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How to Minimize the Most Important Number on Your Tax Return

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Sun, Aug 11, 2024 01:04 PM

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You are receiving this email because you signed up to receive Bob Carlson's free e-letter Retirement

You are receiving this email because you signed up to receive Bob Carlson's free e-letter Retirement Watch Weekly, or you purchased a product or service from its publisher, Eagle Financial Publications. [Carlson's Retirement Watch Weekly] [Retirement Reports](www.retirementwatch.com/retirement-resources/) [Retirement Articles](www.retirementwatch.com/retirement-articles/) Brought to you by Eagle Financial Publications How to Minimize the Most Important Number on Your Tax Return by Bob Carlson Editor, [Retirement Watch]( 08/11/2024 SPONSORED [Buy and Hold This Dividend Stock Forever… and Leave It for Your Grandchildren]( [image]( This stock is one of those rare finds that you can hold forever and pass down to your grandchildren. It should be a core position in every investor's portfolio—especially with its hefty yield! New FREE report gives you the name of the safest, most reliable, and most consistent dividend stock that pays dividends EVERY month. In addition to paying 12 dividend checks each year, this company has also increased its monthly dividend twice every year for the past 8 years. [Click here to get its name now--FREE.]( [CLICK HERE...]( Fellow Investor, [Bob Carlson]It's the most important number on your federal income tax return. The number I'm referring to is your adjusted gross income (AGI). In your retirement years, AGI is more important than for most other taxpayers. Before retiring, taxable income probably is the most important line on your return, and many people believe it still is after retiring. But because of changes over the years, AGI is the key to reducing your retirement income tax burden. You see, Congress knows retirees have the bulk of the country’s income and wealth. Few in Congress want to increase tax rates directly, especially on middle class retirees. So, what I call the “Stealth Taxes” were enacted. When AGI exceeds certain levels, Stealth Taxes are triggered. Each Stealth Tax is different, but under the Stealth Taxes, tax benefits are reduced or additional taxes and surtaxes are imposed. For example, there’s the Medicare premium surtax and the inclusion of Social Security benefits in gross income. There used to be provisions to reduce personal and dependent exemptions and itemized expense deductions. Those were suspended in the 2017 tax law but are scheduled to be reimposed after 2025. There’s also the 3.8% net investment income tax. Those are the main Stealth Taxes. When you’re hit with a Stealth Tax, your income tax bill increases though you stay in the same income tax bracket. Some states now use AGI to impose their own Stealth Taxes. Various government benefit programs also use AGI to determine eligibility. I expect this type of means-testing, in which higher-income individuals pay higher taxes or receive lower benefits, to increase. Governments at all levels have promised benefits they can’t pay, but they don’t want to enact broad-based tax rate increases. Your tax planning, especially in retirement, should focus on managing AGI. (The Stealth Taxes really are imposed on modified adjusted gross income (MAGI), not regular AGI. The difference matters in only a few circumstances, which I discuss later.) Be careful which strategies you use. Some strategies reduce AGI today only to increase it in a few years. If you’re still working, for example, you can reduce AGI by making the maximum deferral to a 401(k) plan. But that only defers income and, in fact, increases AGI in the retirement years when you’re most likely to be subject to the Stealth Taxes. Those still working should focus on strategies that will keep AGI low during the post-career years. Some of the strategies I discuss below are for the pre-retirement years, others for the retirement years, and some are good for both. Minimize Your Tax Return's Most Important Number in Retirement Strategy #1: Take your investment losses. Anyone who invests in a taxable account is likely to have losses from time to time. Most investors compound the losses by waiting to sell a losing investment until it at least returns to the break-even point. A better strategy is to sell and realize the capital loss. A realized loss first is deducted against any capital gains for the year keeping them out of your AGI. Any additional loss is deducted against other income up to $3,000, further reducing AGI. If that doesn’t absorb the entire loss, the additional loss is carried forward to future years to be used in the same way. Turn that loss into an asset. Bite the bullet and recognize the tax loss so it can be deducted. Plus, you free up the capital to invest in something else that might perform better. When you like the losing investment for the long term, you can repurchase it after waiting more than 30 days after the sale. That avoids the “wash sale” rules that would defer the loss deduction. [What Investors Can Do If They’re NOT Ready for Retirement]( [image]( Thanks to a little-known loophole in the law, investors can collect between $2,500 and $3,900 per month for the rest of their lives, tax free, even if they currently have ZERO saved for retirement. It’s a retirement strategy unknown to most financial planners, yet it’s 100% legal and approved by the IRS. One famous investor used this secret strategy to turn just $2,000 into $5 billion. [Click here to find out more.]( [CLICK HERE...]