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183 tagged with "Personal Finance"

Personal money management and financial wellness strategies

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Form 8606 and the Backdoor Roth: How One Missing Tax Form Causes Double Taxation
·mike

Form 8606 and the Backdoor Roth: How One Missing Tax Form Causes Double Taxation

Form 8606 is the IRS's running ledger of after-tax basis inside traditional, SEP, and SIMPLE IRAs. Skip it and the IRS treats your basis as zero, taxing the same dollars a second time at distribution. This guide explains how the form works, why the pro-rata rule punishes most backdoor Roth conversions, and how to keep your basis documented for the next 30 years.

ira
retirement-savings
tax-planning
tax-compliance
+3
Inherited IRA 10-Year Rule: How Non-Spouse Beneficiaries Avoid the 25% Penalty
·mike

Inherited IRA 10-Year Rule: How Non-Spouse Beneficiaries Avoid the 25% Penalty

Non-spouse IRA beneficiaries must empty inherited accounts within 10 years, and annual RMDs become mandatory in 2025 if the original owner died on or after their required beginning date. A missed RMD triggers a 25% excise tax. Only surviving spouses, minor children, disabled or chronically ill individuals, and beneficiaries within 10 years of the deceased's age keep the old stretch treatment.

ira
retirement-savings
tax-planning
estate-planning
+3
Kiddie Tax Form 8615: How Investment Income for Children Under 24 Is Taxed at Parent Rates
·mike

Kiddie Tax Form 8615: How Investment Income for Children Under 24 Is Taxed at Parent Rates

How the federal kiddie tax pulls a child's unearned income above $2,700 in 2026 onto the parent's marginal rate via Form 8615. Mechanics, UTMA/UGMA pitfalls, full-time-student rules through age 23, and planning strategies using 529 plans, Roth IRAs, and gain timing.

tax
tax-planning
personal-finance
financial-planning
+3
Net Unrealized Appreciation: The 401(k) Tax Strategy That Saves Six Figures
·mike

Net Unrealized Appreciation: The 401(k) Tax Strategy That Saves Six Figures

The Net Unrealized Appreciation election lets retirees pay long-term capital gains rates on employer stock distributed from a 401(k) instead of ordinary income, often saving more than $144,000 on a $1 million position. Covers eligibility under IRC 402(e)(4), the lump-sum distribution rule, and the most common mistakes that destroy the strategy.

tax-planning
retirement-savings
capital-gains
tax-optimization
+3
The PFIC Form 8621 Tax Trap: Why US Investors Get Punished for Owning Foreign Mutual Funds and ETFs
·mike

The PFIC Form 8621 Tax Trap: Why US Investors Get Punished for Owning Foreign Mutual Funds and ETFs

PFICs (foreign mutual funds, UCITS ETFs) trigger Section 1291 tax for US investors — gains allocated across the holding period, taxed at top ordinary rates, plus compounded interest charges. This guide covers Form 8621, the QEF and mark-to-market elections, the $25k/$50k de minimis filing exception, and how to escape the trap.

tax
international-tax
tax-compliance
expatriate
+4
Roth Conversion Ladder: How FIRE Investors Tap Retirement Accounts Penalty-Free Before Age 59½
·mike

Roth Conversion Ladder: How FIRE Investors Tap Retirement Accounts Penalty-Free Before Age 59½

A Roth conversion ladder converts traditional IRA dollars to Roth in annual tranches, each unlocking penalty-free five tax years later — the core mechanism FIRE retirees use to tap pre-tax accounts before age 59½ while filling low tax brackets.

retirement-savings
tax-planning
ira
personal-finance
+3
Rule 72(t) SEPP: How to Tap Your IRA Before 59½ Without the 10% Penalty
·mike

Rule 72(t) SEPP: How to Tap Your IRA Before 59½ Without the 10% Penalty

How Rule 72(t) Series of Substantially Equal Periodic Payments (SEPP) lets retirees tap an IRA or 401(k) before 59½ without the 10% early-withdrawal penalty — covering the three IRS calculation methods, the 5% interest-rate floor from Notice 2022-6, and the recapture-tax mistakes that bust early retirement plans.

retirement-plans
ira
retirement-savings
tax-planning
+3
Section 121 Home Sale Exclusion: How Homeowners Can Skip Up to $500,000 in Capital Gains Taxes
·mike

Section 121 Home Sale Exclusion: How Homeowners Can Skip Up to $500,000 in Capital Gains Taxes

How Section 121 lets U.S. homeowners exclude up to $250,000 ($500,000 for joint filers) of capital gains on a primary home sale — covering the 24-month ownership and use tests, the two-year frequency rule, partial exclusions, depreciation recapture, and the nonqualified-use allocation.

tax
tax-planning
real-estate
home-ownership
+4
Section 199A REIT Dividend Deduction: The 20% Tax Break Most REIT Investors Don't Fully Use
·mike

Section 199A REIT Dividend Deduction: The 20% Tax Break Most REIT Investors Don't Fully Use

Section 199A lets investors deduct 20% of qualified REIT dividends from taxable income, dropping the top federal rate from 37% to about 29.6%. This guide covers Box 5 of Form 1099-DIV, the 45-day holding-period rule, Form 8995, and how OBBBA made the deduction permanent.

tax-deductions
tax-planning
real-estate
personal-finance
+3
Section 25D Residential Clean Energy Credit: Final-Year Claim, Carryforward, and TPO Alternatives
·mike

Section 25D Residential Clean Energy Credit: Final-Year Claim, Carryforward, and TPO Alternatives

Section 25D's 30% residential clean energy credit ends December 31, 2025 under the OBBBA. How to file the final-year claim on Form 5695, carry unused credit forward indefinitely, and use TPO leases or Section 48E to capture value in 2026.

tax-credits
tax
home-ownership
tax-planning
+4
Tax Loss Harvesting: The Year-Round Strategy That Can Save You Thousands in Capital Gains Taxes
·mike

Tax Loss Harvesting: The Year-Round Strategy That Can Save You Thousands in Capital Gains Taxes

Year-round tax loss harvesting can add 0.5%–1.5% in annual after-tax returns to a taxable portfolio. This guide explains the IRS netting order, the wash sale rule across taxable and IRA accounts, and a practical framework for harvesting short-term losses without losing the deduction.

tax-loss-harvesting
capital-gains
tax-planning
tax-optimization
+4
Form 709 Gift Tax Return: When You Must File, the Annual Exclusion, and the $15M Lifetime Exemption
·mike

Form 709 Gift Tax Return: When You Must File, the Annual Exclusion, and the $15M Lifetime Exemption

A practical guide to Form 709 for 2026 gifts — who must file, the $19,000 annual exclusion, the $15 million lifetime exemption, gift splitting rules, the adequate disclosure standard that starts the IRS three-year clock, and the medical and tuition payments that escape reporting entirely.

tax
tax-planning
tax-compliance
estate-planning
+4
Showing 73–84 of 183 posts