Year-End Tips to Reduce Your Tax Bill

As the year draws to a close, you may be wondering if you’ve done enough to reduce your overall tax obligations for this year and whether there are any additional steps you can take to improve your position to avoid a tax bill later.

There are always things you can do to improve your tax position at year-end and in the beginning of the new year, and in this article, we’ve compiled a list of recommendations from various CPA tax experts.

Move funds to IRAs, health savings accounts

You can contribute to your individual retirement account, if it’s a traditional IRA, up until April 15, next year. The contribution limit for an IRA is $7,000, and if you are older than 50 you can make an additional $1,000 catch-up contribution.

But, if you want to make additional transfers to your 401(k) plan, you have to do so before the end of the year. The contribution cap for a 401(k) plan is $23,000 in 2024. If you are 50 years or older, you are entitled to make an additional $7,500 in catch-up payments.

Also, health savings accounts are the new way to save for future medical expenses. If you have a qualified high-deductible family health plan, you can contribute up to $8,300 a year ($4,150 for an individual).

Those contributions can be itemized as a deduction to your income on your tax forms. Most people with employer-sponsored health plans with attached HSAs usually have their contributions transferred on a pre-tax basis.

Itemizing

When you itemize, you only want to do so if your itemized deductions will exceed the standard deduction that you are entitled to, which for the 2024 tax year is $29,200 for married couples and $14,600 for single filers.

Make tax-free gifts

You can get ahead of the curve by gifting money to dependents. The IRS code is generous, allowing people to give up to $18,000 a year to family members. Your estate does not pay estate taxes on the gift and the recipient does not pay income taxes on the gift.

The federal lifetime estate and gift tax exemption for 2024 is $13.61 million per adult. If you have not done so, you should see if you need to update your estate plan.

Balancing capital gains

Some financial planning experts say you should consider selling some underperforming or money-losing investments, in order to help show an investment loss or reduce other capital gains you enjoyed from selling more buoyant securities.

And if you generate more losses than capital gains, you can usually deduct up to $3,000 in capital losses if married and $1,500 if you are single or married and filing separately. If your losses are greater than the cap, you can carry them forward to future years.

For capital gains taxes, here’s how the tax table breaks down:

  • Singles earning up to $47,025, and married couples filing jointly and earning $94,050 or less: 0%
  • Singles earning $47,026 to $518,900, and married couples filing jointly and earning between $94,051 to $583,750: 15%
  • Singles earning $518,901 or more, and married couples filing jointly and earning $583,751 or more: 20%

Converting IRAs

Many tax advisors are recommending that people consider converting traditional IRAs into Roth accounts. Under traditional IRAs, you pay taxes on the funds you remove from the account after you retire, but you add funds with tax-free dollars.

With Roth IRAs, you fund the account with already-taxed income, but withdraw funds later on a tax-free basis.

Depending upon your financial situation, it could be wise to convert your traditional IRA and pay taxes now on the conversion, rather than holding the funds in the traditional IRA and paying taxes upon distribution at a later date.


The firm is not engaged in the practice of law or accounting. Please reach out to a tax professional with questions.

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