums even when no leave is taken.

tax-credits
payroll
small-business
employee-benefits
+4
Showing 25–36 of 49 posts