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Content about Income tax

February 19, 2013

ARDMORE, Pa. — Package renews more than 50 temporary tax breaks through 2013

ARDMORE, Pa. — The so-called “fiscal cliff” tax package recently signed into law renewed more than 50 temporary tax breaks through 2013, saving individuals and businesses an estimated $76 billion. For the owners and operators of small- and medium-sized dry cleaning businesses, there is good news and bad news contained in the fiscal cliff tax laws.

First, the good news: greater certainty in taxes. The owners and operators of dry cleaning businesses have grown used to many longstanding tax breaks but they also have had to get used to the uncertainty of whether they will be renewed each year.

On the downside, in addition to a 3.8% Net Investment Income (NII) tax and a 0.9% Additional Medicare tax that, thanks to the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010, began in 2013, many dry cleaners and laundry owners discovered they are subject to new taxes. Single individuals with incomes above the $400,000 level and married couples with income higher than $450,000 will pay more in taxes in 2013.

November 6, 2012

CHICAGO — A precise knowledge of where you stand will help you make appropriate investment decisions

CHICAGO — As the old saying goes, “knowledge is power.” Arguably nowhere is this truer than in how you handle your money. Knowing your true net worth is an essential part of building and maintaining a sensible approach to your financial affairs.

A precise knowledge of where you stand will help you make appropriate investment decisions, demonstrate how to handle debt, plan your estate, and other important financial matters. Equally important is the psychological comfort that comes with knowing where you really stand on the financial landscape.

At first glance, calculating your net worth may look like a quick and easy task; just add up all of your assets, subtract your liabilities, and you have it. But calculating true net worth is a bit more complicated than that. Among the easiest things to overlook when calculating liabilities are the costs associated with such things as real estate brokerage commissions and taxes resulting from liquidating certain assets such as 401(k) plans.

May 1, 2012

CHICAGO — Building a nest egg sufficient to provide a comfortable retirement can be

CHICAGO — With the painful volatility of the stock market playing havoc with 401(k) and IRA accounts these days, building a nest egg sufficient to provide a comfortable retirement can be a challenging assignment. What makes the job even tougher is a tax provision that may come as a nasty surprise from Uncle Sam after you retire.

Those of us who can look with some degree of satisfaction at how well we are building our tax-deferred retirement accounts need to keep in mind that all withdrawals from our 401(k) and conventional IRA accounts will be taxed at our ordinary income tax rate, which can be as high as 35%. That needn’t be a problem for you in your early retirement years when you may make small withdrawals now and then to fill an occasional need. In fact, voluntary small withdrawals prior to age 70½ may be a way to soften the increasing tax bite soon to come.

April 26, 2012

ARDMORE, Pa. — Are certain expenditures currently deductible or must they be capitalized

ARDMORE, Pa. — In an effort to resolve the controversy over whether certain expenditures made by a drycleaning business are currently deductible as repair expenses, or whether they must be capitalized and deducted over the life of the underlying business asset, the Internal Revenue Service has finally released new regulations.

The IRS’s long-awaited expanded regulations for determining whether an expense must be capitalized because it betters or improves tangible business property or equipment, restores it, or adapts it to a new and different use, will have a significant impact on every drycleaning business that acquires, produces, or improves its tangible property. 

In addition to clarifying and expanding the current rules, the new regulations create “bright-line” tests for applying the repair-or-capitalize standards, provides guidance for accounting for—and disposing of—repaired property, as well as clarifying other aspects of the repair/capitalize dilemma.

December 7, 2011

CHICAGO — The filing deadline for 2011 federal income taxes is not far off, but you still have time to make sure you’ve done everything you can to keep Uncle Sam’s paws off as much of your money as possible. Here are some last-minute ways to do that by reducing your 2011 income tax bill:

Often-Overlooked Deductions

Many easily overlooked miscellaneous expenses are deductible as long as they add up to at least 2% of your adjusted gross income. Grouping them can help you meet the threshold. Here are some miscellaneous items you may have overlooked:

July 20, 2011

CHICAGO — By any definition, Joe was a “success,” and so was his business, Success Co. Although Joe was a planner, after he died, his estate plan and business succession plan turned into an economic and tax tragedy—for son Sam, wife Mary and the rest of the family.

April 18, 2007

AUGUSTA, Maine — Maine is examining multiple proposals for tax reform that would extend the state sales tax to personal services such as drycleaning.

Legislators’ goal is to reduce state income taxes — currently a graduated system charging 2% to 8.5% on personal earnings — as well as offer property tax relief and tax rebates for low-income owners and renters.