Don
D. Nelson, Attorney, C.P.A.
34145 Pacific Coast Highway # 401
Dana
Point, California 92629-2808 USA
Phone (949) 481-4094 Fax (949)218-6483
Email:
ddnelson@gmail.com
Website: www.expatattorneycpa.com
RE:
2010 Year End Tax Planning
Dear Clients & Expatriates:
The midterm
elections have changed the Congressional landscape, with Republicans winning control of the House of Representatives and picking
up seats in the Senate. The Congress in mid December passed the 2010 tax legislation everyone has been waiting
for. Click here to see the details.
We have compiled a checklist of actions that
can help you save tax dollars if you act before year-end. Not all actions will apply in your particular situation, but you
will likely benefit from many of them. We can narrow down the specific actions that you can take once we meet with you to
tailor a particular plan. In the meantime, please review the following list and contact us at your earliest convenience so
that we can advise you on which tax-saving moves to make.
Expatriates:
The foreign earned income exclusion for 2010 is $91,500 and the IRS has revised the maximum
housing deduction for many foreign countries.
You can reduce your taxes by (subject to the exception below) making contributions to an IRA (before 4/15/10) but that
will only work to the extent your foreign earned income exceeds your foreign earned income exclusion by at least the amount
of the IRA contribution. The same rules apply whether the contribution is made to a Roth or a regular IRA. Exception: If you
are covered by a US pension plan by your employer in most cases you would not be able to make any IRA contribution unelss
your earnings are low.
Form 8938 will be required with
your form 1040 for tax years beginning after 3/18/10 if you have $50,000 or more in foreign investment or financial assets.
It requires a lot of information on those assets has large penalties for not filing. Though the insructions to that form have
not yet been release, financial assets include foreign bank accounts, brokerage accounts, stocks, bonds, rental properties,financial
contracts, etc. See the draft of the form at www.usexpatriate.blogspot.com
Year End Moves for Individuals:
•Increase the amount you set aside for next year in your employer's health flexible spending
account (FSA) if you set aside too little for this year. Don't forget that you cannot set aside amounts to get tax-free
reimbursements for over-the-counter drugs, such as aspirin and antacids (2010 is the last year that FSAs can be used for nonprescription
drugs).
•Realize losses on stock while substantially preserving your investment position. There are several ways this can
be done. For example, you can sell the original holding, then buy back the same securities at least 31 days later. It may
be advisable for us to meet to discuss year-end trades you should consider making.
•Increase your withholding
if you are facing a penalty for underpayment of federal estimated tax. Doing so may reduce or eliminate the penalty.
•Take
an eligible rollover distribution from a qualified retirement plan before the end of 2010 if your are facing a penalty for
underpayment of estimated tax and the increased withholding option is unavailable or won't sufficiently address the problem.
Income tax will be withheld from the distribution and will be applied toward the taxes owed for 2010. You can then timely
roll over the gross amount of the distribution, as increased by the amount of withheld tax, to a traditional IRA. No part
of the distribution will be includible in income for 2010, but the withheld tax will be applied pro rata over the full 2010
tax year to reduce previous underpayments of estimated tax.
•Make energy saving improvements to your main home, such as putting
in extra insulation or installing energy saving windows or buying and installing an energy efficient furnace, and qualify
for a 30% tax credit. The total (aggregate) credit for energy efficient improvements to the home in 2009 and 2010 is $1,500.
Unless Congress acts, this tax break won't be around after this year. Additionally, substantial tax credits are available
for installing energy generating equipment (such as solar electric panels or solar hot water heaters) to your home (this break
stays on the books through 2016).
• Convert
your traditional IRA into a Roth IRA if doing so is expected to produce better long-term tax results for you and your beneficiaries.
Distributions from a Roth IRA can be tax-free but the conversion will increase your adjusted gross income for 2010. However,
you will have the choice of when to pay the tax on the conversion. You can either (1) pay the tax on the conversion when you
file your 2010 return in 2011, or (2) pay half the tax on the conversion when you file your 2011 return in 2012, and the other
half when you file your 2012 return in 2013.
