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183 tagged with "Personal Finance"

Personal money management and financial wellness strategies

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IRS Tax Payment Plans: How to Set Up an Installment Agreement When You Can't Pay in Full
·mike

IRS Tax Payment Plans: How to Set Up an Installment Agreement When You Can't Pay in Full

A practical guide to IRS installment agreements in 2026 — four plan types, setup fees ranging from $0 to $178, eligibility rules for balances up to $50,000, and the common mistakes that trigger default.

tax
tax-compliance
irs-requirements
tax-planning
+4
Missed the Tax Deadline? Here's Exactly What to Do Next
·mike

Missed the Tax Deadline? Here's Exactly What to Do Next

A step-by-step guide to filing late, halting penalties, and setting up IRS payment plans after missing April 15—covering the 5% monthly failure-to-file penalty, the 0.5% failure-to-pay penalty, interest at the short-term rate plus 3%, and the three-year window to claim a refund.

tax
tax-deadlines
tax-filing
tax-compliance
+3
Schedule A Itemized Deductions: The Complete 2026 Guide to Paying Less Tax
·mike

Schedule A Itemized Deductions: The Complete 2026 Guide to Paying Less Tax

Schedule A itemized deductions return in play for 2026 as the SALT cap rises from $10,000 to $40,400, charitable gifts face a new 0.5% AGI floor, and the $750,000 mortgage interest cap becomes permanent. This guide covers what qualifies, what changed under the OBBB, and how to decide whether itemizing beats the standard deduction.

tax
tax-deductions
tax-planning
personal-finance
+3
Tax Credit vs. Tax Deduction: Which One Saves You More Money?
·mike

Tax Credit vs. Tax Deduction: Which One Saves You More Money?

A tax deduction reduces taxable income; a tax credit cuts your tax bill dollar for dollar. In the 22% bracket, a $2,000 credit saves the full $2,000 while the same-sized deduction saves just $440. Covers refundable vs. nonrefundable credits, 2026 amounts (EITC up to $8,231, CTC $2,200 per child), and strategies for stacking both.

tax
tax-credits
tax-deductions
tax-planning
+3
IRS Form 2210: How to Calculate and Avoid the Underpayment Penalty
·mike

IRS Form 2210: How to Calculate and Avoid the Underpayment Penalty

How IRS Form 2210 works, when you must file it, the three safe harbors that prevent the underpayment penalty, and how Schedule AI reduces the bill for taxpayers with uneven income. Covers 2026 penalty rates (7% in Q1, 6% in Q2), due dates, and common mistakes.

tax
tax-compliance
tax-planning
self-employment-tax
+4
Charitable Contributions Tax Deductions: A Complete Guide for Individuals and Small Business Owners
·mike

Charitable Contributions Tax Deductions: A Complete Guide for Individuals and Small Business Owners

A practical guide to claiming charitable contribution tax deductions — covering qualified organizations, AGI limits (20%–60%), documentation requirements, and strategies like donor-advised funds and qualified charitable distributions for retirees.

tax
tax-deductions
tax-planning
personal-finance
+3
12 Common Tax Return Mistakes to Avoid (and How to Fix Them)
·mike

12 Common Tax Return Mistakes to Avoid (and How to Fix Them)

The IRS now uses AI to cross-reference your return against W-2s, 1099s, and bank records. Here are 12 specific tax return mistakes—from missing income to wrong bank account numbers—with exact steps to avoid each, and what to do if you've already filed with an error.

tax
tax-filing
tax-preparation
tax-compliance
+3
The EV Tax Credit: What Happened, What's Next, and What You Can Still Claim
·mike

The EV Tax Credit: What Happened, What's Next, and What You Can Still Claim

The federal EV tax credit (up to $7,500) expired September 30, 2025 under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. Here's who can still claim it on their 2025 return, how the new car loan interest deduction works, and what records to keep.

tax
tax-deductions
tax-planning
personal-finance
+3
How Far Back Can the IRS Audit You? The Complete Guide to Audit Statutes of Limitations
·mike

How Far Back Can the IRS Audit You? The Complete Guide to Audit Statutes of Limitations

The IRS has 3 years to audit most returns, 6 years if you omit 25%+ of gross income, and unlimited time for fraud or unfiled returns — here's what each window means for your record-keeping strategy and audit risk.

tax
tax-compliance
tax-planning
personal-finance
+3
How the IRS Collects Unpaid Taxes: Liens, Levies, and Your Options
·mike

How the IRS Collects Unpaid Taxes: Liens, Levies, and Your Options

The IRS follows a structured escalation from notices to liens, levies, and asset seizure when taxes go unpaid. Learn how each tool works, your rights as a taxpayer, and the relief options—installment agreements, Offer in Compromise, and Currently Not Collectible status.

tax
tax-compliance
personal-finance
guides
+2
How Long Can You Go Without Filing Taxes? The Real Consequences Explained
·mike

How Long Can You Go Without Filing Taxes? The Real Consequences Explained

The IRS has no grace period for unfiled returns—failure-to-file penalties run 5% per month up to 25%, the statute of limitations never starts on an unfiled return, and refunds expire after three years. Here's what the enforcement timeline looks like and how to get back into compliance.

tax-filing
tax-compliance
tax-deadlines
tax-preparation
+4
How Much Do You Owe the IRS? 5 Ways to Find Out (and What to Do Next)
·mike

How Much Do You Owe the IRS? 5 Ways to Find Out (and What to Do Next)

Check your IRS balance using 5 methods—online account, phone, notices, transcript, or in-person—then choose the right path: pay in full, set up a payment plan, or apply for penalty abatement. Covers 2026 penalty rates and collection timelines.

tax
tax-compliance
tax-planning
personal-finance
+4
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