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Save money-legally-on your 2024-25 taxes with easy, expert advice from America's most trusted personal and small business tax advisor
In the newly revised edition of J.K. Lasser's 1001 Deductions and Tax Breaks 2025: Your Complete Guide to Everything Deductible, renowned small business tax attorney Barbara Weltman walks you through every relevant tax credit and deduction you're entitled to claim on your 2024 return, including brand new tax breaks introduced just this year. You'll find hundreds of money-saving opportunities that help ensure you don't overpay on your taxes, giving Uncle Sam exactly what you're legally required to give him-and not a penny more!
You'll also find:
Perfect for every individual US taxpayer who has ever wondered, "Can I claim X?" or "Can I deduct this expense?", J.K. Lasser's 1001 Deductions and Tax Breaks is a straightforward and authoritative roadmap to saving money on your taxes and simplifying tax season.
BARBARA WELTMAN is an attorney and a nationally recognized expert in taxation for small businesses, as well as the author of many top-selling books on taxes and finance, including J.K. Lasser's Small Business Taxes. She is also the publisher of Idea of the Day® and Big Ideas for Small Business®, an award-winning blogger and quoted regularly in major publications (including the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, and Consumer Reports). Visit her at www.BigIdeasForSmallBusiness.com.
Introduction vii
1. You and Your Family 1
2. Medical Expenses 27
3. Education Costs 75
4. Your Home 110
5. Retirement Savings 147
6. Charitable Giving 193
7. Your Car 224
8. Investing 240
9. Travel 274
10. Real Estate 293
11. Borrowing and Interest 322
12. Insurance and Catastrophes 336
13. Your Job 351
14. Your Business 371
15. Miscellaneous Items 399
Appendix A. Items Adjusted Annually for Inflation 423
Appendix B. Checklist of Tax-Free Items 429
Appendix C. Checklist of Nondeductible Items 433
Appendix D. Common Mistakes to Avoid 440
Index 442
The word "taxes" makes most people groan. There are good reasons for this response: First of all, the cost of paying your taxes annually can be a financial burden. You may feel taken to the cleaners every time you view your paycheck after withholding for federal income taxes (not to mention state income taxes as well as Social Security and Medicare taxes). And taxes are time consuming-to gather information, meet with a tax professional if you use one, or prepare and submit your own returns.
Second, it can cost you money to get your taxes done. The IRS says that nearly 60% of taxpayers use paid preparers for their returns. Of course, because more than 90% of individual income tax returns are completed by computer (through a paid preparer, with software, or through FreeFile or Direct File), knowing the places where deductions and credits are entered on the return is not critical to you; it's effectively done automatically.
Third, the tax law is very complicated and changing all the time. Federal tax legislation means there are a number of new rules for 2024.
Fourth, you have to know what the tax rules are and can't claim ignorance to avoid taxes and penalties. Even if you use a tax professional or tax preparation software to prepare your return, you remain responsible for your taxes. The Tax Court has noted that using software is not an automatic excuse to avoid underpayment penalties.
How can you combat the feeling of dread when it comes to taxes? It helps to know that the tax law is peppered with many, many tax breaks to which you may be entitled. These breaks allow you to not report certain economic benefits you enjoy or to subtract certain expenses from your income or even directly from your tax bill. As the famous jurist Judge Learned Hand once stated (in the 1934 case of Helvering v. Gregory in the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit):
Anyone may arrange his affairs so that his taxes shall be as low as possible; he is not bound to choose that pattern which best pays the Treasury. There is not even a patriotic duty to increase one's taxes. Over and over again the Courts have said that there is nothing sinister in so arranging affairs as to keep taxes as low as possible. Everyone does it, rich and poor alike, and all do right, for nobody owes any public duty to pay more than the law demands.
So get your tax affairs in order and legally reduce what you pay each year to Uncle Sam!
In getting a handle on how to do this by taking advantage of every tax break you may be entitled to without running afoul of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), there are some simple rules to keep in mind. They include:
Whether you prepare your return by hand, use computer software or an online solution, or rely on a professional, this book is designed to tell you how to get every tax edge you're entitled to. Knowing what to look out for will help you plan ahead and organize your activities in such a way that you'll share less of your hard-earned money with the government.
There are 5 types of tax-advantaged items receiving preferential or favorable treatment under the tax law:
This book focuses on different types of tax-favored items: exclusions (tax-free income), above-the-line deductions that don't require itemizing, itemized deductions, tax credits, and other benefits, such as subtractions that reduce income. At the end of this Introduction you'll see symbols used to easily identify the type of benefit being explained.
In many cases, eligibility for tax benefits or the extent to which they may be claimed depends on adjusted gross income (AGI) or modified adjusted gross income (MAGI).
Adjusted gross income is gross income (all the income you are required to report) minus certain deductions (called "adjustments to gross income" on Schedule 1 of Form 1040 or 1040-SR). Adjustments or subtractions you can make to your gross income to arrive at your adjusted gross income are limited in 2024 to the following items:
Figuring AGI may sound complicated, but in reality it's merely a number taken from a line on your tax return. For example, AGI is the figure you enter on line 11 of the 2024 Form 1040 or 1040-SR.
Modified adjusted gross income is AGI increased by certain items...
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