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211 tagged with "Tax Deductions"

Maximize tax deductions and reduce your tax liability legally

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OBBBA Locks In the Section 199A QBI Deduction: A 2026 Playbook for Pass-Through Owners
·mike

OBBBA Locks In the Section 199A QBI Deduction: A 2026 Playbook for Pass-Through Owners

Section 199A is now permanent under OBBBA. Pass-through owners get a 20% deduction, wider SSTB phase-in ranges ($75K single / $150K joint above the 2026 threshold), a new $400 minimum for material participants, and the same W-2 wage and UBIA tests at the top of the band.

tax-planning
tax-deductions
small-business
s-corporation
+4
The Standard Deduction Is Now Permanent: How OBBBA Reshapes the Itemize-vs-Standard Decision for 2026
·mike

The Standard Deduction Is Now Permanent: How OBBBA Reshapes the Itemize-vs-Standard Decision for 2026

How the One Big Beautiful Bill Act made the doubled standard deduction permanent, raised the SALT cap to $40,000, added a 0.5% AGI charitable floor, and stacked a $6,000 senior bonus deduction — with concrete math for the 2026 itemize-versus-standard decision.

tax
tax-planning
tax-deductions
charitable-giving
+3
Repair or Capitalize? A Plain-English Guide to the Section 263(a)-3 Tangible Property Rules for Small Businesses
·mike

Repair or Capitalize? A Plain-English Guide to the Section 263(a)-3 Tangible Property Rules for Small Businesses

How the IRS Section 263(a)-3 tangible property regulations decide what small businesses can deduct now versus capitalize over decades — with the three safe harbors ($2,500/$5,000 de minimis, the small taxpayer building rule, and routine maintenance), the BRA test, and the unit-of-property trap that drives most mistakes.

tax
tax-deductions
tax-planning
depreciation
+4
Are Business Credit Card Rewards Taxable? How to Record Cash Back, Points, and Bonuses
·mike

Are Business Credit Card Rewards Taxable? How to Record Cash Back, Points, and Bonuses

For most businesses, credit card cash back and points are non-taxable rebates, not income—but a bonus with no spending requirement is taxable. Spending rewards also reduce your deductible expenses, so record them as a contra-expense to keep deductions accurate.

tax
credit
cash-back
rewards
+4
NIL Collectives and 501(c)(3) Status: What IRS Memorandum AM 2023-004 Means for Donors
·mike

NIL Collectives and 501(c)(3) Status: What IRS Memorandum AM 2023-004 Means for Donors

IRS Memorandum AM 2023-004 holds that most nonprofit NIL collectives fail the 501(c)(3) operational test because compensating student-athletes is substantial private benefit, not charitable activity — meaning donor contributions are often not deductible.

nonprofit
charitable-giving
tax-compliance
tax-deductions
+3
Why Most NIL Collectives Aren't Real Charities (and Your Donation Isn't Deductible)
·mike

Why Most NIL Collectives Aren't Real Charities (and Your Donation Isn't Deductible)

The IRS memorandum AM 2023-004 concluded that NIL collectives paying 80-100% of donations to athletes confer substantial private benefit and fail the operational test for 501(c)(3) status, so contributions to them are generally not tax-deductible.

tax
charitable-giving
tax-deductions
tax-compliance
+2
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
·mike

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.

tax
tax-deductions
tax-planning
personal-finance
+3
The $40,000 SALT Cap: Should You Re-Itemize in 2026?
·mike

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.

tax
tax-planning
tax-deductions
personal-finance
+3
Section 1341 and the Claim of Right Doctrine: Recovering Tax on Clawed-Back Bonuses
·mike

Section 1341 and the Claim of Right Doctrine: Recovering Tax on Clawed-Back Bonuses

Section 1341 lets a taxpayer who repays more than $3,000 of previously taxed income recover the tax cost—via a deduction or a credit, whichever is lower—on the repayment-year return rather than by amending the old one.

tax
tax-credits
tax-deductions
executive-compensation
+3
Section 7508A: How Federally Declared Disaster Relief Postpones Your Tax Deadlines
·mike

Section 7508A: How Federally Declared Disaster Relief Postpones Your Tax Deadlines

Section 7508A lets the IRS postpone tax deadlines up to one year for taxpayers in federally declared disaster counties—usually automatically by address. A Section 165(i) election can also move a casualty loss to the prior year's return for a faster refund.

tax
tax-deadlines
tax-deductions
tax-compliance
+2
The PTET SALT Cap Workaround: How Pass-Through Owners Convert State Tax Into a Federal Deduction
·mike

The PTET SALT Cap Workaround: How Pass-Through Owners Convert State Tax Into a Federal Deduction

How partnerships and S corporations in 36+ states use the Pass-Through Entity Tax election under IRS Notice 2020-75 to deduct state income tax at the entity level and bypass the federal SALT cap — with a worked example, resident-credit mechanics, and 2026 election deadlines.

tax-planning
s-corporation
partnerships
multi-state-tax
+4
Section 163(h) Mortgage Interest Deduction in 2026: $750K Cap, Grandfathered Loans, and HELOC Rules
·mike

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.

tax-deductions
real-estate
home-ownership
personal-finance
+4
Showing 25–36 of 211 posts