How many times have you done your taxes, and a week or a month later
realized you forgot a deduction? The tax law is very complicated, so
it’s easy to miss a deduction or two. In my experience, these are the
top 5 missed deductions.
1. Non-Cash Donations
Did you clean out your closets this year? Chances are you donated those
items to Goodwill or a similar non-profit organization. The value of
donated items (clothing, furniture, etc.) is deductible. You will need
to get a written receipt and assign a value to these items, but the tax
savings are worth the effort.
2. Points on Refinancing
With interest rates so low the past few years, there have been a
record-number of houses refinanced. If you refinanced, you may have paid
points to get a lower interest rate. These points are deductible over
the life of the new loan. In addition, if you incurred points on an old
refinancing, any unamortized points are deductible in the year of the
new refinancing.
3. Educator Expenses
If you’re a qualified educator (teacher, aide, instructor or principal),
you can deduct up to $250 for materials you bought for the classroom.
Qualified expenses include books, supplies, and computer equipment. This
law is set to expire in 2006, so take advantage of it now if you
qualify.
4. Investment and Tax Expenses
Expenses for tax planning and investment advice are deductible as a
miscellaneous deduction, subject to the 2% Adjusted Gross Income (AGI)
limitation. Expenses that qualify include tax preparation fees, safe
deposit box fees, fees paid to investment advisors, legal and accounting
fees related to tax planning, broker and IRA fees paid directly,
investment publications, and more. Many people assume that they won’t
have enough miscellaneous expenses to exceed the 2% AGI floor, but all
of these expenses combined can be substantial, especially if you have
unreimbursed employee expenses to add to these expenses.
5. College Savings or 529 Plan Contributions
Depending on which state you live in, contributions to 529 college
savings plans may be deductible on your state income tax return. Because
this deduction is only available on the state return (no deduction
available on your federal return for 529 contributions), many people
fail to include this deduction on their state tax return.
Article by:
Kristine A. McKinley, CFP, CPA, and founder of Beacon Financial
Advisors, teaches individuals and families how to invest and plan for
retirement, college, and other financial goals. Kristine offers
financial and tax planning on an hourly, fee-only basis. To sign up for
free financial planning tips, worksheets, checklists and more, visit
www.beacon-advisor.comSourced from:
LadyPens