Beancount.io LogoBeancount.io

470 tagged with "Tax Planning"

Strategic tax planning to minimize liability and maximize savings

View all tags

The Convenience of the Employer Rule in 2026: Why Your Remote Workers May Still Owe Tax to the Office State
·mike

The Convenience of the Employer Rule in 2026: Why Your Remote Workers May Still Owe Tax to the Office State

Eight states tax remote workers as if they sat in the office. A 2026 guide to the convenience of the employer rule, the May 2025 Zelinsky decision, reciprocity agreements, resident credits, and what multi-state employers must withhold.

remote-work
multi-state-tax
tax-compliance
payroll
+3
The Minister's Housing Allowance: Section 107, the SECA Trap, and the Retired-Pastor 403(b) Designation
·mike

The Minister's Housing Allowance: Section 107, the SECA Trap, and the Retired-Pastor 403(b) Designation

Section 107 lets ordained ministers exclude designated housing costs from federal income tax, but the allowance is still added back for SECA and only an in-advance written designation survives audit. A practical guide to the three-part cap, Form 4361's irrevocable opt-out, and the 403(b) designation that keeps a retired pastor's distribution income-tax-free for life.

tax
tax-planning
self-employment-tax
retirement-planning
+3
The Charity Deduction You Get Without Itemizing: A 2026 Guide to the New $1,000 / $2,000 Above-the-Line Write-Off
·mike

The Charity Deduction You Get Without Itemizing: A 2026 Guide to the New $1,000 / $2,000 Above-the-Line Write-Off

Starting in 2026, taxpayers who take the standard deduction can deduct up to $1,000 ($2,000 for joint filers) of cash gifts to qualified public charities under new IRC Section 170(p) — cash only, no donor-advised funds, no carryforward, and the same $250 documentation rules as itemizers.

charitable-giving
tax-deductions
tax-planning
personal-finance
+3
The $15 Million Estate Tax Exemption Is Now Permanent: How High-Net-Worth Families Should Recalibrate SLATs, GRATs, and Lifetime Gifts in 2026
·mike

The $15 Million Estate Tax Exemption Is Now Permanent: How High-Net-Worth Families Should Recalibrate SLATs, GRATs, and Lifetime Gifts in 2026

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act locks the federal estate, gift, and GST exemption at $15 million per individual with no sunset. Here is what changes for SLATs, GRATs, dynasty trusts, GST allocation, and basis planning in 2026 — and what to actually do this year.

estate-planning
tax-planning
trust
wealth-building
+3
Permanent 100% Bonus Depreciation Returns: How Small Businesses Stack Section 168(k), Section 179, and QIP in 2026
·mike

Permanent 100% Bonus Depreciation Returns: How Small Businesses Stack Section 168(k), Section 179, and QIP in 2026

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act made 100% bonus depreciation under Section 168(k) permanent for qualified property placed in service after January 19, 2025. This guide explains how small businesses coordinate Section 179, qualified improvement property, and the new Section 168(n) manufacturing deduction — and the acquisition-date rules that decide eligibility.

bonus-depreciation
section-179
depreciation
tax-planning
+4
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
Section 1041 and Divorce: A Guide to Property Transfers, Carryover Basis, and QDROs
·mike

Section 1041 and Divorce: A Guide to Property Transfers, Carryover Basis, and QDROs

Section 1041 lets spouses transfer property tax-free during and after divorce, but carryover basis, the six-year window, QDROs, ISO conversions, and post-TCJA alimony rules quietly reshape every settlement. A working guide to what must be fixed before the decree is signed.

divorce
tax-planning
capital-gains
retirement-planning
+4
Section 1235 Capital Gains Treatment for Patent Sales: How Inventors Convert Royalty Income Into Long-Term Capital Gain
·mike

Section 1235 Capital Gains Treatment for Patent Sales: How Inventors Convert Royalty Income Into Long-Term Capital Gain

Section 1235 lets individual inventors and qualifying early investors treat a patent sale as long-term capital gain — even without a one-year holding period — if they transfer all substantial rights. This guide explains who qualifies as a holder, why the rule survived the TCJA carve-out for self-created intangibles, and how to draft the transfer so the IRS sees a sale rather than a royalty license.

tax-planning
capital-gains
tax
legal
+4
Section 25C Energy Efficient Home Improvement Credit: A Final-Year Filing Guide Before the OBBBA Sunset
·mike

Section 25C Energy Efficient Home Improvement Credit: A Final-Year Filing Guide Before the OBBBA Sunset

Section 25C's 30% federal credit for heat pumps, insulation, windows, and other home efficiency upgrades ends with the OBBBA sunset on December 31, 2025, making the 2025 return the last chance to claim up to $3,200 per household — provided you supply a valid 4-character QMID on Form 5695.

tax
tax-credits
tax-planning
tax-preparation
+3
Section 267 Explained: Related-Party Loss Disallowance and the Matching Rule
·mike

Section 267 Explained: Related-Party Loss Disallowance and the Matching Rule

Section 267 disallows losses on sales between related parties and defers deductions on accrued payments to related cash-basis payees. A practical guide to who counts as related, how constructive ownership works, the 267(d) gain offset, the 2.5-month payment safe harbor, and the bookkeeping habits that keep family businesses and partnerships audit-ready.

tax
tax-planning
tax-compliance
family-business
+4
Section 45L Before the Lights Go Out: How Builders and Developers Can Still Claim $2,500 to $5,000 Per Unit Before June 30, 2026
·mike

Section 45L Before the Lights Go Out: How Builders and Developers Can Still Claim $2,500 to $5,000 Per Unit Before June 30, 2026

Section 45L pays builders and developers $500 to $5,000 per energy-efficient home, but the One Big Beautiful Bill Act ends the credit for homes acquired after June 30, 2026. A practical guide to ENERGY STAR versus Zero Energy Ready certification, prevailing wage rules on multifamily, the LIHTC basis carve-out, and the Form 8908 mechanics that decide whether the credit survives audit.

tax-credits
tax-compliance
construction
real-estate
+4
Showing 37–48 of 470 posts