Tax Planning

Tax Planning

Tax planning is the analysis of a financial situation or plan to ensure that all elements work together to allow you to pay the lowest taxes possible. As of 2020, long-term capital gains are taxed as follows: 0% tax for taxpayers whose income is less than $78,750 15% tax for single taxpayers whose income is more than $78,750 but less than $434,550 ($488,850 if married filing jointly or a qualifying widow(er), $461,700 for the head of the household, or $244,425 for married filing separately) 20% tax for those whose income is higher than listed for the 15% tax If the same investor sold underperforming investments carrying $10,000 in long-term capital losses, the losses would offset the gains, resulting in a tax liability of 0. For 2020 and 2021, if meeting all qualifications, a filer under age 50 can contribute a maximum of $6,000 to their IRA and $7,000 if age 50 or older. For example, if a 52-year-old male with an annual income of $50,000 who made a $7,000 contribution to a traditional IRA has an adjusted gross income of $43,000 For example, if a single investor whose income was $80,000 had $10,000 in long-term capital gains, there would be a tax liability of $1,500.

Tax planning is the analysis of a financial situation or plan to ensure that all elements work together to allow you to pay the lowest taxes possible.

What Is Tax Planning?

Tax planning is the analysis of a financial situation or plan to ensure that all elements work together to allow you to pay the lowest taxes possible. A plan that minimizes how much you pay in taxes is referred to as tax efficient. Tax planning should be an essential part of an individual investor's financial plan. Reduction of tax liability and maximizing the ability to contribute to retirement plans are crucial for success. 

Tax planning is the analysis of a financial situation or plan to ensure that all elements work together to allow you to pay the lowest taxes possible.
Considerations of tax planning include the timing of income, size, the timing of purchases, and planning for expenditures.
Tax planning strategies can include saving for retirement in an IRA or engaging in tax gain-loss harvesting.

Understanding Tax Planning

Tax planning covers several considerations. Considerations include timing of income, size, and timing of purchases, and planning for other expenditures. Also, the selection of investments and types of retirement plans must complement the tax filing status and deductions to create the best possible outcome.

Tax Planning for Retirement Plans

Saving via a retirement plan is a popular way to efficiently reduce taxes. Contributing money to a traditional IRA can minimize gross income by the amount contributed. For 2020 and 2021, if meeting all qualifications, a filer under age 50 can contribute a maximum of $6,000 to their IRA and $7,000 if age 50 or older. For example, if a 52-year-old male with an annual income of $50,000 who made a $7,000 contribution to a traditional IRA has an adjusted gross income of $43,000, the $7,00 contribution would grow tax-deferred until retirement.

There are several other retirement plans that an individual may use to help reduce tax liability. 401(k) plans are popular with larger companies that have many employees. Participants in the plan can defer income from their paycheck directly into the company’s 401(k) plan. The greatest difference is that the contribution limit dollar amount is much higher than that of an IRA. 

Using the same example as above, the 52-year-old could contribute up to $26,000 into their 401(k). For 2020 and 2021, if under age 50, the salary contribution can be up to $19,500, or up to $26,000 if age 50 or older due to the allowed additional $6,000 catch-up contribution. This 401(k) deposit reduces adjusted gross income from $50,000 to $24,000.

Tax Gain-Loss Harvesting

Tax gain-loss harvesting is another form of tax planning or management relating to investments. It is helpful because it can use a portfolio's losses to offset overall capital gains. According to the IRS, short and long-term capital losses must first be used to offset capital gains of the same type. In other words, long-term losses offset long-term gains before offsetting short-term gains. Short-term capital gains, or earnings from assets owned for less than one year, are taxed at ordinary income rates. 

As of 2020, long-term capital gains are taxed as follows: 

For example, if a single investor whose income was $80,000 had $10,000 in long-term capital gains, there would be a tax liability of $1,500. If the same investor sold underperforming investments carrying $10,000 in long-term capital losses, the losses would offset the gains, resulting in a tax liability of 0. If the same losing investment were brought back, then a minimum of 30 days would have to pass to avoid incurring a wash sale. 

According to the Internal Revenue Service, "If your capital losses exceed your capital gains, the amount of the excess loss that you can claim to lower your income is the lesser of $3,000 ($1,500 if married filing separately) or your total net loss shown on line 21 of Schedule D (Form 1040 or 1040-SR).

For example, if the 52-year-old investor had $3,000 in net capital losses for the year, the $50,000 income will be adjusted to $47,000. Remaining capital losses can be carried over with no expiration to offset future capital gains.

Related terms:

401(k) Plan : How It Works & Limits

A 401(k) plan is a tax-advantaged retirement account offered by many employers. There are two basic types—traditional and Roth. read more

Capital Gains Tax

A capital gains tax is a levy on the profit that an investor gains from the sale of an investment such as stock shares. Here's how to calculate it. read more

Financial Planner

A financial planner is a qualified money-management professional who helps clients meet their financial goals.  read more

Individual Retirement Account (IRA)

An individual retirement account (IRA) is a savings plan with tax advantages that individuals can use to invest for retirement. read more

IRS Publication 571: Tax-Sheltered Annuity Plans (403(b) Plans)

IRS Publication 571 provides tax information for filers who have a 403(b) retirement plan. read more

Net Investment Income (NII)

Net investment income (NII) is income received from investment assets such as bonds, stocks, mutual funds, loans, and other investments, less related expenses. read more

Robo-Advisor Tax-Loss Harvesting

Robo-advisor tax-loss harvesting is the automated selling of securities in a portfolio to deliberately incur losses to offset any capital gains or taxable income. read more

Tax-Advantaged

Tax-advantaged refers to any type of investment, account, or plan that is either exempt from taxation, tax-deferred, or offers other types of tax benefits. read more

Tax Efficiency

Tax efficiency is when an individual or business pays the least amount of taxes required by law. read more

Tax-Loss Harvesting

Tax-loss harvesting is the selling of securities at a loss to offset a capital gains tax liability. read more