Year-End Tax Strategies - 2022

Jon McGraw • Nov 16, 2022

Near the end of each year, we proactively review opportunities for year-end tax strategies through the lens of a trial tax return. Our objective is to surface strategy for tax management of your financial life. Each family we work with has unique situations. However, each discussion starts around looking at your income and which tax bracket you will fall into. Remember to review for both Federal and State rates.


The following list is a summary of some of the more common strategies we implement. As a disclaimer, please know the information contained is not tax advice and we strongly recommend taxpayers consult with their tax advisor when making tax and financial decisions.


Take advantage of opportunities:

  • Fully fund IRA / Roth to IRS limits. If income is high, fund an IRA, report as a non-deductible contribution and backdoor Roth convert if possible.
  • If Self Employed, fully fund 401(k) ($67,500 in 2022 for those age 50+).
  • Include: 1) Employee Pretax, 2) Employer Profit Share and 3) Employee Post Tax
  • Tax loss ‘harvest’ your investments to reset your basis and remove future tax. Sell investments that may have declined in value and use losses to offset gains.
  • Rather than giving cash, gift appreciated assets to charity.
  • Gift assets to family to take advantage of the large unified credit limits or take advantage of the $16,000 annual gift tax exclusion amount.
  • Review your medical plan for an option that allows for a Health Savings Account (HSA). Funding and growing assets in an HSA can open the door for retirement before age 65 (when Medicare starts).
  • If you are involved with an Irrevocable Trust, consider distributing income out of the trust to the trust beneficiaries in order to reduce the tax rates from the ‘estate’ tax table to individual tax rates. This is commonly known as the 65 day rule.
  • If you have a business or started a side gig this year:
  • Even very small businesses can deduct ‘business expenses’ like home-office deduction, write-offs for mileage and materials and equipment.
  • If you have a business close to break even, create a loss by pushing receivables out to 2023, prepaying expenditures in 2022 and maximizing bonus depreciation.
  • Use bonus depreciation to create a larger Net Operating Loss (NOL). Unlike a Section 179 deduction, bonus depreciation will create a larger NOL.


Increase Income to “fill up” lower tax brackets:

If you took the year off and income is low:

  • Implement a Roth conversion by moving IRA assets to your Roth. This creates a tax impact today but will remove assets from future taxation.
  • If Self Employed, invoice clients in advance for services for next year. Incentivize through a ‘prepayment’ discount / package.
  • The lowest tax brackets have a 0% capital gain tax rate so sell appreciated assets and recognize the gain. If there is a stock with a big gain you still want to own, simply sell and re-purchase the shares.


Decrease income to “drop” to lower tax brackets:

  • Increase retirement plan contributions. If cash flow doesn’t allow for full 401(k) plan contributions and you have non-retirement assets on the balance sheet, increase 401(k) by $1 and take $1 out of savings to live.
  • A larger gift in a high-income year allows for the creation of a ‘lifetime giving account.’ Charity can be an actual non-profit organization or it can be your own ‘donor advised fund’ , ‘private family foundation’, ‘charitable gift annuity’  or other option. If you have appreciated assets, remove the capital gains tax and gift these assets directly to the charity ‘in-kind’.
  • Take advantage of Qualified Charitable Distributions (QCDs). If you are over age 70.5 you can directly gift up to $100,000 per year from your retirement accounts to charity using QCDs.
  • If you’re on the itemize-or-not borderline, your year-end strategy could focus on timing of charitable gifts and expenses to pull multiple years of gifts / expenses into a single year. The goal is to surpass the standard-deduction amount and claim a larger write-off. If you itemize, lump medical expenses, charitable gifts, state income taxes, payments for long term care policies, etc. into a single year. Use this opportunity to gift things you are no longer using, receive a tax deduction, and allow others to enjoy them.
  • If Self Employed, pay current year invoices as well as invoices for costs coming next year. Also, review delaying billing of clients until late December, so you won’t receive payment until the next year.
  • If kids, grandkids, extended family are in, or will be going to school:
  • Contribute to a 529 Plan for possible state tax deduction
  • Prepay tuition to take advantage of the American Opportunity Tax Credit, which you can take for students who are in their first four years of undergraduate study, is worth up to $2,500 for each qualifying student. Married couples filing jointly with modified adjusted joint income of up to $160,000 can claim the full credit; those with MAGI of up to $180,000 can claim a partial amount.
  • Likewise, if you’re planning to take a class next year to boost your own career, consider prepaying the January bill before December 31 so you can claim the Lifetime Learning Credit on your 2022 tax return. The credit is worth up to 20% of your out-of-pocket costs for tuition, fees and books, up to a maximum of $2,500. It’s not limited to undergraduate expenses, and you don’t have to be a full-time student. Married couples filing jointly with MAGI of up to $160,000 can claim the full credit; those with MAGI of more than $160,000 will be phased out.
  • If someone is disabled or has a ‘special needs’ situation, review an ABLE account. Contributions up to $15,000 a year to an ABLE account, allow people with qualifying disabilities to save money without jeopardizing government benefits (ABLE account beneficiaries can contribute more to their own account). You don’t have to invest in your own state’s plan, but if you are a resident of one of the states that do offer a tax break for ABLE accounts, you can likely deduct your contribution.
  • If you are interested in alternative energy, a nonrefundable tax credit is available for qualified solar electric property, qualified solar water heating property, qualified fuel cell property, qualified small wind energy property, and geothermal heat pump property. Cooperative and condominium dwellers can claim the credit by splitting the cost of installing equipment with other unit owners. The credit is 26 percent of the cost of eligible property placed in service in 2020-2022; and 22 percent of the cost of eligible property placed in service in 2023. There is also a $500 credit limit with respect to each 0.5 kilowatts of capacity of qualified fuel cell property expenditures for each tax year.


Prevent surprises:

  • If income has changed materially throughout the year, review withholding tables to make sure there isn’t too little / too much being withheld
  • Flexible spending accounts (FSA) are subject to a “use it or lose it” rule. Check to see if your employer has adopted a grace period permitted by the IRS, allowing employees to spend 2022 set-aside money as late as March 15, 2023. If not, you can do what employees have always done and make a last-minute trip to the drug store, dentist, or optometrist to use up the funds in your account.


Buttonwood Financial Group serves as multigenerational Family CFO, working with you, as the CEO of your family to uncover and maximize opportunities for tax planning, investments, cash flows and more. If you are in need of year-end tax strategies and a holistic financial plan, contact us today to learn how our Family CFO services can benefit you.


The post appeared first on Buttonwood Financial Group, LLC.

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