• Purchase qualified small business stock (QSBS) before the end of
this year. There is no tax on gain from the sale of such stock if it is (1) purchased after September 27, 2010 and before
January 1, 2011, and (2) held for more than five years. In addition, such sales won't cause AMT preference problems. To
qualify for these breaks, the stock must be issued by a regular (C) corporation with total gross assets of $50 million or
less, and a number of other technical requirements must be met. Our office can fill you in on the details.
Take required minimum
distributions (RMD) from your IRA or 401(k) plan (or other employer-sponsored retired plan) if you have reached age 70 1/2.
Failure to take a required withdrawal can result in a penalty of 50% of the amount not withdrawn. A temporary tax law change
waived the RMD requirement for 2009 only, but the usual withdrawal rules apply full force for 2010. So individuals age 70
1/2 or older generally must take the required distribution amount out of their retirement account before the end of 2010 to
avoid the penalty. If you turned age 70 1/2 in 2010, you can delay the required distribution to 2011, but if you do, you will
have to take a double distribution in 2011—the amount required for 2010 plus the amount required for 2011. Think twice
before delaying 2010 distributions to 2011—bunching income into 2011 might push you into a higher tax bracket or have
a detrimental impact on various income tax deductions that are reduced at higher income levels.
•Make annual exclusion gifts
before year end to save gift tax (and estate tax if it is reinstated). You can give $13,000 in 2010 or 2011 to an unlimited
number of individuals free of gift tax. However, you can't carry over unused exclusions from one year to the next. The
transfers also may same family income taxes where income-earning property is given to family members in lower income tax brackets
who are not subject to the kiddie tax.
Year End Moves for Business Owners
•Hire a worker who has been unemployed for at least 60 days before
year end if you are thinking of adding to payroll soon. Your business will be exempt from paying the employer's 6.2% share
of the Social Security payroll tax on the formerly unemployed new-hire for the remainder of 2010. Plus, if you keep that formerly
unemployed new-hire on the payroll for a continuous 52 weeks, your business will be eligible for a nonrefundable tax credit
of up-to-$1,000 after the 52-week threshold is reached. This credit will be taken on the business's 2011 tax return. In
order to be eligible, the formerly unemployed new-hire's pay in the second 26-week period must be at least 80% of the
pay in the first 26-week period.
Put new business equipment and machinery in service before year-end to qualify for 50% bonus
first-year depreciation allowance. Unless Congress acts, this bonus depreciation allowance won't be available for property
placed in service after 2010.
Make expenses qualifying for the $500,000 business property expensing option. The maximum amount you
can expense for a tax year beginning in 2010 is $500,000 of the cost of qualifying property placed in service for that tax
year. The $500,000 amount is reduced by the amount by which the cost of qualifying property placed in service during 2010
exceeds $2 million. Also, within the overall $500,000 expensing limit, you can expense up to $250,000 of qualified real property
(certain qualifying leasehold improvements, restaurant property, and retail improvements). Note that at tax return time, you
can choose not to use expensing (or bonus depreciation) for 2010 assets. This is something to consider if tax rates go up
for 2011 and future years, and you'd rather have more deductions after 2010 than for 2010.
•Set up a self-employed retirement
plan if you are self-employed and haven't done so yet.
•Increase your basis in a partnership or S corporation if doing so
will enable you to deduct a loss from it for this year. A partner's share of partnership losses is deductible only to
the extent of his partnership basis as of the end of the partnership year in which the loss occurs. An S corporation shareholder
can deduct his pro-rata share of an S corporation's losses only to the extent of the total of his basis in (a) his S corporation
stock, and (b) debt owed to him by the S corporation.
•Consider whether to defer cancellation of debt (COD) income from the
reacquisition of an applicable debt instrument in 2010. The business can elect to elect to have the cancelled COD income included
in gross income ratably over five tax years beginning with the fourth tax year following the tax year in which the repurchase
occurs (i.e., beginning with 2014).
These are just some of the year-end steps that can be taken to save taxes. Again, by contacting
us, we can tailor a particular plan that will work best for you.
Very truly yours,
Don D. Nelson
Attorney
at Law, CPA