As the end of 2014 approaches, there are many tax matters
to consider, including the following (non-exhaustive) list:
1.
Small estates should consider whether to elect
portability of the deceased spouse’s unused exemption amount by the December
31, 2014 special extended deadline. See
my January 28, 2014 post here.
2.
Project your 2014 and 2015 income tax rates to
see whether it is beneficial to accelerate deductions into 2014 and defer
income to 2015, or to do just the opposite.
3.
Determine whether prepaying state income taxes
by December 31st is beneficial.
If the alternative minimum tax applies, prepaying is generally not
beneficial.
4.
Be careful of buying mutual funds before their
December ex-dividend dates to avoid inadvertently increasing your taxable
income simply from your purchase!
5.
Be sure to receive the required minimum
distribution (RMD) from an inherited IRA (traditional or Roth) or an inherited
qualified retirement plan by December 31st to avoid a 50% penalty!
6.
If you are over age 70 ½ in 2014, you must also
receive the RMD from your traditional IRA or qualified plan by December 31st
to avoid the 50% penalty.
a. If
you make contributions to public charities, consider waiting until further into
December to see if Congress and the President will extend the charitable IRA
rollover provision that can count as part of your RMD and save you taxes. See my January 12, 2013 post here
for a discussion of this technique. If
you aren’t sure whether the provision will be extended and the end of the year
is approaching, make the charitable IRA rollover anyway in case the provision
is retroactively extended.
b. If
you turned age 70 ½ in 2014, then your RMDs must begin. For the first year that you are subject to
the RMD, you can choose whether to receive the RMD by December 31, 2014 or by
April 1, 2015. If you choose April 1,
2015, then two RMDs will occur in 2015 as the 2015 RMD must be received by
December 31, 2015. The choice depends
upon your income tax rates and the impact upon adjusted gross income (AGI)
based deductions and taxes between the two years.
7.
For those employing a program of making annual
exclusion gifts of $14,000 each year as part of their estate planning, be sure
the checks are cashed early enough in December so that the funds are removed
from your bank account by December 31st, or else use cashier checks.
8. Businesses should be sure that their written
capitalization policy for 2015 is in place by December 31, 2014.
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