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						Your Money: How to get 20 percent off your tax bill
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		 [January 28, 2019]   
		By Beth Pinsker 
 NEW YORK (Reuters) - Tax filing season for 
		2018 returns starts this week, and the most complicated changes brought 
		about by the Tax Cut and Jobs Act are still barely comprehensible.
 
 There are some 30 million filers who need to pay attention, ranging from 
		Uber drivers to day traders to professional athletes. Anyone who files a 
		Schedule C for profit or loss from a business might qualify for a 20 
		percent deduction off certain income.
 
 The issue is so new that tax experts have not even settled on a name for 
		it. Some refer to the changes by the number of the section of tax code 
		that pertains, 199A.
 
 Some prefer a more generic-but-wordy approach: "20 percent pass-through 
		deduction." And some go both wordy and obscure, referring to it as the 
		"Qualified Business Income deduction."
 
 Mastering the ins and outs during the past year has been a marathon, 
		with a sprint in the last two weeks when final regulations emerged from 
		the partially shuttered Internal Revenue Service, resulting in more than 
		300 pages of arcane accounting language.
 
		
		 
		
 "It took a lot of coffee and a lot of late nights," said Jeff Levine, a 
		CPA and certified financial planner who heads Blueprint Wealth Alliance, 
		based in Garden City, New York.
 
 Levine estimates he spent 50 to 60 hours just digesting the new 
		paperwork. He has written more than 100,000 words about the new 
		regulations for other tax professionals.
 
 If you do not have that kind of time to put into decoding the new tax 
		laws, here are Levine's responses to some key questions:
 
 1. Do you need professional help this year?
 
 The truth is, not even tax professionals or DIY software may get the new 
		regulations completely right at the moment. Since the final regulations 
		came out, many back-end algorithms still need to be tweaked. Accountants 
		who created their own spreadsheets to do the calculations may need to 
		make adjustments.
 
 Levine thinks it make take years to sort through the new tax law, and 
		there will no doubt be court cases - all for regulations set to expire 
		in 2026.
 
 At some point, whatever tax program you or your tax preparer use should 
		be able to calculate the basics, but there is a bit more to it than 
		that.
 
 "The software only does so much. It might tell you the right number, it 
		might be wrong. But it will not be able to think outside the box," 
		Levine said.
 
 If, for instance, your software asks you: “What is my depreciable 
		property immediately after acquisition?”
 
		
            [to top of second column] | 
            
			 
            
			Copies of tax regulations are seen during a markup on the "Tax Cuts 
			and Jobs Act" on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., November 15, 
			2017. REUTERS/Aaron P. Bernstein/File Photo 
            
			 
And you say: What are you even talking about? Then it may be best to ask for 
help. 
2. What can you save?
 A 20 percent reduction in taxes sounds worth the effort to figure out the math, 
right?
 
For those with business income that qualifies, the savings can be significant. 
Say you are single and have $50,000 in income to claim from a tutoring gig, 
after all of your expenses and other Schedule C deductions. Your taxable income 
after taking out half the self-employment tax and the new $12,000 standard 
deduction would be just over $34,000.
 The new qualified business income deduction then lowers that by 20 percent - 
which is about $6,900. And that would slash your tax owed by just over $800.
 
 Go up the income scale to $150,000 and your savings is more like $6,000.
 
 But go up the income scale too far, and you hit the caps. These start at 
$315,000 for married couples and half that for singles. At that point, whole 
swaths of occupations get no deduction at all - zero.
 
3. What kind of planning do I need to do?
 If you are close to any of the caps, you could benefit in big ways from holistic 
financial planning, Levine said. He recently worked with a young doctor in New 
York who was married and right at the cap. Levine helped her set up a defined 
benefit retirement pension plan to lower her income by $78,000. He saved her 
$35,000 on her taxes, and the deferred income will come back to her when she 
retires.
 
 Moves like this can be complicated, because deferring income into retirement 
accounts to save on taxes now can actually end up costing you down the road 
since you have to pay taxes on it when you start getting payments.
 
 Levine said the 199A deduction has changed his strategic thinking in some cases 
because today's 20 percent deduction is very enticing.
 
 "The key point is that nothing should go without being checked," Levine said.
 
 (Editing by Lauren Young and David Gregorio)
 
				 
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