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    Tax Deductions: Enjoy Them While You Can

    Two-thirds of U.S. taxpayers claim the standard deduction, but if ever there was a time to make the most of valuable tax deductions and credits, it might be now, before it’s too late.

    Given the general tenor in Washington these days, there’s no telling which tax breaks will survive and which will disappear.

    Already some tax perks are gone. Remember Schedule L? On that now-defunct form, taxpayers could claim above-the-line deductions (that is, no itemizing necessary) for certain disaster losses, sales taxes paid for the purchase of a new car, and a limited amount of property taxes. Those benefits are not available on your 2011 return.

    And the tax credit for homeowners who make energy-efficient improvements? That’s worth just $500 in 2011, down from $1,500 in previous years — and it’s a lifetime total so if you claimed it before, there’s a good chance you’ve wrung that tax break dry. Tax mines that could blow up your return

    “Over the last couple of years we’ve lost a few credits and deductions,” said Mark Luscombe, principal tax analyst with CCH Inc., a Riverwoods, Ill.-based tax publisher and a unit of Wolters Kluwer.

    That makes doing your taxes “maybe a little bit simpler,” he said, but “those deductions were all saving someone some money probably.”

    And the outlook for other tax breaks is far from certain. The so-called tax extenders — a group of tax breaks that Congress generally renews each year — expired at the end of 2011. That includes, among other things, a provision for older Americans to make a tax-free IRA distribution to a charity, a deduction for college tuition and a deduction for state and local sales taxes.

    Will they, or won’t they?

    It’s not the first time the tax extenders have expired. In the past, lawmakers renewed them and other tax breaks retroactively. But, while lawmakers eventually may extend some or all of these perks, it’s no sure thing in the current political climate.

    And that means a lot of tax uncertainty ahead.

    For instance, businesses enjoyed a bonus depreciation perk on 100% of the cost of qualified property in 2011; in 2012, that’s down to 50% and it’s unclear whether the more generous allowance will be resurrected. Similarly, small businesses enjoyed a $500,000 limit for expensing business assets under Code Section 179 in 2011; that drops to $125,000 in 2012 and will fall to $25,000 in 2013 if Congress doesn’t act, according to CCH Inc.

    Paying for college costs? The American opportunity credit is worth up to $2,500 (and up to $1,000 of that is refundable) for certain higher-education expenses, but under current law it’s not available after 2012. In 2013, that credit goes back to being the Hope credit, worth up to $1,500, nonrefundable.

    And consider the tax credit for adopting a child. It’s a refundable credit worth more than $13,000 in 2010 and 2011. In 2012, the credit is down to $12,650 and nonrefundable. In 2013, it’s slated to disappear (a much smaller credit will remain available for adoptions of special-needs children).

    Of course, the Bush-era income-tax rates, set to expire at the end of 2012, would affect the broadest swath of taxpayers. If lawmakers don’t act, the top income-tax rate rises to 39.6% from 35% now, the other tax brackets inch higher and the lowest tax rate becomes 15%, from 10% now.

    Will Congress bring back any of these tax breaks? That’s tough to say in the current climate of gridlock and lawmakers’ focus on deficit reduction.

    “Given the repeal of the estate tax, it wouldn’t surprise me” if lawmakers let the Bush-era tax cuts and other tax breaks lapse, said Jack Nuckolls, the San Francisco-based national director of private client tax services at accounting firm BDO.

    He’s referring to the fact that Congress allowed the estate tax to expire in 2010 for one year — a situation that stunned many tax professionals, many of whom expected lawmakers to reinstate the estate tax for that year retroactively. (Eventually, the Tax Relief Act, passed late in 2010, gave estates the option of paying the estate tax or avoiding the estate tax but facing less-generous cost-basis rules for heirs.)

    Still, absent an overhaul of the entire tax code — where tax breaks are eliminated and tax rates are reduced, which is much desired by some lawmakers but difficult to attain — some say Congress is likely to extend many of the most popular tax breaks.

    “The basic approach of the Republicans is ‘no tax increases,’ and eliminating a tax break without reducing tax rates looks to them like a tax increase,” Luscombe said. And Democrats “might like phase-outs for the wealthy but they want tax breaks generally for the middle-class and poorer people.”

    Whatever lawmakers end up doing, Nuckolls said, don’t expect much tax-law legislation before the election in November.

