Tax Savings Tips: April 2022
Tax-Saving Tips
April 2022
Health Savings
Accounts: The Ultimate Retirement Account
It
isn’t easy to make predictions, especially about the future. But there is one
prediction we’re confident in making: you will have substantial out-of-pocket
expenses for health care after you retire. Personal finance experts estimate
that an average retired couple age 65 will need at least $300,000 to cover
health care expenses in retirement.
You
may need more.
The
time to save for these expenses is before you reach age 65. And the best way to
do it may be a Health Savings Account (HSA). After several years, you could
have a fat HSA balance that will help pave your way to a comfortable
retirement.
Not
everyone can have an HSA. But you can if you’re self-employed or your employer
doesn’t provide health benefits. Some employers offer, as an employee fringe
benefit, either HSAs alone or HSAs combined with high-deductible health plans.
An
HSA is much like an IRA for health care. It must be paired with a
high-deductible health plan with a minimum annual deductible of $1,400 for
self-only coverage ($2,800 for family coverage). The maximum annual deductible
must be no more than $7,050 for self-only coverage ($14,100 for family
coverage).
An
HSA can provide you with three tax benefits:
1.
You
or your employer can deduct the contributions, up to the annual limits.
2.
The
money in the account grows tax-free (and you can invest it in many ways).
3.
Distributions
are tax-free if used for medical expenses.
No
other tax-advantaged account gives you all three of these benefits.
You
also have complete flexibility in how to use the account. You may take
distributions from your HSA at any time. But unlike with a traditional IRA or
401(k), you do not have to take annual required minimum distributions from the
account after you turn age 72.
Indeed,
you need never take any distributions at all from your HSA. If you name your
spouse the designated beneficiary of your HSA, the tax code treats it as your
spouse’s HSA when you die (no taxes are due).
If
you maximize your contributions and take few distributions over many years, the
HSA will grow to a tidy sum.
Partnership with
Multiple Partners: The Good and the Bad
The generally favorable
federal income tax rules for partnerships are a common reason for choosing to
operate as a partnership with multiple partners instead of as a corporation
with multiple shareholders. The most important partnership tax benefit rules
can be summarized as follows:
·
You get
pass-through taxation.
·
You can deduct
partnership losses (within limits).
·
You may be
eligible for the Section 199A tax deduction.
·
You get basis from
partnership debts.
·
You get basis
step-up for purchased interests.
·
You can make
tax-free asset transfers with the partnership.
·
You can make
special tax allocations.
Partnership taxation is not
all good stuff. There are a few important disadvantages and complications to
consider:
·
Exposure to
self-employment tax
·
Complicated Section 704(c) tax allocation rules
·
Tricky disguised
sale rules
·
Unfavorable fringe
benefit tax rules
Limited partnerships are
obviously treated as partnerships for federal income tax purposes, with the
generally favorable partnership taxation rules mentioned above.
Limited partners generally are
not exposed to liabilities related to the partnership or its operations. So,
you generally cannot lose more than what you’ve invested in a limited
partnership—unless you guarantee partnership debt.
So far, so good. But you must
also consider the following disadvantages for limited partners:
·
Limited partners
usually get no basis from partnership liabilities.
·
Limited partners
can lose their liability protection.
·
You need a general
partner.
On the plus side, limited
partners have a self-employment tax advantage.
Since your partnership will
have multiple partners, multiple issues can come into play. You’ll need a
carefully drafted partnership agreement to handle potential issues even if you
don’t expect them to arise. For instance, you may want to include
·
a partnership
interest buy-sell agreement to cover partner exits;
·
a non-compete
agreement (for obvious reasons);
·
an explanation of
how tax allocations will be calculated in compliance with IRS regulations;
·
an explanation of
how distributions will be calculated and when they will be paid (for instance,
you may want to call for cash distributions to be made annually in early April
to cover partners’ tax liabilities from their shares of partnership income for
the previous year);
·
guidelines for how
the divorce, bankruptcy, or death of a partner will be handled;
·
and so on.
Key point. No type of entity
(including a limited partnership in which you are a limited partner) will
protect your personal assets from exposure to liabilities related to your own
professional malpractice or your own tortious acts.
Send Tax Documents
Correctly to Avoid IRS Trouble
You have heard the horror stories about mail sent to the IRS that
remains unanswered for months. Reportedly, the IRS has mountains of unanswered
mail pieces in storage trailers, waiting for IRS employees to process them.