( Minimize Your Tax Return's Most Important Number in Retirement Strategy #2: Maximize health savings accounts. A health savings account (HSA) is one of the best shelters available. You can contribute to an HSA when you’re covered by a high-deductible medical insurance plan. Contributions to the HSA are deductible, or they’re excluded from gross income if the employer makes them on your behalf. Contributions can be up to $7,300 in 2022 when you have family coverage or $3,650 when you have individual coverage. An additional catch-up contribution of $1,000 is allowed when you are age 50 or older. Contributions aren’t allowed once you join Medicare. You can invest the account, and all income and gains compound tax-free. Finally, when you withdraw money and use it for qualified medical expenses, the distributions are tax-free. They won’t increase your AGI. HSAs don’t have required minimum distributions. I recommend letting the account accumulate until retirement. Then, when extra income is needed, tax-free distributions from the HSA can be taken. Minimize Your Tax Return's Most Important Number in Retirement Strategy #3: Restructure traditional IRAs and 401(k)s. The Stealth Taxes often are triggered or increased by required minimum distributions (RMDs) that must begin from traditional IRAs and other retirement accounts after age 72. Since the percentage of the IRA that must be distributed increases each year, RMDs tend to be a real problem for people who are in their late 70s or older. You can take actions to reduce future RMDs at any time, but the earlier you take action the more effective the strategies will be. You can simply empty the IRA early. Take distributions and pay the taxes now, then invest the after-tax amount. That prevents ever-increasing AGI in later years. Or you can convert the traditional IRA to a Roth IRA. That incurs income taxes (and higher AGI) in the year of the conversion. After a five-year waiting period, however, all distributions from the Roth IRA are tax-free. More sophisticated IRA-repositioning strategies using charitable remainder trusts, life insurance and more are available. In next week’s issue of Retirement Watch Weekly, I’ll share more strategies you can use in your retirement years to minimize your adjusted gross income. To a better retirement, [Bob Carlson] Bob Carlson Editor, Retirement Watch Weekly Editor’s Note: Have you heard of the “RDZ”? It’s already destroying the retirements of more Americans than anything else on the planet… and forcing nearly half of all seniors to visit a food pantry or use food stamps just to eat. One of America’s top retirement researchers has the solution. [Click here to get the full story.]( SPONSORED [How to know what to trade.]( [image]( With thousands of stocks in the market… How do you know which ones to trade? You may not believe this, but… You can ignore almost all of them, because when it comes to stock and options trading... This is [something valuable]( that tells you the few stocks that you really should be looking at. Your whole search and strategy can take less than 15 minutes. Which leaves plenty of time to do the other things you want to do during your day. If you want to learn more - this free live class will show you how. [Save Your Seat Here.]( [CLICK HERE...]( Want More Retirement Advice? Check out my website, [RetirementWatch.com](, where you’ll find hundreds of free articles covering every aspect of retirement planning. Popular Posts: [Nine Important Things to Know Before Contributing to an IRA]( [How to Help Children or Grandchildren Buy a Home]( [Building the Complete Estate Plan]( [Finding Higher Returns With Low Risk]( New to the Retirement Watch Community: SeniorResource.com People frequently come up with ideas to change Social Security law in some way that they think is clever and unique. After all, Social Security has been around for almost 90 years now, and for those nine decades, people have constantly been coming up with plans that they think would improve the system. And lots of times, those plans don’t work out under closer scrutiny. [Click here for an example.]( About Bob Carlson: [Bob Carlson]Robert C. Carlson is the author of the books The New Rules of Retirement and Retirement Tax Guide, editor and investment director of the popular retirement newsletter, Retirement Watch, and editor of the free weekly e-letter, Retirement Watch Weekly. Bob is a frequent speaker at investment conferences around the country, and you can also hear Bob as a featured guest on nationally-syndicated radio shows, such as The Retirement Hour, Dateline Washington, Family News in Focus, The Michael Reagan Show, Money Matters and The Stock Doctor. About Us: Eagle Financial Publications is located in Washington, D.C. – only a few blocks from the Capitol. Our products have been helping investors build their wealth for several decades. Whether you’re a long-term investor or short-term trader, you’ll find the right strategy for you, including how to earn more steady income to spend now, preserve and grow your capital to enjoy later, and whatever other investment goals you have. Visit Our Websites: - [StockInvestor.com]( - [DividendInvestor.com]( - [DayTradeSPY.com]( - [CoveredCall](.com - [MarkSkousen.com]( - [GilderReport.com]( - [BryanPerryInvesting.com]( - [JimWoodsInvesting.com]( - [InvestmentHouse.com]( - [RetirementWatch.com]( - [SeniorResource.com]( - [GenerationalWealthStrategies.com]( - [InvestInFiveStarGems.com]( - [[YouTube] Visit our YouTube Channel - Eagle Investing Network]( To ensure future delivery of Eagle Financial Publications emails please add financial@info2.eaglefinancialpublications.com to your address book or contact list. This email was sent to {EMAIL} because you are subscribed to Dividend Investor Daily. To unsubscribe from this list please click [here](. To stop receiving emails simply click [here](. If you have questions, please send them to [Customer Service](mailto:customerservice@eaglefinancialpublications.com). View this email in your [web browser](. Legal Disclaimer: Any and all communications from Eagle Products, LLC. employees should not be considered advice on finances. Although our employees may answer your general customer service questions, they are not licensed under securities laws to address your particular investment situation. No communication by our employees to you should be deemed as personalized advice on finances. Eagle Financial Publications - Eagle Products, LLC. - a Salem Communications Holding Company 122 C Street NW, Suite 515 | Washington, D.C. 20001 [Link](

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