Did you know that you may be entitled to even more stimulus?

The stimulus you already received was really a pre-payment of a 2020 tax credit. When we prepare your 2020 tax return, we calculate the total 2020 stimulus tax credit based on your 2020 tax information (income, dependents, etc) and then subtract what you have already received. If you are due more stimulus, you get it with your 2020 tax return (in the form of an increased refund). If you have received too much stimulus pre-payment, then you don’t have to pay any of the overage back to the government. Be sure to tell us the exact amount of stimulus that you have already received so that we can correctly calculate how much additional stimulus you may be owed

Want to Contribute to a Roth IRA, but you Earn Too Much?

If you earn over $206K, then you can not directly contribute new money to a Roth IRA. You might be able to “backdoor” the contribution though. If you don’t have pre-tax money in a Traditional IRA, then: 1. Create a Traditional IRA and make “nondeductible” contributions (up to $7,000). 2. Convert the nondeductible Traditional IRA to a Roth IRA.

Is your Income Lower this Year due to COVID?

If so, it may be an opportune time to convert some or all of your Traditional IRA to a Roth IRA. Once converted to a Roth your investment will grow tax-fee. If you have a Traditional IRA with a relatively large balance, a full conversion could push you into a higher tax bracket. If that’s the case, spread your conversion across 2020 and 2021 to save on the amount of taxes you’ll have to pay.

Do you, as an Employee Spend Money to Perform Your Job?

Most employees incur expenses to do their jobs.  You might drive for your job or use your cell phone or home internet or maintain a home office.  You, as an employee, have no way to deduct these un-reimbursed expenses on your individual tax return (those deductions go wasted).  Instead, consider asking your employer to replace part of your wage with an expense reimbursement.  Example:  If you earn $50,000 and incur $5,000 of un-reimbursed expenses (driving, cell phone, internet, supplies, home office), then you pay FICA tax and income tax on $50,000.  If you ask your employer to instead pay you $45,000 as a wage and $5,000 of reimbursement, then you now pay FICA tax and income tax on $45,000 even though you are still being paid $50,000…saving you $1,200 of tax/year.

For Those over 72 who Donate to Charity

If you are over age 72 then you are forced to withdrawal money from your IRA each year and include that amount in your taxable income.  Most retirees don’t itemize since their itemized deductions (state and local taxes, mortgage interest, and donations) don’t exceed the $27,400 standard deduction – thus their donations don’t save them any tax.  The solution:  If you donate to charity directly from your IRA, then you don’t have to include that donated amount as income on your tax return…so in a round-about way, you get to deduct that donation (i.e., your taxable income doesn’t include the amount you donated to charity directly from your IRA).

Was your 2020 Business Income Affected by COVID?

If you were unable to work in your normally-profitable self-employed business due to practically almost any COVID-related reason, you can save up to 5K of tax.  If you couldn’t work in your self-employed business because you had to take care of your children or another dependent, then you can save up to 10K of additional tax (on top of the 5K).  Call us for details – there is math involved.

Tax Credits for Self-Employed Individuals

The FFCRA provides for sick leave and family leave refundable credits against the self-employment tax. The sick leave credit provision for self-employed individuals allows an income tax credit for a qualified sick leave equivalent amount. The qualified sick leave equivalent amount equals the number of days (up to 10) that the self-employed individual can’t perform services and would have been entitled to receive paid sick leave under the EPSLA if he were an employee, multiplied by the lesser of two amounts, based on the circumstance of the leave. The credit is limited to the lesser of 100% of average daily self-employment income, or $511 per day if the self-employed individual is (1) subject to a federal, state, or local quarantine or isolation order related to COVID-19; (2) advised by a health care provider to self-quarantine due to coronavirus concerns; or (3) experiencing coronavirus symptoms and seeking a medical diagnosis. The credit is limited to the lesser of 67% of average daily self-employment income, or $200 per day for a self-employed individual who is caring for another individual described in item 1 or 2, caring for a son or daughter whose school or place of care is closed or child care provider is unavailable, or because the self-employed individual is experiencing a “substantially similar condition” specified by the government. The family leave credit provision for self-employed individuals allows an income tax credit for a qualified family leave equivalent amount. The qualified family leave equivalent amount equals the number of days (up to 50) that the self-employed individual can’t perform services and would have been entitled to receive paid leave under the EFMLEA if he were an employee, multiplied by the lesser of 67% of average daily self-employment income, or $200. The credits for self-employed individuals apply only to days occurring during the period beginning on April 1, 2020.

