Skip to main content
Beancount.io LogoBeancount.io

470 tagged with "Tax Planning"

Strategic tax planning to minimize liability and maximize savings

View all tags

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
How the OBBBA's Tiered QSBS Exclusion Changes the Math for Founders, Employees, and Angels
·mike

How the OBBBA's Tiered QSBS Exclusion Changes the Math for Founders, Employees, and Angels

The OBBBA raised the Section 1202 QSBS cap to $15 million, lifted the gross-asset ceiling to $75 million, and replaced the five-year cliff with a tiered 50/75/100 percent exclusion at three, four, and five years — but only for stock issued after July 4, 2025.

tax
tax-planning
startup
equity-instruments
+4
Section 1031 Boot Recognition: Cash Boot, Mortgage Boot, and Partial Deferral on Form 8824
·mike

Section 1031 Boot Recognition: Cash Boot, Mortgage Boot, and Partial Deferral on Form 8824

A working guide to how the IRS computes boot in a Section 1031 exchange — cash boot, mortgage boot, the four netting rules, depreciation recapture at 25%, carryover basis, and Form 8824 reporting — with a worked example showing how $200K of fresh equity can wipe out $200K of mortgage boot.

real-estate
tax
tax-planning
capital-gains
+2
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
The Section 1375 Sting Tax: How Former C Corps Pay 21% on Passive Income and Lose Their S Election After Three Years
·mike

The Section 1375 Sting Tax: How Former C Corps Pay 21% on Passive Income and Lose Their S Election After Three Years

Section 1375 imposes a flat 21% sting tax on S corporations that carry C-corp earnings and profits when passive investment income exceeds 25% of gross receipts, and three consecutive years over that threshold terminates the S election automatically. This guide walks through the excess net passive income formula, the three-year cliff under Section 1362(d)(3), and three planning moves to defuse exposure before year-end.

s-corp
c-corp
tax-planning
tax-compliance
+3
The Section 1375 Sting Tax: How S Corporations Trigger the 21% Passive Income Tax and a Three-Year Termination Cliff
·mike

The Section 1375 Sting Tax: How S Corporations Trigger the 21% Passive Income Tax and a Three-Year Termination Cliff

The Section 1375 sting tax hits an S corporation with a 21% corporate-level tax when it has C-corporation E&P and passive investment income above 25% of gross receipts; three consecutive years of that combination terminates the S election. This guide shows who is exposed, how excess net passive income is calculated, and how to defuse the trap.

tax
s-corporation
s-corp
tax-planning
+4
Section 414 Controlled Group and Affiliated Service Group Rules: How Multiple Businesses Can Sabotage Your 401(k)
·mike

Section 414 Controlled Group and Affiliated Service Group Rules: How Multiple Businesses Can Sabotage Your 401(k)

Section 414(b), (c), and (m) treat related businesses as one employer for retirement-plan testing. This guide explains controlled-group and affiliated-service-group rules, the spousal and minor-child attribution traps, and the steps multi-business owners should take before opening a 401(k).

retirement-plans
solo-401k
tax-compliance
small-business
+4
The Section 45E Credit: How Small Employers Can Run a New 401(k) at Near-Zero Cost
·mike

The Section 45E Credit: How Small Employers Can Run a New 401(k) at Near-Zero Cost

A new 401(k) can be nearly free for small employers — Section 45E reimburses up to 100% of startup costs for three years plus $1,000 per employee in contribution credits for five years. Here is who qualifies and how to claim it on Form 8881.

tax-credits
retirement-plans
small-business
employee-benefits
+3
Section 45E After SECURE 2.0: How Small Employers Recoup 100% of Pension Plan Startup Costs on Form 8881
·mike

Section 45E After SECURE 2.0: How Small Employers Recoup 100% of Pension Plan Startup Costs on Form 8881

SECURE 2.0 turned Section 45E into a 100% refund of pension plan startup costs—up to $5,000 per year for three years—for employers with 50 or fewer employees, stacked with a per-employee contribution credit worth up to $1,000 and a $500 auto-enrollment credit, all claimed on Form 8881.

tax-credits
retirement-plans
small-business
tax-planning
+4
Section 707 Disguised Sale Rules: When a Partnership Contribution Becomes a Taxable Sale
·mike

Section 707 Disguised Sale Rules: When a Partnership Contribution Becomes a Taxable Sale

A disguised sale under Section 707(a)(2)(B) collapses a partnership contribution and a related cash distribution into a taxable sale. Transfers within two years are presumed a sale; the deemed-sale fraction equals consideration received divided by property FMV.

tax
partnerships
real-estate
llc
+3
Section 707(a)(2)(B) Disguised Sale Rules: How LLC Members Contribute Property and Take Cash Without Triggering a Taxable Sale
·mike

Section 707(a)(2)(B) Disguised Sale Rules: How LLC Members Contribute Property and Take Cash Without Triggering a Taxable Sale

Section 707(a)(2)(B) recharacterizes paired property contributions and cash distributions to LLC members as taxable sales when they occur within two years. A walkthrough of the two-prong test, the rebuttable two-year presumption, the four regulatory exceptions, debt-financed distribution mechanics, and the Form 8275 disclosure that keeps partners out of audit trouble.

partnerships
llc
real-estate
tax
+3
Showing 61–72 of 470 posts