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470 tagged with "Tax Planning"

Strategic tax planning to minimize liability and maximize savings

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Form 8889 in 2026: HSA Reporting Without Triggering the 6%, 10%, or 20% Penalty
·mike

Form 8889 in 2026: HSA Reporting Without Triggering the 6%, 10%, or 20% Penalty

A 2026 walkthrough of Form 8889 — HSA contribution limits ($4,400 self-only, $8,750 family), the triple tax advantage, the last-month rule's 13-month testing period, the Medicare six-month retroactive enrollment trap, and the six most common filing mistakes that trigger the 6% excess-contribution excise tax, 10% recapture, or 20% non-qualified-distribution penalty.

tax
tax-compliance
tax-planning
tax-preparation
+4
HSA vs FSA vs HRA in 2026: Stack a Limited-Purpose FSA With Your HSA and Beat the Use-It-or-Lose-It Trap
·mike

HSA vs FSA vs HRA in 2026: Stack a Limited-Purpose FSA With Your HSA and Beat the Use-It-or-Lose-It Trap

2026 rules for HSAs, FSAs, and HRAs — contribution limits, who owns each account, when each one wins, how to stack a Limited-Purpose FSA with an HSA without breaking eligibility, and how employees and employers avoid forfeitures.

healthcare
health-insurance
tax-planning
personal-finance
+3
HSA vs FSA vs HRA in 2026: The Practical Playbook for Picking, Stacking, and Not Forfeiting Your Health Dollars
·mike

HSA vs FSA vs HRA in 2026: The Practical Playbook for Picking, Stacking, and Not Forfeiting Your Health Dollars

A 2026 walk-through of HSA, FSA, and HRA rules with the new contribution limits, the limited-purpose FSA stack that adds up to $7,800 of pre-tax room, and how small employers can use ICHRA and QSEHRA to compete with corporate benefits.

healthcare
health-insurance
tax-planning
personal-finance
+4
The Mega Backdoor Roth Playbook: How High Earners Can Funnel an Extra $47,500 Into Tax-Free Retirement Accounts in 2026
·mike

The Mega Backdoor Roth Playbook: How High Earners Can Funnel an Extra $47,500 Into Tax-Free Retirement Accounts in 2026

The mega backdoor Roth routes up to $47,500 of after-tax 401(k) contributions into a Roth bucket for 2026, on top of the standard $24,500 employee deferral, by converting after-tax dollars through an in-plan Roth conversion or in-service distribution to a Roth IRA. The IRS Section 415(c) total cap of $72,000 ($80,000 if age 50+) covers contributions from all sources combined, and converting promptly keeps the taxable earnings drag near zero.

retirement-plans
retirement-savings
tax-planning
personal-finance
+4
The NIL Tax Trap: What College Athletes (and Their Parents) Owe on Endorsement, Collective, and Revenue-Sharing Income
·mike

The NIL Tax Trap: What College Athletes (and Their Parents) Owe on Endorsement, Collective, and Revenue-Sharing Income

How NIL endorsements, collective payouts, and House v. NCAA revenue sharing are taxed in 2026—Schedule C mechanics, the 15.3% self-employment tax, multi-state jock-tax filings, and the planning moves that keep April manageable for college athletes and their families.

tax
self-employment-tax
independent-contractor
multi-state-tax
+4
Personal Goodwill in C-Corp Asset Sales: Martin Ice Cream, Norwalk, Bross Trucking, and Howard
·mike

Personal Goodwill in C-Corp Asset Sales: Martin Ice Cream, Norwalk, Bross Trucking, and Howard

Personal goodwill carve-outs let C-corporation shareholders pay 23.8% capital gains instead of 40%+ combined tax on a portion of an asset sale. Martin Ice Cream, Norwalk, and Bross Trucking show when the allocation survives; Howard shows when an employment-and-noncompete agreement quietly destroys it.

