Current:Home > InvestInvestment, tax tips for keeping, growing your money in 2024 -Clarity Finance Guides
Investment, tax tips for keeping, growing your money in 2024
View
Date:2025-04-14 04:27:52
It’s almost time to say goodbye to 2023. But don’t let some time-sensitive tax and other money tips slip away without pondering and perhaps acting on a few.
These tips involve portfolio reviews, charitable donations, stock sales, retirement planning and more.
Review and rebalance your investments
The investment landscape this year has been much different from 2022. Hence, it’s a good idea to check what you own because things likely shifted around a lot.
Rebalancing is the process of adjusting your portfolio periodically so that you maintain your desired or target mix of stocks, bonds or other assets. Suppose you strive to hold 60% of your investments in stocks and stock funds a nd the other 40% in bonds and bond funds. If your mix is now closer to 70/30 following this year's stock market rally, it might be time to sell some equities and move the proceeds to the bond side.
Rebalancing provides a discipline for buying low and selling high. From a tax perspective, it’s often neater to do so within sheltered accounts such as 401(k) plans and individual retirement accounts (IRAs). Otherwise, you would incur taxable transactions with each trade.
If you want to hold more fixed-income investments, consider Series-I U.S. Savings Bonds, suggests Trent White, a certified financial planner and attorney in Scottsdale, Arizona. These investments pay yields (currently 5.27%) that are pegged to inflation, which has made them popular lately, he said. You buy them from the government (at Treasurydirect.gov), which places a general limit of $10,000 in annual purchases per person.
Money:US economy doing better than national mood suggests. What to consider.
Donate to charities
Giving away money or property can be a good way to reduce your taxes, but many caveats apply and the strategy doesn’t make sense for everyone. For starters, you must itemize to make tax-deductible charitable donations, but most Americans take the standard deduction instead. "Fewer people benefit from charitable giving (from a tax perspective) because the standard deduction is so high," said White.
Charitable donations also are limited — generally, you can deduct no more than 60% of your adjusted gross income. You also may deduct various types of property donations such as vehicles or furnishings, but you might need to have larger gifts appraised. Still, donating appreciated assets or investments can make sense to avoid the capital-gains taxes that otherwise might apply.
If you can't give away the several thousand dollars a year or more that might be necessary to make itemizing worthwhile, it can pay to “bunch” your donations by skipping them one year and doubling up the next.
Gifts to individuals can’t be deducted. However, anyone may give up to $17,000 each year to any number of other people (or up to $34,000 given by married couples) without incurring gift-tax consequences, White noted.
Investing:Your employer can help you save up for a rainy day. Not enough of them do.
Harvest those losses or gains
If you sell money-losing stocks, funds or other investments, you can use that to offset gains on more profitable holdings. If your losses exceed you gains, you can deduct some of the excess, up to $3,000 per year, carrying forward unused amounts to future years. This tax-loss harvesting approach can be used on investments held in unsheltered accounts but not in 401(k) plans, IRAs and so on.
You may harvest losses throughout the year but it’s popular to do so in December, when you know which holdings are sitting on gains or losses. One caveat: You can’t purchase the exact same security within 30 days before or after a sale. If you do, your deduction would be disallowed under the "wash sale" rule, though you may buy similar but not identical investments within that time.
Another caveat is that you must first offset short- or long-term losses against gains of the same type, where “long term” signifies investments held for more than one year.
“But if your losses of one type exceed your gains of the same type, then you can apply the excess to the other type,” noted Fidelity Investments in a commentary. “For example, if you were to sell a long-term investment at a $15,000 loss but had only $5,000 in long-term gains for the year, you could apply the remaining $10,000 excess to offset any short-term gains.”
Alternatively, if you're in a low ordinary-income tax bracket, especially if it's temporary, you might consider capital gain harvesting instead, White suggests. The idea here is to look for opportunities where you can sell appreciated investments at the lowest 0% long-term rate. Singles with taxable income up to $44,625 can qualify for that, as can married couples filing jointly up to $89,250.
Plan for required minimum distributions
If you have been investing diligently in 401(k) plans, IRAs and other tax-deferred accounts, congratulations, but a tax bill awaits. Required minimum distributions are taxable withdrawals that you generally must take out on an annual basis, starting at age 73. Still, there are ways to minimize the tax bite.
One option is to take some withdrawals before you hit RMD age, pay the tax, then convert the proceeds into Roth IRAs for tax-free growth later, with no more RMDs to deal with. Another option is to make qualified charitable distributions. With these, available to people 70½ and up, you may donate up to $100,000 annually from a traditional IRA directly to charities and exclude the withdrawn amount from taxation. It's an option if you’re charitably inclined and can live off other income. This option is open to people 70 1/2 and up, even though RMDs don't kick in until 73, White noted.
At any rate, the time to start planning an RMD strategy is years before you must take them. But planning is advisable, as ordinary withdrawals from tax-sheltered accounts can bump up your Medicare premiums and make more of your Social Security income taxable.
Reach the writer at russ.wiles@arizonarepublic.com.
veryGood! (69773)
Related
- 2025 'Doomsday Clock': This is how close we are to self
- You Don’t Need to Buy a Vowel to Enjoy Vanna White's Style Evolution
- Light a Sparkler for These Stars Who Got Married on the 4th of July
- Kyle Richards and Mauricio Umansky Break Up After 27 Years of Marriage
- North Carolina trustees approve Bill Belichick’s deal ahead of introductory news conference
- Wayfair 4th of July 2023 Sale: Shop the Best Up to 70% Off Summer Home, Kitchen & Tech Deals
- He's trying to fix the IRS and has $80 billion to play with. This is his plan
- SVB, now First Republic: How it all started
- Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
- BMW warns that older models are too dangerous to drive due to airbag recall
Ranking
- The Grammy nominee you need to hear: Esperanza Spalding
- New report blames airlines for most flight cancellations
- Cue the Fireworks, Kate Spade’s 4th of July Deals Are 75% Off
- Space Tourism Poses a Significant ‘Risk to the Climate’
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- The best picket signs of the Hollywood writers strike
- In the US West, Researchers Consider a Four-Legged Tool to Fight Two Foes: Wildfire and Cheatgrass
- SVB, now First Republic: How it all started
Recommendation
Meta releases AI model to enhance Metaverse experience
With Biden in Europe Promising to Expedite U.S. LNG Exports, Environmentalists on the Gulf Coast Say, Not So Fast
What's Your Worth?
Elon Musk picks NBC advertising executive as next Twitter CEO
$73.5M beach replenishment project starts in January at Jersey Shore
An Unprecedented Heat Wave in India and Pakistan Is Putting the Lives of More Than a Billion People at Risk
Coach 4th of July Deals: These Handbags Are Red, White and Reduced 60% Off
Warming Trends: A Possible Link Between Miscarriages and Heat, Trash-Eating Polar Bears and a More Hopeful Work of Speculative Climate Fiction