183 tagged with "Personal Finance"
Personal money management and financial wellness strategies
The Interest-Free Loan That Isn't: How Section 7872 Imputes Interest on Family and Shareholder Loans
A below-market loan triggers Section 7872, which treats forgone interest as taxable income to the lender even when no cash changes hands. This guide covers the $10,000 and $100,000 de minimis exceptions, the gift tax connection, and how charging the AFR avoids the whole problem.
The IRA Once-Per-Year Rollover Rule: One 60-Day Rollover and the Trustee-to-Trustee Workaround
You get only one IRA-to-IRA 60-day rollover per rolling 12-month period, counting all your IRAs as one account — a limit the 2014 Bobrow Tax Court case made aggregate. Trustee-to-trustee transfers are exempt and unlimited.
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 for Individual Investors: UBTI, Section 751 Recapture, and Multi-State Filings
A Master Limited Partnership pays cash quarterly but issues a Schedule K-1, not a 1099. Most distributions reduce your cost basis instead of being taxed, holding units in an IRA can trigger UBTI and a Form 990-T once income exceeds $1,000, and selling converts depreciation into ordinary income under Section 751 — taxed up to 37%.
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.
Car Loan Interest Is Tax-Deductible Again: How the OBBBA $10,000 Above-the-Line Deduction Works for U.S.-Assembled Vehicles From 2025 Through 2028
The OBBBA restores a personal car-loan interest deduction—up to $10,000 per year, above-the-line, for tax years 2025 through 2028—on new U.S.-assembled vehicles financed after December 31, 2024. Mechanics covered include the MAGI phase-out starting at $100K single / $200K joint, Form 1098-VLI reporting beginning in 2026, mandatory VIN entry on Form 1040, and edge cases for refinances, trade-ins, leases, and co-signers.
The $40,000 SALT Cap: Should You Re-Itemize in 2026?
OBBBA raised the SALT deduction cap to $40,400 for 2026, but a 30-cent-per-dollar MAGI phase-down between $505,000 and $606,333 creates a roughly 45% effective marginal rate — the "SALT torpedo." Here is how to decide whether to re-itemize.
Form 1099-DA in 2026: Reconcile Per-Wallet Crypto Cost Basis and Avoid Overpaying
Form 1099-DA reports gross crypto proceeds but often leaves cost basis blank, and filing it as-is defaults basis to zero — taxing the full sale price. Here is how per-wallet tracking and reconciliation against the form let you pay tax on your actual gain.
Section 163(h) Mortgage Interest Deduction in 2026: $750K Cap, Grandfathered Loans, and HELOC Rules
Section 163(h) decides whether your largest Schedule A line is a $14,000 deduction or an $8,500 one. Here is how the permanent $750,000 TCJA cap, the grandfathered $1 million pre-2018 loans, the HELOC "substantial improvement" rule, and the 2026 return of the mortgage insurance premium deduction actually work — with worked examples and the records you need on audit.
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.
Section 7345 and the CP508C: How the IRS Can Revoke Your Passport and How to Get It Back
Section 7345 lets the IRS certify a "seriously delinquent" tax debt — roughly $66,000 in 2026 — to the State Department, which can deny, refuse to renew, or revoke a U.S. passport. This guide explains how the CP508C notice works, the five practical paths to decertification, the expedited procedures for imminent travel, and what the courts have recently said.
Solo 401(k) vs. SEP-IRA for the Self-Employed: 2026 Limits, the Roth Option, and the Pro-Rata Trap
For the self-employed, a Solo 401(k) often shelters more than double what a SEP-IRA does at the same income — a $90,000 earner can contribute $47,000 vs. $22,500 in 2026. This guide covers the limits, the Roth option, the pro-rata rule, and the December 31 deferral deadline.