Because the understaffed IRS is having so much trouble processing
all the documents it receives, you need to protect yourself when you send an
important tax filing due by a specific deadline.
If you can file a document electronically, do so. The IRS deems
such filings as filed on the date of the electronic postmark.
If you must file a physical document with the IRS, don’t use
regular U.S. mail, Priority Mail, or Express Mail.
Why not?
When you mail a document with these methods, the IRS considers it
filed on the postmark date, but only if the IRS receives it. What if the U.S.
Postal Service doesn’t deliver it or the IRS loses it? You’ll have no way to prove
the IRS got it—and the IRS and most courts won’t accept your testimony that it
was timely mailed.
Don’t take this chance. Instead, file physical documents by
certified or registered U.S. mail, or use an IRS-approved private delivery
service (generally, two-day or better service from FedEx, UPS, or DHL Express).
When you do this, the IRS considers the document filed on the postmark date
whether or not the IRS receives it.
Make sure to keep your receipt.
Tax Implications
When Your Vacation Home Is a Rental Property
If
you have a home that you both rent out and use personally, you have a tax code-defined
vacation home.
Under
the tax code rules, that vacation home is either
·
a
personal residence or
·
a
rental property.
The
tax code classifies your vacation home as a rental property if
·
you
rent it out for more than 14 days during the year, and
·
your
personal use during the year does not exceed the greater of (a) 14 days
or (b) 10 percent of the days you rent the home out at fair market rates.
Count
actual days of rental and personal use. Disregard days of vacancy, and
disregard days that you spend mainly on repair and maintenance activities.
For
vacation homes that are classified as rental properties, you must allocate
mortgage interest, property taxes, and other expenses between rental and
personal use, based on actual days of rental and personal occupancy.
Mortgage Interest
Deductions
Mortgage
interest allocable to personal use of a rental property does not meet the
definition of qualified residence interest for itemized deduction purposes. The
qualified residence interest deduction is allowed only for mortgages on
properties that are classified as personal residences.
Schedule E Losses
and the PAL Rules
When
allocable rental expenses exceed rental income, a vacation home classified as a
rental property can potentially generate a deductible tax loss that you can
claim on Schedule E of your Form 1040. Great!
Unfortunately,
your vacation home rental loss may be wholly or partially deferred under the
dreaded passive activity loss (PAL) rules. Here’s why.
You
can generally deduct passive losses only to the extent that you have passive income
from other sources (such as rental properties that produce positive taxable
income).
Disallowed
passive losses from a property are carried forward to future tax years and can
be deducted when you have sufficient passive income or when you sell the
loss-producing property.
“Small Landlord” Exception to PAL Rules
A
favorable exception to the PAL rules currently allows you to deduct up to
$25,000 of annual passive rental real estate losses if you “actively
participate” and have adjusted gross income (AGI) under $100,000. The $25,000
exception is phased out between AGI of $100,000 and $150,000.
The Seven-Days-or-Less and Less-Than-30-Days Rules
The
IRS says the $25,000 small landlord exception is not allowed
·
when
the average rental period for your property is seven days or less, or
·
when
the average period of customer use for such property is 30 days or less, and
significant personal services are provided by or on behalf of the owner of the
property in connection with making the property available for use by customers.
“Real Estate Professional” Exception to PAL Rules
Another exception to the PAL rules currently allows
qualifying individuals to deduct rental real estate losses even though they
have little or no passive income. To be eligible for this exception,
1. you must spend more than 750 hours during the year delivering personal
services in real estate activities in which you materially participate, and
2. those hours must be more than half the time you spend delivering personal
services (in other words, working) during the year. If you can clear those
hurdles, you qualify as a real estate professional.
The second step is determining whether you have one
or more rental real estate properties in which you materially participate. If
you do, those properties are treated as non-passive and are therefore exempt
from the PAL rules. That means you can generally deduct losses from those
properties in the current year.
Meeting the
Material Participation Standard
The
three most likely ways to meet the material participation standard for a
vacation home rental activity are when the following occur:
·
You
do substantially all the work related to the property.
·
You
spend more than 100 hours dealing with the property, and no other person spends
more time on this property than you do.
·
You
spend more than 500 hours dealing with the property.
In
attempting to clear one of these hurdles, you can combine your time with your
spouse’s time. But if you use a management company to handle your vacation home
rental activity, you’re unlikely to pass any of the material participation
tests.
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