DEANNA RAMSEY, CPA
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Services
  • Service Packages
  • Info Center
  • News
  • Financial Tools
  • Events
  • Contact
  • Client Portal
(859) 873-0981
Access Client Portal
taxes
November 23 2017

Challenges and Opportunities for 2017 Year-end Tax Planning

News Letters, Tax Help

Year-end tax planning can provide most taxpayers with a good way to lower a tax bill that will otherwise be waiting for them when they file their 2017 tax return in 2018. Since tax liability is primarily keyed to each calendar tax year, once December 31, 2017 passes, your 2017 tax liability for the most part – good or bad – will mostly be set in stone.

Year-end 2017 presents a unique set of challenges for many taxpayers because of current efforts by Congress and the Trump Administration to enact tax reform legislation, the scope of which has not been seen since 1986, according to supporters. Whether this ambitious plan will be successful by the end of this year remains uncertain; but the reasons to prepare to maximize any benefits if it does happen are indisputable. Both talk of lower tax rates, and fewer deductions, requires careful monitoring at this time, with “contingency” plans ready to go before year-end should these changes occur.

Tax reform, although important, is not the only reason to engage in year-end tax planning this year. Other changes in the tax law, made by the IRS and the courts, have already taken place in 2017. Opportunities and pitfalls within these recent changes–as they impact each taxpayer’s unique situation—should not be overlooked. This particularly rings true as we approach year-end 2017.

Data gathering

Year-end planning – with or without the prospect of tax reform– should start with data collection and a review of prior year returns. This includes losses or other carryovers, estimated tax installments, and items that were unusual. Conversations about next year should include discussions of any plans for significant purchases or dispositions, as well as any possible life cycle events.

Bunching strategies

Certain items are deductible only to the extent they exceed an adjusted gross income (AGI) floor; for example, aggregate miscellaneous itemized deductions are deductible only to the extent they exceed two percent of the taxpayer’s AGI. Thus, year-end and new-year tax planning might consider ways to bunch AGI-sensitive expenditures in a single year, so that particular deductions exceed their applicable floors and the taxpayer’s total itemized deductions exceed the standard deduction.

Life-cycle changes

External influences such as changes in the tax law, however, may be only part of the reason for taking some action before year’s end. Changes in your personal and financial circumstances – marriage, divorce, a newborn, a change in employment, a new business venture, investment successes and downturns – may require a change-in-course tax-wise since last year. As with any ‘life-cycle” change, your tax return for this year may look entirely different from what it looked like for 2016. Accounting for that difference now, before year-end 2017 closes, should be an integral part of your year-end planning.

Timing rules

Effective year-end tax planning by its nature requires the correct execution of specific timing rules under the tax code. Due especially to the current uncertainties surrounding tax reform, taxpayers must be particularly nimble and prepared to implement timing strategies well into December.

  • For businesses, the IRS and the courts generally require use of the accrual method whenever inventories are used. For an accrual-basis taxpayer, the right to receive income, rather than actual receipt, determines the year of inclusion in income.
  • Under the cash receipts and disbursements method (cash method), all items constituting income, whether in the form of cash, property, or services, must generally be included in income for the tax year in which the items are actually or constructively received; and deductions are generally taken into account for the tax year in which actually paid.

The cash method, which is required to be used by almost all individual taxpayers, generally allows a cash-basis taxpayer to exercise some control over the year of income or deduction by accelerating or deferring receipts and payments. Thus, timing, and the skilled use of timing rules to accelerate and defer certain income or deductions, is the linchpin of year-end tax planning. For example, timing year-end bonuses or year-end tax payments, or timing sales of investment properties to maximize capital gains benefits should be considered. So, too, sometimes fairly sophisticated “like-kind exchange,” “installment sale” or “placed in service” rules for business or investment properties come into play.

In other situations, however, implementation of more basic concepts are just as useful. For example, taxpayers can write a check or charge an item by credit card in one year and have it count as a deduction in that year, even though the check is not drawn on the bank until the following year; or a credit card statement is not sent and paid until the following year.

Please feel free to contact this office for a more customized look at what year-end tax planning can do for you this year.

ACA Requirements Remain in Effect for 2017 Tax Season Tax Reform Takes On New Momentum as Year-end Approaches

Related Posts

News Letters

FinCEN

News Letters

Taxpayers see wave of summer email, text scams; IRS urges extra caution with flood of schemes involving Economic Impact Payments, Employee Retention Credits, tax refunds

News Letters

IRS announces administrative transition period for new Roth catch up requirement; catch-up contributions still permitted after 2023

Search

Recent Posts

  • FinCEN.svgFinCEN
    January 5, 2024
  • scam alert 1Taxpayers see wave of summer email, text scams; IRS urges extra caution with flood of schemes involving Economic Impact Payments, Employee Retention Credits, tax refunds
    October 23, 2023
  • 2IRS announces administrative transition period for new Roth catch up requirement; catch-up contributions still permitted after 2023
    October 23, 2023

Categories

  • Audit Advice (1)
  • Business Help (7)
  • Estate Planning (1)
  • FAQs (6)
  • Health Care (1)
  • News Letters (28)
  • Tax Calendars (3)
  • Tax Credit (3)
  • Tax Help (7)
  • Tax Law (9)
DEANNA RAMSEY, CPA
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Services
  • Service Packages
  • Info Center
  • News
  • Financial Tools
  • Events
  • Contact
  • Client Portal
Deanna Ramsey, CPA, LLC | 205 Frankfort St., Versailles, KY 40383
Copyright Deanna Ramsey, CPA, LLC 2017. All right reserved.
New Business Law

Greetings, and I hope all is well. I am reaching out to you today to ensure you are aware of certain tax laws that affect pass-through entities in the Commonwealth of Kentucky. You may elect on an annual basis to pay Kentucky income tax and expense those taxes at the entity or business level, which could provide tax savings to you on your personal tax return. Under existing law, a “pass-through entity” (PTE) includes any partnership, S corporation, limited liability company, limited liability partnership, limited partnership, or similar entity recognized by the laws of Kentucky that is not taxed for federal purposes at the entity-level, but instead passes to its owners their proportionate share of income, deductions, gains, losses, credits, and similar attributes.

 

Electing to pay Kentucky income tax at the business level is optional and must be done each tax year on KY Form 740-PTET, along with making the requisite estimated tax payments using KY Form 740-PTET-ES. The electing entity may be subject to penalties if the estimated tax payments are not made timely and correctly. An election to pay estimated payments through the business entity for a particular tax year is binding for all entity owners for the entire tax year. An election for a year is only for a single year and subsequent elections must be made each year you wish to pay Kentucky income tax at the entity level.

 

Owners of electing entities are entitled to a refundable credit against Kentucky’s individual income tax equal to 100% of their proportionate share of the tax paid by the electing entity. The entity must report to each owner the owner’s proportionate share of tax paid for the taxable year. This provision prevents double taxation at both the entity and owner levels, allowing the business to pay and expense the taxes, thereby no longer recognizing them as an Owner’s Draw.

 

We encourage you to contact us to discuss how this applies to you and to address any questions you may have about your specific tax situation, or if you require assistance with calculating your estimated tax payments. We are here to help you navigate these requirements and ensure your business remains compliant.