Inside the Coin Shop Ledger: AML Compliance, Spot-Price Inventory, and Buy-Sell Spread Accounting for Bullion and Numismatic Dealers
A working guide for owner-operators of coin and bullion shops covering ASC 606 revenue streams, spot-price inventory methods, Form 8300 and 1099-B triggers, 31 CFR 1027 AML duties, Section 408(m) IRA fulfillment, and the KPIs (buy-sell spread, turn-earn index, GMROI) that separate profitable shops from break-even ones.
The 0.5% AGI Floor on Charitable Gifts: Preserving Your Deduction in 2026 With Bunching, DAFs, and QCDs
Starting in 2026, OBBBA imposes a 0.5% AGI floor on itemized charitable contributions and caps top-bracket deductions at 35 cents per dollar. Bunching gifts, funding a donor-advised fund, and making qualified charitable distributions from an IRA recover most of the lost benefit for typical itemizing donors.
Section 514 UDFI Demystified: How Nonprofits, Foundations, and Self-Directed IRAs Get Taxed on Borrowed-Money Investments
How Section 514 of the Internal Revenue Code taxes leveraged investments held by 501(c)(3) organizations, private foundations, and self-directed IRAs — including the debt/basis percentage calculation, Form 990-T mechanics, the 12-month look-back on sale, and the Section 514(c)(9) real estate exception for schools and pension trusts.
State Auto-IRA Mandates in 2026: CalSavers, Illinois Secure Choice, and OregonSaves Compliance Guide
Twenty-two states now require small employers to offer retirement savings or face penalties up to $750 per employee. A practical guide to CalSavers, Illinois Secure Choice, OregonSaves, headcount thresholds, registration deadlines, exemption rules, and the compliance traps that trigger non-compliance notices in 2026.
Form 1099-R Box 7 Distribution Codes, Decoded
A field-tested guide to every Form 1099-R Box 7 code retirees and beneficiaries actually see — Code 1, 2, 4, 7, G, H, M, and Q — with the specific custodian errors that trigger a 10% penalty and how to fix them before April 15.
The IRA 60-Day Rollover Trap: How One Tax Attorney's $65,000 Mistake Rewrote the Rules for Every American Retirement Saver
After Bobrow v. Commissioner, the once-per-year IRA rollover limit aggregates every traditional, Roth, SEP, and SIMPLE IRA you own. Here is how the rule works, what a violation costs, and the trustee-to-trustee transfer that sidesteps the cap entirely.
MLP K-1 Tax Issues: UBTI, Section 751, and Multi-State Filings for Individual Investors
How individual MLP investors actually owe tax — UBTI on IRA-held units crosses the $1,000 Form 990-T threshold faster than expected, Section 751 reclassifies part of any sale gain as ordinary income, and the K-1's state schedule can force nonresident filings in operating states. Includes practical thresholds and basis-tracking rules.
Section 4975 Prohibited Transactions: How Self-Directed IRA and Solo 401(k) Owners Avoid the Disqualified Person Trap
Section 4975 of the Internal Revenue Code defines disqualified persons and the six categories of forbidden transactions with self-directed IRAs and Solo 401(k)s. Violations trigger a 15 percent annual excise tax — and, for IRAs, deemed distribution of the entire account back to January 1.
The Section 691(c) Deduction: How IRA Beneficiaries Recover Estate Tax
Beneficiaries of taxable estates can claim a Section 691(c) income tax deduction for federal estate tax already paid on inherited IRAs and other IRD assets. This guide covers eligibility, the with-and-without calculation, where to claim it on Schedule A, and the errors that cost families six figures.
The Mega Backdoor Roth Playbook: How High Earners Can Funnel an Extra $47,500 Into Tax-Free Retirement Accounts in 2026
The mega backdoor Roth routes up to $47,500 of after-tax 401(k) contributions into a Roth bucket for 2026, on top of the standard $24,500 employee deferral, by converting after-tax dollars through an in-plan Roth conversion or in-service distribution to a Roth IRA. The IRS Section 415(c) total cap of $72,000 ($80,000 if age 50+) covers contributions from all sources combined, and converting promptly keeps the taxable earnings drag near zero.
Form 5498 Decoded: The IRA Tax Form You Never File but Should Read Line by Line
Form 5498 reports IRA contributions, rollovers, Roth conversions, and the December 31 fair market value, and arrives in late May after you have already filed. A box-by-box reading of the fourteen lines, how to reconcile each with Forms 1099-R, 8606, and 5329, and the specific traps that trigger CP2000 notices and the 6% excess-contribution penalty.
Qualified Charitable Distributions in 2026: A $111,000 Tax-Free Path From IRA to Charity
A complete 2026 guide to Qualified Charitable Distributions — the IRS-sanctioned strategy that lets retirees age 70½ and older route up to $111,000 from an IRA directly to a qualified charity without recognizing the distribution as taxable income.