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470 tagged with "Tax Planning"

Strategic tax planning to minimize liability and maximize savings

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Section 199A Rental Real Estate Safe Harbor: How Landlords Log 250 Hours, Avoid the Triple Net Lease Trap, and Lock In the 20% QBI Deduction
·mike

Section 199A Rental Real Estate Safe Harbor: How Landlords Log 250 Hours, Avoid the Triple Net Lease Trap, and Lock In the 20% QBI Deduction

Revenue Procedure 2019-38 lets landlords treat rental real estate as a trade or business for the 20% QBI deduction if they log 250 hours of qualifying services, keep contemporaneous records, avoid triple net leases, and file a signed election — now permanent under the 2025 One Big Beautiful Bill Act.

real-estate
tax
tax-planning
tax-deductions
+4
The Section 199A Rental Real Estate Safe Harbor: A Guide for Schedule E Landlords
·mike

The Section 199A Rental Real Estate Safe Harbor: A Guide for Schedule E Landlords

Rev. Proc. 2019-38 lets landlords claim the 20% QBI deduction if a rental enterprise logs 250+ hours of rental services a year with contemporaneous records and a signed election. Triple net leases and personal-use property are excluded.

tax
real-estate
tax-deductions
tax-planning
+4
Section 302 Stock Redemptions: Sale vs. Dividend Treatment in Closely-Held C Corporations
·mike

Section 302 Stock Redemptions: Sale vs. Dividend Treatment in Closely-Held C Corporations

A practical guide to Section 302 stock redemptions in closely-held C corporations — when a buyback gets capital gain treatment versus dividend treatment, how Section 318 family attribution disqualifies most family redemptions, and how the four 302(b) tests plus the 302(c)(2) waiver preserve sale treatment.

tax
tax-planning
c-corporation
capital-gains
+4
Section 302 Stock Redemption: How Closely-Held C Corporations Avoid Surprise Dividend Treatment
·mike

Section 302 Stock Redemption: How Closely-Held C Corporations Avoid Surprise Dividend Treatment

Section 302 of the Internal Revenue Code decides whether a closely-held C corporation's stock redemption is taxed as a capital sale or a full-amount dividend. This guide explains the three Section 302(b) tests, the Section 318 attribution traps that ensnare family-owned companies, the 10-year family-attribution waiver, and the partial-liquidation safe harbor under Section 302(b)(4).

c-corp
tax-planning
equity-instruments
business-exit
+3
Section 382: Why Acquirers Lose a Target's Net Operating Losses
·mike

Section 382: Why Acquirers Lose a Target's Net Operating Losses

Section 382 caps how fast an acquirer can use a target's net operating losses after an ownership change — annual limit equals the loss corporation's equity value times the long-term tax-exempt rate (about 3.58% in early 2026). Here is what triggers it and the legitimate workarounds.

tax
tax-planning
tax-compliance
business-acquisition
+3
Section 461(h) Economic Performance and the Recurring Item Exception: When Accrual-Basis Liabilities Are Actually Deductible
·mike

Section 461(h) Economic Performance and the Recurring Item Exception: When Accrual-Basis Liabilities Are Actually Deductible

Section 461(h) layers an economic performance test on top of the all-events test, so accrual-basis taxpayers cannot deduct a liability until the underlying activity actually happens. The recurring item exception accelerates deductions for predictable expenses when economic performance occurs within 8½ months of year-end and four specific conditions are met.

tax
tax-compliance
tax-planning
tax-deductions
+4
Section 6603 Deposits: Stop IRS Interest on Disputed Tax Without Giving Up Appeal Rights
·mike

Section 6603 Deposits: Stop IRS Interest on Disputed Tax Without Giving Up Appeal Rights

A Section 6603 deposit freezes IRS underpayment interest on contested tax while preserving your appeal, Tax Court, and withdrawal rights. This guide covers the written designation under Rev. Proc. 2005-18, when a deposit beats a payment, LIFO withdrawal mechanics, and the procedural traps that turn planned deposits into accidental payments.

tax
tax-compliance
tax-planning
audit
+4
Section 6603 Deposits: Stop IRS Interest Without Conceding the Audit
·mike

Section 6603 Deposits: Stop IRS Interest Without Conceding the Audit

A Section 6603 deposit halts interest on a disputed IRS liability without paying the tax, conceding the position, or forfeiting Tax Court access. Revenue Procedure 2005-18 spells out the mechanics—a written designation that names the tax, year, amount, and basis for disputability.

tax
tax-compliance
tax-planning
audit
+4
Bookkeeping for Short-Term Rental Hosts: Schedule E vs. Schedule C, the 7-Day Average Stay Rule, and Material Participation
·mike

Bookkeeping for Short-Term Rental Hosts: Schedule E vs. Schedule C, the 7-Day Average Stay Rule, and Material Participation

How Airbnb and Vrbo hosts classify income on Schedule E vs. Schedule C, calculate the 7-day average stay, and document material participation to unlock non-passive losses against W-2 wages.

airbnb
real-estate
bookkeeping
tax-planning
+4
Solo 401(k) vs. SEP-IRA in 2026: Picking the Self-Employed Retirement Plan That Actually Shelters the Most Income
·mike

Solo 401(k) vs. SEP-IRA in 2026: Picking the Self-Employed Retirement Plan That Actually Shelters the Most Income

A 2026 comparison of solo 401(k) and SEP-IRA plans for the self-employed, with contribution math at $60K, $120K, and $300K of net income, SECURE 2.0 Roth catch-up and super catch-up rules, setup deadlines, and a decision framework for picking the plan that shelters the most income.

solo-401k
sep-ira
retirement-plans
retirement-savings
+4
Soroban v. Commissioner: How 'Limited Partner' Stopped Meaning Limited Partner for SE Tax
·mike

Soroban v. Commissioner: How 'Limited Partner' Stopped Meaning Limited Partner for SE Tax

The Tax Court's 2025 Soroban v. Commissioner ruling applied a functional test to Section 1402(a)(13), reclassifying tens of millions in distributive share as self-employment income for working partners in hedge funds, private equity, and professional service LPs.

tax
self-employment-tax
partnerships
tax-planning
+4
ABLE Accounts in 2026: How Section 529A Lets People With Disabilities Save $19,000 a Year Tax-Free Without Losing SSI or Medicaid
·mike

ABLE Accounts in 2026: How Section 529A Lets People With Disabilities Save $19,000 a Year Tax-Free Without Losing SSI or Medicaid

A 2026 guide to ABLE accounts under IRC Section 529A — the new age-46 eligibility cutoff that makes 6 million more Americans (including 1 million veterans) eligible, the $19,000 annual contribution cap, the $100,000 SSI shelter, the unlimited Medicaid shelter, qualified disability expenses, the ABLE to Work multiplier up to $34,650, and how to avoid Medicaid clawback at death.

tax
tax-planning
personal-finance
financial-planning
+4
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