Retirement Planning
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- Remember to take your Mandatory Retirement Distribution before
December 31.
- Maximize your contributions to your employer-sponsored plans
to take advantage of pretax contributions to 401(k)
or 403(b) plans of up to $14,000. All plan assets grow tax deferred.
- Consider starting a Roth IRA to
take advantage of tax-free growth of your retirement assets
with tax-free qualified distributions by making an annual contribution
of $3,500 plus catch-up contributions if age 50 or over.
- If you retire and receive a lump-sum distribution from your
employer’s retirement plan, roll it into an IRA
within 60 days to avoid current income tax while assets grow tax
deferred.
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Portfolio Management |
- Execute a Bond Swap by selling a bond for a capital loss, to
deduct from gains in other investments, and then immediately buy
another bond which better meets your investment objectives i.e.
improving credit quality, call protection, current income, diversification,
liquidity, etc.
- Consider taking some losses on investments when you have already
realized gains to offset them or vice versa.
- Sell assets with capital gains on a year-to-year basis to reduce
your overall tax burden.
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Estate Planning |
- Gift up to $22,000, per couple, in assets free of federal gift
tax to each of your children.
- Create a trust in a gift or estate
plan to provide significant tax savings while preserving some
control over the assets.
- Donate appreciated assets, such as publicly traded securities
which you have owned for more than a year, to get a tax deduction
for the full fair market value of the security as well as avoid
paying capital gains tax on the appreciation.
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| Education Planning |
- Consider starting a Section 529 plan
to create a tax-free savings account to fund college expenses.
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| Increase Deductions |
- Consider paying your first quarter real estate tax bill early
so they qualify on your 2002 tax return. In some cases you can
prepay your mortgage so you can claim the interest charges.
- Convert non-deductible interest expense such as interest on
credit cards and automobile loans into deductible home mortgage
interest. You can deduct the interest on a home equity loan or
line of credit because the interest on your home equity loan is
deductible no matter what the loan money is used for.
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