470 tagged with "Tax Planning"
Strategic tax planning to minimize liability and maximize savings
The 2026 Adoption Tax Credit: Form 8839, the Refundable $5,120, and the Five-Year Carryforward
For 2026, the federal Adoption Tax Credit is worth up to $17,670 per child, with $5,120 now refundable. A field guide to Form 8839, qualified expenses, the special-needs rule, failed adoptions, the MAGI phase-out, and the five-year carryforward.
Adoption Tax Credit Under Section 23 in 2026: Claiming Up to $17,670 on Form 8839 for Domestic, Foreign, Special Needs, and Failed Adoptions
For tax year 2026, the federal Adoption Tax Credit caps at $17,670 per eligible child, with up to $5,120 refundable and a five-year carryforward on the nonrefundable remainder. This guide explains Form 8839, the timing rules for domestic, foreign, special needs, and failed adoptions, MAGI phase-out between $265,080 and $305,080, and how to coordinate with employer-provided adoption assistance under Section 137.
Direct Indexing for Tax-Loss Harvesting in 2026: The Loss Machine ETFs Cannot Build
A 2026 guide to direct indexing — how owning the 500 underlying stocks of an index in a separately managed account harvests $18,281 of losses per year on average versus $4,808 for ETF investors, why the §1091 wash-sale rule and Rev. Rul. 2008-5 IRA trap can destroy your tax alpha, the platforms (Frec, Wealthfront, Schwab, Vanguard, BlackRock Aperio) competing at 9–40 bps with $5K–$1M minimums, and the loss-exhaustion problem that limits the strategy to a 5–10 year shelf life.
ESBT vs QSST: Choosing the Right Trust to Hold S-Corporation Stock
A side-by-side comparison of Electing Small Business Trusts (ESBT) and Qualified Subchapter S Trusts (QSST) under Section 1361, including who pays the tax, the 2-month-and-16-day election window, and a worked example showing a $118,000 annual tax swing between the two structures on $1M of K-1 income.
ESBT vs QSST: How Trusts Can Hold S-Corporation Stock Without Killing the S Election
A trust holding S-corporation stock must qualify as a QSST or ESBT under Section 1361 or the S election terminates retroactively. A QSST taxes pass-through income at the single beneficiary's personal rate; an ESBT permits multiple beneficiaries but traps S-portion income at the 37% top trust rate. The election deadline is two months and sixteen days from the triggering event.
Form 3800 General Business Credit: Stacking R&D, WOTC, FICA Tip, and Childcare Credits Under the 25/75 TMT Limit
How Form 3800 aggregates 40-plus business tax credits into one limitation, why the 25/75 tentative minimum tax floor matters, and how eligible small businesses (≤$50M gross receipts) can offset AMT with R&D, WOTC, FICA Tip, and other specified credits.
Form 6166 U.S. Residency Certification: How Businesses and Individuals Use Form 8802 to Slash Foreign Withholding on Royalties, Dividends, and Service Income
Form 6166 is the IRS-issued certificate of U.S. tax residency that unlocks reduced foreign withholding under bilateral tax treaties. Apply with Form 8802 — $85 for individuals, $185 for entities — and one filing covers unlimited countries and certificates, often saving five or six figures per cross-border contract.
Form 6252 and Installment Sales: A Working Guide to Section 453
A practical guide to Section 453 installment sales and Form 6252 — how the gross profit ratio defers capital gains across years, when depreciation recapture forces year-one recognition, how the Section 453A interest charge applies above the $5 million threshold, and when electing out beats deferral.
Form 6252 Installment Sales Under Section 453: Spreading Capital Gains and Avoiding the 453A Interest Charge
A practical walk-through of reporting installment sales on Form 6252 under IRC Section 453 — computing the gross profit percentage, why depreciation recapture is taxed in year one, the 453A interest charge on notes above the $5M aggregate threshold, the two-year related-party resale rule, and when electing out beats deferring gain.
Form 8308 and Section 751 Hot Assets: How a Partnership Sale Turns Capital Gain Into Ordinary Income
When a partner sells an LLC or partnership interest, Section 751 can recharacterize a large share of the gain as ordinary income taxed up to 37 percent. Form 8308 is the partnership's required disclosure of that hot-asset gain on Form 1065, with a January 31 furnishing leg and a return-due-date filing leg in 2026.
Form 6166 and Form 8802: How U.S. Residents Cut Foreign Withholding by Certifying Tax Residency
Form 6166 is the IRS letter that lets U.S. taxpayers claim treaty rates on foreign royalties, dividends, and services. This guide walks through the Form 8802 application, eligibility rules, common rejection traps, and the timing required to get withholding right at the source.
The U.S. Exit Tax in 2026: How Form 8854 and Section 877A Tax You on the Way Out
Section 877A treats covered expatriates as if they sold every asset the day before leaving the United States. For 2026 the net-tax threshold is $211,000, the net-worth test sits at $2 million, and the gain exclusion is $910,000 — here is how Form 8854 decides whether you pay.