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Getting the most from itemized
deductions
By Kay
Bell Bankrate.com
Veteran itemizers have long known that you can
cut taxes if you take the time to total your eligible expenses.
But too often, even the most tax-savvy filers do only a partial
job when it comes to counting deductions.
Deductions aren't a dollar-for-dollar tax reduction
tool. They can only reduce your taxes on a limited basis by reducing
your taxable income. Less income equals less tax.
That means every bit that reduces your
taxable income is critical to cut your final payment to Uncle Sam
-- or get a bigger refund. If you're going to add up your deductible
expenses, add them all up. Especially since many deductions
require you to reach a certain level before you can use them.
So get your Schedule
A, pull out your shoebox of receipts and sharpen your pencil.
Here's some deductions you may have forgotten about.
Many
medical costs to consider
There is never anything good about being sick, but don't add to
your ailments by overlooking medical costs that you can deduct.
Since total medical expenditures must be at
least 7.5 percent of adjusted gross income, many taxpayers don't
even bother with this one. But there are ways the IRS says you can
get this deduction up to that ceiling.
- Don't overlook travel expenses to and from
medical treatments. The IRS evaluates the
standard cents-per-mile allowance each year, so check its Web
site for the current
rate.
- If you made insurance payments from already
taxed income, add it in here. This includes the cost of long-term
care insurance, up to certain limits based on your age.
- What about things your insurance didn't cover,
but you needed anyway? This is where you can recoup some of their
costs. This includes an extra pair of eyeglasses or set of contact
lenses, false teeth, hearing aids and artificial limbs.
- The doctor told you to get that air conditioner
to relieve your allergies. That means the A/C unit -- and additional
electricity costs to operate it -- are deductible.
- The IRS even classifies the cost of programs
to help you kick the smoking habit and certain weight-loss efforts
as medically deductible.
Special
medical needs
Do you have special needs? The medical deductions section of your
tax form is also where you account for the cost of a wheelchair,
crutches and equipment that enables a deaf person to use the telephone
or that provides television closed-captioning.
If you purchase a hearing or seeing-eye guide
dog, Fido's cost is deductible, too.
You need to add a chair lift to get up and down
the stairs? This, too, is a legitimate expense. Other deductible
projects that make a house more accessible for a handicapped resident
are:
- Adding ramps
- Widening doors and hallways
- Lowering counters and cabinets
- Adjusting electrical outlets and fixtures
- Installing railings, support bars and other
bathroom modifications
- Changing hardware on doors
- Grading exterior landscape to ease access
to the house
A word of warning -- elevators generally aren't
deductible. The IRS considers this a structural change that could
increase the value of your house and therefore doesn't allow it
as a medical deduction.
Yes,
there are some good taxes
In April, some taxes do come in handy.
If you live in a state with an income tax, you
already know the value of deducting those taxes from your federal
ones. But don't limit yourself here.
You also can deduct personal property taxes,
intangible taxes on investments and real estate taxes. Some workers
in California, New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island and Washington
state even get to deduct any mandatory contributions they made to
state benefit funds established to protect against lost wages.
Go a bit further down the government tax chain,
too. Did you pay city or county income or property taxes? Then throw
them in here.
This means those taxes you paid directly, not
just the ones withheld from your paycheck and that show up on your
W-2.
An
interest(ing) deduction
Every homeowner makes sure he gets that statement from the mortgage
holder so that chunk of loan interest can be deducted.
But don't forget that second home or a vacation
place with a mortgage. Make sure to include that interest on your
Schedule A, too.
If it's a new loan, make sure you add in here
any points -- money you paid the lender to get the loan. If you
don't get a statement from your bank with this information, pull
out your closing paperwork and you'll find it listed there.
Investments can help you out here, too. Did
you borrow money to buy that hot stock? Interest on that loan is
deductible.
Countless
charitable contributions
You got the receipt from the Red Cross for your cash donation. You
have that one from the Salvation Army for that extra couch you got
tired of seeing in the garage.
You're done here, right? Wrong.
There are many non-cash contributions that taxpayers
forget to add up.
The IRS allows you to deduct the miles you drove
your personal car to the soup kitchen where you volunteer each weekend.
As with medical mileage, the allowable rate is evaluated
each year, so check the IRS Web site for the current
rate.
Are you a Scout leader? Then the cost of your
uniform and its upkeep -- dry cleaning, tailoring, repair -- is
deductible.
Letting
the IRS share your losses
Most taxpayers think they can deduct casualty losses only if they
suffer catastrophic damages.
But you don't have to live through a fire, flood,
hurricane, tornado or earthquake to file a casualty deduction. Losses
from theft and vandalism are eligible losses, as are any damages
from an automobile accident as long as it wasn't the result of driver
negligence.
The IRS does limit, however, just how much of
these losses you can use to reduce your taxable income. Any amount
here must be reduced by $100 and then it must exceed 10 percent
of your adjusted gross income.
Myriad
miscellaneous expenses
This is a fun category, if you've got the patience -- and receipts
-- to back up your spending. And you'll need the receipts because
this category, like the medical one, is limited. The total of your
miscellaneous deductions must be more than 2 percent of your adjusted
gross income.
If you looked for a new job this year, be sure
to count your job-hunting expenses here. Just remember that your
job search has to be in the same field in which you're already employed.
Any subscriptions to work-related publications
can be taken here, as can fees you paid for membership in a professional
organization.
Do you have a hobby that nets you a bit of extra
spending money throughout the year? Any costs you had here toward
that hobby can be toted up as a miscellaneous expense. But you can't
deduct more than you made on the hobby.
Maybe your hobby is a bit more glitzy -- trips
to Las Vegas or Atlantic City for a little recreational gaming.
If it wasn't a good year at the roulette wheel, the IRS lets you
deduct your losses. These losses aren't limited by the 2 percent
cap, but you can't deduct in losses more than you won.
And finally, if this whole deduction process
just got too taxing for you and you paid an accountant to figure
it out for you, here's final itemizing gift from the IRS. Fees paid
to professional tax preparers are deductible, too.
-- Updated Jan. 12, 2004
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