Overlooked Tax Deductions
1. State sales taxes. Although all taxpayers have a
shot at this write-off, it makes sense primarily for
those who live in states that do not impose an income
tax. You must choose between deducting state income
taxes or state sales taxes. For most citizens of income-tax
states, the income-tax deduction is a better deal.
IRS has tables for residents of states with sales taxes
showing how much they can deduct. But the tables aren't
the last word. If you purchased a vehicle, boat or airplane,
you get to add the state sales tax you paid to the amount
shown in IRS tables for your state, to the extent the
sales tax rate you paid doesn't exceed the state's general
sales tax rate. The same goes for home building materials
you purchased. These items are easy to overlook. The
IRS even has a calculator on its Web site to help you
figure the deduction, which varies by your state and
income level.
2. $250 educators' expenses. Teachers and their aides
can deduct up to $250 they spent in 2007 for books and
classroom supplies. If you qualify, put your deduction
on line 23 of the Form 1040. You get this deduction
regardless of whether you itemize.
3. College tuition. You may qualify to deduct up to
$4,000 you paid in college tuition in 2007 for yourself,
your spouse or a dependent. This break can pay off if
your income is too high to qualify to claim the Hope
or Lifetime Learning credit. You also get to claim this
deduction regardless of whether you itemize.
4. Student loan interest paid by Mom and Dad. Until
recently, if parents paid back a student loan incurred
by their children, no one got a tax break. To get a
deduction, the law held that you had to be both liable
for the debt and actually pay it yourself. But now there's
an exception. If Mom and Dad pay back the loan, IRS
treats it as though they gave the money to their child,
who then paid the debt. So, a child who's not claimed
as a dependent can qualify to deduct up to $2,500 of
student loan interest paid by mom and dad.
5. Out-of-pocket charitable contributions. It's hard
to overlook the big charitable gifts you made during
the year, by check or payroll deduction. But little
things add up, too, and you can write off out-of-pocket
costs you incur while doing good works. Ingredients
for casseroles you regularly prepare for a nonprofit
organization's soup kitchen, for example, or the cost
of stamps you buy for your school's fundraiser count
as a charitable contribution.
6. Moving expense to take first job. Here's an interesting
dichotomy: Job-hunting expenses incurred while looking
for your first job are not deductible; but moving expenses
to get to that first job are. And you get this write-off
even if you don't itemize. If you moved more than 50
miles, you can deduct the cost of getting yourself and
your household goods to the new area, including 20 cents
a mile (and parking fees and tolls) for driving your
own car.
7. Military reservists travel expenses. If you are
a member of the National Guard or military reserve,
you may deserve a deduction for travel expenses to drills
or meetings. To qualify, you must travel more than 100
miles and be away from home overnight. If you qualify,
you can deduct the cost of lodging and half the cost
of your meals, plus 48.5 cents a mile (and any parking
or toll fees) for driving your own car. You get this
deduction regardless of whether you itemize.
8. Child-care credit. A credit is so much better than
a deduction: It reduces your tax bill dollar for dollar.
So missing one is even more painful than missing a deduction
that simply reduces the amount of income that's subject
to tax.
It's easy to overlook the child-care credit if you
pay your child-care bills through a reimbursement account
at work. Until a few years ago, the child-care credit
applied to no more than $4,800 of qualifying expenses.
And, the law allows you to run up to $5,000 of such
expenses through a tax-favored reimbursement account
at work. Now, however, up to $6,000 (for two or more
children) can qualify for the credit ... but the old
$5,000 limit still applies to reimbursement accounts.
So, if you run the maximum $5,000 through a plan at
work, but spend more for work-related child care, you
can claim the credit on that extra $1,000. That would
cut your tax bill by at least $200.
9. Estate tax on income in respect of a decedent. This
sounds complicated, but it can save you a lot of money
if you inherited an IRA from someone whose estate was
big enough to be subject to the federal estate tax.
Basically, you get an income-tax deduction for the
amount of estate tax paid on the IRA balance. Let's
say you inherited a $100,000 IRA, and the fact that
the $100,000 was included in your benefactor's estate
added $45,000 to the estate tax bill. As you withdraw
the money from the IRA and pay tax on it, you also get
to deduct a proportional amount of the estate tax paid.
If you withdraw $50,000 in one year, for example, you
get to claim a $22,500 itemized deduction on Schedule
A.
10. State tax you paid last spring. Did you owe tax
when you filed your 2006 state tax return in the spring
of 2007? Then remember to include that amount with your
state-tax deduction on your 2007 return, along with
state income taxes withheld from your paychecks or paid
via quarterly estimated payments.
11. Refinancing points. When you buy a house, you get
to deduct points paid to get your mortgage in one fell
swoop. When you refinance a mortgage, though, you have
to deduct the points over the life of the loan. That
means 1/30th a year if it's a 30 year mortgage -- that's
$33 a year for each $1,000 of points you paid. Not much,
maybe, but don't throw it away. And, in the year you
pay off the loan -- because you sell the house or refinance
again -- you may get to deduct all as-yet-undeducted
points. You do unless you refinance with the same lender.
In that case, you add points on the latest deal to the
leftovers from the previous refinancing and deduct the
expense ratably over the life of the new loan. See more
Deductions for Homeowners
12. Reinvested dividends. This isn't really a deduction,
but it is a subtraction that can save you money ...
and this is the break former IRS Commissioner Fred Goldberg
told Kiplinger's that lots of taxpayers miss.
If, like most investors, you have mutual fund dividends
automatically invested in extra shares, remember that
each reinvestment increases your "tax basis"
in the fund. That, in turn, reduces the taxable capital
gain (or increases the tax-saving loss) when you redeem
shares. Forgetting to include the reinvested dividends
in your basis -- which you subtract from the proceeds
of sale to pinpoint your gain -- means overpaying your
tax.
TurboTax Premier and Home & Business products include
a very cool tool — BasisPro — that will figure your
basis for you and make sure you get credit for every
dime of reinvested dividends.
13. Jury pay paid to employer. Some employers continue
to pay employees' full salary while they are doing their
civic duty but ask that they turn over their jury fees
to the corporate treasury. The only problem is that
the IRS demands that you report those fees as taxable
income. You've always had a right to deduct the amount,
so you weren't taxed on money that simply passed through
your hands. But now tax forms include a line dedicated
to this deduction.
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