    Take advantage of those deductions

    So, what’s a taxpayer to do? Planning ahead for your 2012 tax return is no easy task, though some planners say pulling income into this year may make sense, particularly for high-income taxpayers, in case higher tax rates do kick in next year.

    High-income taxpayers also face a limit on itemized deductions that’s slated to kick in again next year — that would suggest maximizing deductions as much as possible this year.

    At this point in time, of course, it’s near-impossible to change your 2011 tax situation, though you do have until April 17 to make a 2011 IRA contribution.

    But one big decision taxpayers still must make — and many may be getting it wrong is whether or not to itemize.

    It’s time to make the most of valuable tax deductions and credits, before it’s too late.

    Just one-third of tax returns claimed itemized deductions in 2009, according to CCH. Certainly, taking the standard deduction — worth $5,800 for single filers on 2011 returns, up from $5,700 a year earlier (double that if you’re married-filing-jointly) — is a good call for many taxpayers. And it’s much easier than tracking receipts and calculating your tax breaks. But at least one study found that many people who take the standard deduction are overpaying taxes.

    As many as 2.2 million tax returns claimed the standard deduction when itemizing would have reduced their tax bill, according to a 2002 report, based on 1998 data, by the U.S. Government Accountability Office, the investigative arm of Congress. Taxpayers overpaid by an estimated $945 million, with about 24% of those taxpayers overpaying by more than $500 each and 76% overpaying by $500 or less. GAO report

    Meanwhile, other data show that taxpayers are claiming hefty sums, and likely reducing their tax bills substantially. For instance, for people with adjusted gross income of $50,000 to $100,000, the average deduction claimed for interest paid is $10,133; for taxes paid, $6,247; and for charitable contributions, $2,775, according to CCH Inc., based on 2009 data. (The figures are the average for the taxpayers in that income group who claim the deduction.)

    Among taxpayers with adjusted gross income of $250,000 or more, the average deduction claimed for interest is $25,527; for taxes paid, $48,317; and for charitable contributions, $18,488.

    Next time you start up your tax software or get out your tax forms, make sure you run the numbers to see whether itemizing makes sense for you.



    Andrea Coombes is MarketWatch's personal finance editor, based in San Francisco.