c-corporation
tax-planning
mergers-and-acquisitions
business-exit
+3
Personal Goodwill in M&A Asset Sales: How Martin Ice Cream and Norwalk Help Owners Avoid Double Taxation
·mike

Personal Goodwill in M&A Asset Sales: How Martin Ice Cream and Norwalk Help Owners Avoid Double Taxation

Personal goodwill, anchored in the Martin Ice Cream and Norwalk Tax Court decisions, lets closely held C corporation owners shift a portion of an asset-sale price out of the corporate tax layer and onto the shareholder as long-term capital gain. This guide explains the doctrine, when it works, the documentation that survives an IRS audit, and the mistakes that have sunk allocations.

tax-planning
mergers-and-acquisitions
c-corporation
capital-gains
+4
Personal Holding Company Tax Under Section 541: The 20% Surtax That Quietly Ambushes Closely-Held C Corporations
·mike

Personal Holding Company Tax Under Section 541: The 20% Surtax That Quietly Ambushes Closely-Held C Corporations

Section 541 layers a 20% federal surtax on closely-held C corporations that fail both the stock ownership and 60% passive income tests. This guide walks through Schedule PH mechanics, the dividends-paid deduction, and four ways — cash, throwback, consent, and deficiency dividends — to zero out the tax before it hits.

tax
c-corp
tax-compliance
tax-planning
+3
Sales Tax on SaaS, Streaming, and Digital Goods in 2026: A State-by-State Compliance Survival Guide for Software Vendors
·mike

Sales Tax on SaaS, Streaming, and Digital Goods in 2026: A State-by-State Compliance Survival Guide for Software Vendors

By 2026, sales tax on SaaS and digital goods splits into three legal routes—tangible property, taxable service, or nontaxable intangible—plus a true-object test that turns on customer intent. This guide covers the 2026 Illinois, Maine, and D.C. changes, economic nexus thresholds, and when a voluntary disclosure agreement beats direct registration.

sales-tax
saas
nexus
tax-compliance
+3
Schedule F Survival Guide: Crop Insurance Deferral, Section 1033(e) Livestock Sales, and Schedule J Income Averaging
·mike

Schedule F Survival Guide: Crop Insurance Deferral, Section 1033(e) Livestock Sales, and Schedule J Income Averaging

Schedule F farm tax elections explained — crop insurance deferral under Section 451(f), weather-forced livestock replacement under Section 1033(e), Section 175 conservation deductions, the Section 464 prepaid-supply cap, the March 1 estimated-tax rule, and Schedule J three-year income averaging — with rules, deadlines, and worked examples.

tax
tax-planning
tax-deductions
self-employment-tax
+3
Schedule F: Farm Tax Reporting, Disaster Deferrals, and Income Averaging Explained
·mike

Schedule F: Farm Tax Reporting, Disaster Deferrals, and Income Averaging Explained

A practical walkthrough of Schedule F for farmers and ranchers, covering crop insurance deferral under Section 451, weather-related livestock relief (Section 451(g) and 1033(e)), Section 175 soil and water conservation deductions capped at 25% of farm gross income, Section 179 and bonus depreciation, and Schedule J income averaging using elected farm income across three base years.

schedule-f
tax-planning
self-employment-tax
depreciation
+4
Schedules K-2 and K-3 in 2026: The Domestic Filing Exception, the 1-Month Deadline, and the Foreign Tax Credit Trap
·mike

Schedules K-2 and K-3 in 2026: The Domestic Filing Exception, the 1-Month Deadline, and the Foreign Tax Credit Trap

Schedules K-2 and K-3 pulled even purely domestic partnerships and S-corps into international tax reporting starting in 2021. This guide explains the 2026 filing rules, the four-condition domestic filing exception, the January 15 partner notification and February 15 1-month K-3 request deadlines for calendar-year filers, the $250,000 small entity carve-out added in 2024, and the per-partner, per-month penalty math for non-compliance.

tax
tax-compliance
partnerships
s-corp
+4
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