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183 tagged with "Personal Finance"

Personal money management and financial wellness strategies

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IRS One-Time Forgiveness: How to Use First-Time Penalty Abatement to Eliminate Tax Penalties
·mike

IRS One-Time Forgiveness: How to Use First-Time Penalty Abatement to Eliminate Tax Penalties

The IRS First-Time Penalty Abatement program can eliminate failure-to-file, failure-to-pay, and failure-to-deposit penalties for taxpayers with a clean 3-year compliance history — no documentation required, often approved in a single phone call.

tax
tax-compliance
small-business
personal-finance
+4
Itemized Deductions: The Complete 2026 Guide to Maximizing Your Tax Savings
·mike

Itemized Deductions: The Complete 2026 Guide to Maximizing Your Tax Savings

The 2026 SALT cap increase to $40,000 and a new 0.5% AGI floor on charitable giving change the math on itemizing. Here's who benefits, what qualifies on Schedule A, and how to maximize deductions—including bunching and donor-advised funds.

tax
tax-deductions
tax-planning
tax-preparation
+3
Medicare Tax: Complete Guide to Rates, Rules, and What You Owe in 2026
·mike

Medicare Tax: Complete Guide to Rates, Rules, and What You Owe in 2026

Medicare tax applies to all wages with no income cap; in 2026 the base rate is 2.9%, but high earners face an additional 0.9% surtax and up to 5% Net Investment Income Tax on passive income.

tax
self-employment-tax
self-employment
tax-planning
+3
Form 4868: The Complete Guide to Filing a Tax Extension
·mike

Form 4868: The Complete Guide to Filing a Tax Extension

Form 4868 grants an automatic six-month federal tax extension—but not a payment extension. Learn who should file, how to complete the form, key deadlines, penalty comparisons, and common mistakes that cost taxpayers real money.

tax
tax-filing
tax-deadlines
tax-compliance
+3
How to File Back Taxes Without Records: A Step-by-Step Guide
·mike

How to File Back Taxes Without Records: A Step-by-Step Guide

A practical guide to reconstructing missing financial records and filing back taxes. Covers IRS wage transcripts, bank statements, alternative documentation, penalty math (5% vs 0.5% per month), and payment options for taxpayers with one to six years of unfiled returns.

tax
tax-filing
tax-compliance
tax-preparation
+3
IRS CP2000 Notice: What It Is and How to Respond
·mike

IRS CP2000 Notice: What It Is and How to Respond

Over 4 million taxpayers receive IRS CP2000 notices each year—a proposed adjustment from the Automated Underreporter unit, not a bill. This guide explains what triggers a CP2000, how to respond within the 30-day deadline, when to dispute, and how to prevent future notices with better record-keeping.

tax
tax-compliance
tax-preparation
personal-finance
+3
How to Spot a Fake IRS Letter: Warning Signs and What to Do
·mike

How to Spot a Fake IRS Letter: Warning Signs and What to Do

IRS impersonation fraud cost Americans over $114 million between 2013 and 2025, with average victims losing more than $32,000. Learn the 9 warning signs of a fake IRS letter, what legitimate IRS notices look like, and the exact steps to take if you receive a suspicious letter.

tax
fraud-prevention
fraud-detection
security
+4
IRS Currently Not Collectible Status: What It Is and How to Get It
·mike

IRS Currently Not Collectible Status: What It Is and How to Get It

IRS Currently Not Collectible (CNC) status pauses all collection activity—wage garnishments, bank levies, asset seizures—for taxpayers whose income minus allowable expenses leaves no disposable income. Learn how to qualify, apply using Form 433-F, and use the 10-year collection statute expiration date as a strategic advantage.

tax
tax-planning
tax-compliance
personal-finance
+4
Tax Season Survival Guide: 8 Tips to Avoid Financial Stress
·mike

Tax Season Survival Guide: 8 Tips to Avoid Financial Stress

Eight year-round habits—organized records, quarterly estimated payments, deduction tracking, and fraud awareness—that transform tax season from a last-minute scramble into a routine filing task for employees, freelancers, and small business owners.

tax
tax-planning
tax-preparation
tax-filing
+4
Adjusted Gross Income (AGI): What It Is, How to Calculate It, and Why It Matters
·mike

Adjusted Gross Income (AGI): What It Is, How to Calculate It, and Why It Matters

AGI—the number on Line 11 of Form 1040—determines your taxable income, credit eligibility, and itemization thresholds. This guide covers how to calculate it for 2026, how it differs from MAGI, and five strategies to reduce it, from maxing retirement contributions to Qualified Charitable Distributions.

tax
personal-finance
tax-planning
tax-preparation
+4
Alternative Minimum Tax: What It Is, Who Pays It, and How to Minimize It
·mike

Alternative Minimum Tax: What It Is, Who Pays It, and How to Minimize It

The AMT is a parallel federal tax system that disallows many standard deductions—here's how it's calculated, which 2025 exemption thresholds apply, and concrete strategies (from ISO exercise timing to bond selection) to reduce your exposure.

tax
tax-planning
tax-compliance
personal-finance
+3
Back Taxes: What They Are, What Happens If You Ignore Them, and How to Resolve Them
·mike

Back Taxes: What They Are, What Happens If You Ignore Them, and How to Resolve Them

11 million Americans owe $125 billion in back taxes. Learn the exact penalty structure (5%/month for not filing vs. 0.5%/month for not paying), IRS enforcement tools, and every resolution option from installment agreements to Offer in Compromise — with 2024 acceptance rates and eligibility thresholds.

tax
tax-compliance
tax-filing
tax-planning
+3
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