Part of a good tax strategy is finding deductions in the hidden corners of the cluttered labyrinth that is the U.S. tax code. There are about 200 such breaks in the current system according to data compiled by researchers Leonard Burman and Marvin Phaup. But many of them go unclaimed—the Government Accountability Office has estimated that as many as 2 million taxpayers overpay by not itemizing their deductions. With tax rules even more complex today, that number has likely only grown.
Many of the breaks target tiny constituencies and specific companies. There’s the deduction for foreign bettors on money they make gambling over the Internet on U.S. horse and dog races. Another benefits companies that film movies in the U.S. And you can write off the cost of shipping your pet when you move for work as part of your other deductible moving expenses.
Along with breaks that help out a small group are a few you might actually take advantage of. We contacted tax and financial specialists about their favorite obscure deductions lodged in the tax system. Here are 13 lesser known activities that can get you a tax break this year:
1. Donate to charity from your IRA. The fiscal cliff deal passed in early January resuscitated an expired provision that allows people age 70.5 or older to donate up to $100,000 from their IRA to a qualified charity, without having to pay taxes on the transfer. For people who already itemize their deductions, the provision makes no difference—if they withdraw money from their IRA and then donate it, they’re taxed on the withdrawal and then deduct the donation. But those who don’t itemize also don’t get charitable deductions, so taking advantage of this provision means they’ll save on their taxes, says Beth Shapiro Kaufman, an estate planner at tax and legal services firm Caplin & Drysdale. Another group helped, she says, are high-income earners whose total deductions are capped by the Pease limitation enacted under the fiscal cliff legislation—when they donate straight from their IRA, the donation doesn’t count against their total, effectively skirting the Pease cap.
2. Pay for your child’s medical expenses and education. A parent or grandparent can pass along up to $5.12 million to their children or grandchildren over the course of their lifetime, or $14,000 per year (up from $13,000 in 2012), without incurring an inheritance tax. But for those really well-off parents who want to give even more, there’s a loophole to get around even those limits—pay for their children’s medical care or tuition, says Clarence Kehoe, a partner at accounting firm Anchin, Block & Anchin. Qualifying payments, which don’t count against the lifetime or annual limits, have to be made directly to the medical provider or school.
3. Foster a pet. If you foster cats and dogs while they wait for placement in a permanent home, you can deduct expenses like litter, food, vet bills, paper towels, and possibly even your mileage to the vet, notes Mark Steber, chief tax officer at Jackson Hewitt Tax Service. The organization you’re working with has to be a 501(c)(3) charity.
4. Go for alternative medical treatments. In 1955, a ruling by the IRS allowed deductible medical care to be provided by practitioners of Christian Science, says Bruce Givner, a tax lawyer at Los Angeles-based Givner & Kaye, and it has since been extended to other forms of alternative medicine like acupuncture, vitamins, and herbal supplements if these are prescribed by a “medical practitioner.” In a 1980 tax case, songs by a Navajo medicine man were approved as a deductible medical expense. A swimming pool can even be deducted in certain cases if it can be shown to be medically necessary, says Jode Beauvais, a CPA at accounting firm Moss Adams. But, notes Givner, if a medical benefit can be obtained in a cheaper way, you could have trouble. That’s what happened in a 1969 tax court case in which a taxpayer tried to deduct expenses related to playing golf since his doctor had recommended it to treat his emphysema. The IRS won by showing that taking walks would have done him just as much good.
5. Pay for private mortgage insurance. The fiscal cliff deal also revived a provision that allows taxpayers to deduct their premiums for private mortgage insurance (which can run anywhere from $50 to $220 a month on a loan of $250,000). Most people know about the deduction for mortgage interest, but fewer have heard of the insurance deduction, says Rebecca Pavese, head of Palisades Hudson Financial Group’s tax practice.
6. Move away for your first job. The costs of moving for a job are deductible if you pass the distance test (at least 50 miles from your old home) and the time test (at least 39 weeks of full-time work during your first year at the new employer). Steven Warren, a CPA at Minneapolis-based Lehrman, Flom, and Co., points out that what’s not well known is that recent graduates also can deduct their costs if they move to get that first job. Self-employed workers qualify as well.
7. Drive for charity. Any driving you do related to charity work is deductible at 14 cents a mile plus parking costs, says Warren. Other out-of-pocket expenses you incur in connection with charity work also are also normally deductible.
8. Invest in retirement to get both a deduction and a credit. Taxpayers with limited incomes can get both a deduction and a tax credit for putting away money in their retirement plans, says Todd Koch, partner at accounting firm John Knutson & Co. Almost everyone gets a deduction for investing in a qualified plan like an IRA—but some investors also get the Saver’s Credit, which provides a tax credit of up to $1,000 to individuals and $2,000 to married couples for saving. The income limits to qualify for the credit are $28,750 for individuals; $43,125 for heads of household; and $57,500 for couples. Though approximately 57 million households qualify for the credit, in a 2012 Transamerica Center for Retirement Studies’ survey, less than 20 percent of people had heard of it.
9. Join a native Alaskan tribe and hunt whales. Captains of boats involved in subsistence hunting of endangered bowhead whales in Alaska are in luck—the IRS lets them deduct up to $10,000 of their expenses for buying and maintaining gear, feeding their crews, and distributing their catch, notes Steber. In practice though, this isn’t a job for just any boat captain: that word “subsistence” matters. It means hunting to provide food or materials for your family, and the federal government allows only certain native tribes of Alaska to hunt bowhead whales as part of traditional cultural practices.
10. Build a NASCAR track. A report last summer by Republican Senator Tom Coburn noted that the cost of constructing a racetrack can be depreciated over seven years, compared with the typical 15 to 39 years for similar property. One of the main beneficiaries of the break is the International Speedway Corporation, owners of the Daytona Speedway and 11 other NASCAR tracks, according to the report—estimates have put the benefit to the company at around $38 million.
11. Donate stock to charity. If you’d like to give money to a good cause, you can get more bang for your buck by giving stock instead of cash, says certified financial planner Eric Heckman, author of Worry Less Wealth. If you donate cash, you get to deduct that amount in most cases. But if you donate stock that has appreciated in value, not only do you get to write off the fair-market value, but you also avoid the capital-gains tax on the stock sale.
12. Work overseas in a low-tax country. If you work overseas, the first $95,100 of income are excluded from U.S. taxes so that you avoid paying twice—once in-country and once in the U.S. But that exclusion recognizes no distinction between low- and high-tax countries, notes Bob Spielman, a partner at accounting firm Marcum LLP. So if you’re earning money in places like Monaco, Kuwait, or Bermuda, where there’s no income tax, your first 95 grand are tax free.
13. Harvest your investment losses. An important tax-saving practice allowable under the code called “tax loss harvesting” allows investors to reduce their IRS payments substantially—but it’s one that most people ignore, says Frank Armstrong, founder of investment advisory firm Investment Solutions. The strategy allows taxpayers to sell an investment like a mutual fund at a loss and then use the loss to offset either capital gains on other investments or their regular taxable income (in the case of regular income, you can apply up to $3,000 of the loss in a single year). Best of all, any losses that you don’t use now against other income can be carried forward to offset gains in future tax years.
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