Employee Retention Credit

A refundable payroll tax credit is available for 50% of wages paid by eligible employers to certain employees during the COVID-19 crisis. The credit is available to (1) employers, including nonprofits, whose operations were fully or partially suspended due to a COVID-19-related shut-down order and (2) employers whose gross receipts declined by more than 50% when compared to the same quarter in the prior year. The credit is based on qualified wages paid to employees. For employers with an average number of full-time employees during 2019 greater than 100, qualified wages are wages paid to employees when they are not providing services due to the COVID-19-related circumstances described earlier. For eligible employers with an average number of full-time employees during 2019 of 100 or less, all employee wages qualify for the credit, whether the employer is open for business or subject to a shut-down order. However, wages do not include those taken into account for purposes of the (1) payroll credits for required paid sick leave or required paid family leave under the FFCRA or (2) employer credit for paid family and medical leave (IRC Sec. 45S). In addition, no credit is available with respect to an employee for any period for which the employer is allowed a work opportunity credit under IRC Sec. 51 with respect to that employee. The credit applies to the first $10,000 of compensation, including health benefits, paid to an eligible employee after March 12, 2020 and before January 1, 2021. The Secretary of the Treasury is granted authority to advance payments to eligible employers and to waive applicable penalties for employers that do not deposit applicable payroll taxes in anticipation of receiving the credit. The credit is not available to employers receiving Small Business Interruption Loans (CARES Act Sec. 2301).

Student Loan Payments By Employers

This new provision enables employers to provide a student loan repayment benefit to employees on a tax-free basis. An employer may contribute up to $5,250 annually toward an employee’s student loans, and the payment will be excluded from the employee’s income. The $5,250 cap applies to both the new student loan repayment benefit as well as other educational assistance (such as tuition, fees, and books) provided by the employer under current law. (such as under IRC Sec. 127.) The provision applies to any student loan payments made by an employer on behalf of an employee, whether paid to a lender or to the employee, after the CARES Act’s March 27, 2020 enactment date and before January 1, 2021. To prevent a double benefit, student loan repayments for which the exclusion is allowable cannot be deducted under IRC Sec. 221 (the limited deduction provision for student loan interest)

Retirement Plan Distributions – A Change in the Rules

If your retirement plan rules allow, the CARES Act waives the 10% early withdrawal penalty for distributions up to $100,000 from IRAs and defined contribution qualified retirement plans [such as 401(k) plans] made for coronavirus-related purposes on or after January 1, 2020 and before December 31, 2020. Income attributable to these distributions will be subject to tax over three years, and the taxpayer may recontribute the funds to an eligible retirement plan within three years after receipt without regard to that year’s cap on contributions. Additionally, defined contribution plans are permitted to allow plan loans up to $100,000, and repayment of existing plan loans is extended for employees who are affected by the coronavirus. A coronavirus-related distribution is any distribution made to an individual (1) who is diagnosed with COVID-19; (2) whose spouse or dependent is diagnosed with COVID-19; or (3) who experiences adverse financial consequences as a result of being quarantined, furloughed, laid off, having work hours reduced, being unable to work due to lack of child care due to COVID-19, closing or reducing hours of a business owned or operated by the individual due to COVID-19, or other factors as determined by the IRS.

Required Minimum Distributions are not required in 2020

If you don’t want to take a Required Minimum Distribution from your IRA/401K/403B in 2020, then you don’t have to. Nothing special to do – just don’t take the money out of your retirement plan.
You still should consider making Qualified Charitable Distributions from your retirement plan (giving money directly from the retirement plan to charity) since this is one of the only ways to take money out of these plans tax-free.
Since you are not required to take RMDs, you will have a lower overall income and might be in the lowest tax bracket of the remainder of your life and might want to consider rolling money from your retirement plan to a Roth IRA this year (voluntarily paying tax on the retirement distribution in a low-tax year to avoid ever having to pay tax on the money or the earnings again). Ask us if you are a good candidate for this.