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    99 comments

    • tracy croll  •  Philadelphia, Pennsylvania  •  7 days ago
      President George Washignton and i quote"A free people ought not only be armed and disciplined, but they should have sufficient arms and ammunition to maintain a status of independence from any who might attempt to abuse them, which would include their own government!--- george washington looks to me like he knew something
    • Happy  •  Milwaukee, Wisconsin  •  12 days ago
      It's time for a revolt against all the crooked politicians. The whole system is BROKEN!!!!!
    • JOHN VOTER  •  Pleasanton, California  •  11 days ago
      OVER TAXED??
      BETTER LOOK AT YOUR CONGRESS !! VOTE EM OUT!!!
    • thank you god  •  Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania  •  6 days ago
      Hm a simple solution ,all IRS workers take a drasticly overwhelmingly huge pay cut to help balance out US. budget.
      you know that will never happen , they love that free money they take from us .our sweat and hard labor puts food on the table for them and their children ,while we struggle to keep lights on and put food on the table for our families..the irs soaks hard working americans dry leaviing us scratching to survive.then theres obama who made all his campaign promises in his first election,and those were lies ,he cares for the lower and middle class ,yeah right he cared for you when it was voting time ,as soon as he won he forgot all the lies he told a american public that looked upon him as a shining glimmer of hope in an economic storm.we did not realise he was the calm before the storm,he is the lightning and the tornado that lays waste to america .Thank you mr president ,your campaign lies fooled america once hopefully we wont have another four years of you driving around a gas guzzling limmo and america paying to fuel up air force one so you and the mrs. can vacation all over the world , oh and not to mention all the wonderful white house block parties that the us tax payer pays for .glad the white house can pay it's light bill .wish you created more jobs so we the people of america could pay ours.
      sincerely a non obama supporter..
    • Herman  •  7 days ago
      Give us a freeking 10 % flat tax and the revenue soars and the middle guy loves it.WHEN WILL PEOPLE STAND UP TO GOVERNMENT AND DEMAND THIS ? ITS BEST FOR EVERYONE .THIS IS INSANE.HOW DO WE GET THE GOVERNMENT TO LISTEN TO WHAT EVERYONE "KNOWS" THIS IS RIGHT INCLUDING THE GOVERNMENT.THIS IS WRONG.DO IT DO IT DO IT ........
    • Movingtexas  •  San Antonio, Texas  •  7 days ago
      Typical DC BULLS___T, they don't have the nads to tell anyone that they are losing their tax breaks prior to it passing in congress. NO they wait until after the fact and let some LAMO website publish the good news. What a bunch of GUTLESS WONDERS, do your research and vote these spineless pukes out in the next election. OBLOWME included!!!
    • JimS  •  Bigfork, Montana  •  12 days ago
      how come with all taxes, sales tax, property tax , vehicle tax, luxury,state, federal,gas and energy taxes,soc. sec. , medicare and hidden taxes we are paying about 52% on 30,000 income?
    • Bill  •  Denver, Colorado  •  11 days ago
      Look at your cell phone bill, the fed tax for the free phones to the poor!
    • Lorraine  •  Walnut Creek, California  •  4 days ago
      This article states :The average charitable contribution for incomes $50, 000 to $100,000 a year was $2,775, while the average charitable contribution for incomes over $250,000 was $18,488. If taxes increases for those making over $250,000, I speculate donations will drop considerably, causing more on the charity of others to become dependent on the government.
      Why are some claiming the "rich" are villains who don't care about others? And what percentage of the lower income give to those less fortunate?
    • bad food  •  Englewood, Colorado  •  4 days ago
      Ms Coombes personal comments injected in the mix makes it known she is a democrat, the truth streached or omitted, even a little, become a lie.
    • john  •  12 days ago
      In every country or society there have always been wealthy people, middle class and the poor. Its just the way it is. In our country the promise was that all of of us would have a fair chance to succeed. Well, life isnt always fair is it? Many immigrant groups endured discrimination and abuse and fought hard to achieve the so-called American Dream, Others whined and complained and forced the government to pass laws that forced others to give them what they felt they were entiltled to. Thus was born the Entitlement Society. If you didnt get what you wanted, you just yelled and whined until people got tired of hearing it and just gave in. Those people in those groups that did work hard to succeed were mocked and slandered by those who felt they had to do nothing but sit back and be taken care of. Now what do we have? Uneducated children, broken families, rising violence, no real industry, a corrupt government and Obama. Good job America, we finally made it.
    • Lone Wolf  •  12 days ago
      "Of course, the Bush-era income-tax rates, set to expire at the end of 2012, would affect the broadest swath of taxpayers. If lawmakers don’t act, the top income-tax rate rises to 39.6% from 35% now, the other tax brackets inch higher and the lowest tax rate becomes 15%, from 10% now."

      Lowest rate becomes 15%? I thought the the "Bush tax cuts" were only for the evil rich people"?
    • DJLake  •  12 days ago
      And we cant even turn to dog food for survival, since it has gotten really expensive. Guess we'll have to become cannibals and eat up all the liberals...
    • Miss Tikya  •  13 days ago
      I like the nice roads, i like the security of having a military ready to defend us, i like that I'm able to help others, that's why I don't mind paying taxes. If you want something, you have to pay for it.
    • M  •  19 days ago
      Why do people make a big fuss when rich people try to avoid (legally) paying taxes versus the middle class person avoiding taxes? The amount is different but the principle is the same.

      Plus, why are we still calling it Bush-era tax cuts? I seem to recall someone else has allowed them to continue.....
    • Dems Don't Care  •  Chicago, Illinois  •  12 days ago
      This article fails to mention the following: DNC hates deductions because the money goes directly from the donor to the charitable organization. This is considered less money for them to take from you, the tax payer to give out to their own crony leftist leaning organizations like Family Planning. They also look at this as a loophole that prevents them from taking more of your money. The GOP, on the other hand want to simplify the tax code, and lower the rates into one simplified flat tax. The DNC hates that too, because everyone will have to pay their fair share, and they loose power because entitlements go away.
    • michael  •  Port Huron, Michigan  •  16 days ago
      Bottom line....they want every last dime you make, every dime you lose, they want it ALL! WE are all working and busting our keisters for the GOVERNMENT!
    • Deedee  •  26 days ago
      The Federal Reserve can give "loans" to foreign banks and countries at 0% interest. From 2007 to 2011 over 16 Trillion dollars were given away but the average working family can't get a tax break. What's wrong with this country?
    • tom  •  Rich Hill, Missouri  •  26 days ago
      isn't this why we left England?
    • CONNIE  •  Champaign, Illinois  •  6 days ago
      Hitting the older people again. Obama you need to find another job. Too sneaky for me.

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