How to Save Money on Your Social Security Taxes
Most people look forward to the day when they start to receive the rewards for putting all their hard-earned money over the years into social security. However, some people end up with a lot less than they had planned on because they end up paying more taxes on those benefits than they had expected. So what can you do to help lower the tax bill on your Social Security benefits?
For starters you need to know what tax table you fall into. It all depends on how much provisional income you make, which is determined by adding your adjusted gross income, your nontaxable interest and half of your Social Security benefits. If you earn less than $25,000 as a single or $32,000 for a joint return then you won’t have to pay taxes on your SS benefits.
However, as much as 50 percent of your benefits could be taxable if your provisional income is between $25,000 and $34,000 for singles and $32,000 and $44,000 for joint filers. If you surpass those figures as much as 85 percent of your benefits could be taxed.
So in order to avoid these taxes you have a few options. You can give as much as $100,000 tax free a year to charity from an IRA if you are 70.5 years or older. You can also put as much as $125,000 into a Qualified longevity Annuity Contract (QLAC). This amount does not count against you when your required minimum distribution is calculated.
Another move you can make is to withdraw money from a tax-free Roth IRA or you can roll money over from a traditional IRA to a Roth many years before you start collecting SS benefits, which will help you reduce taxes in retirement. Of course, for high net worth individuals it might be very difficult to get below the 85 percent threshold, which is why it’s important to have an overall tax-efficiency plan instead of simply focusing on saving on Social Security taxes.
http://www.kiplinger.com/article/retirement/T051-C001-S003-how-to-limit-taxes-on-social-security-benefits.html
Is Philanthropy Good for Capitalism?
Is Philanthropy good for capitalism? In 2013 Zoltan J. Acs wrote the book Why Philanthropy matters. It explores the benefits of Philanthropy on the US economy; “…philanthropy as an underappreciated force in capitalism, measures its critical influence on the free-market system, and demonstrates how American philanthropy could serve as a model for the productive reinvestment…
George McGherin of The McGehrin Group
Transcript of George McGherin, of the McGherin Group, interview by Alan Olsen for the American Dreams Show: Alan Olsen: Welcome to today’s show I have with me, George. McGehrin George, welcome, George McGherin: Alan, it’s good to be here. It’s good to catch up with you. Alan Olsen: So, George, you’re a founder of the…
The Flip Transaction: Bringing Your Foreign Startup into the US Investment Market
By Roger Royse, Partner, Haynes Boone, LLP in Palo Alto, CA. The flip transaction, bringing your foreign startup into the US investment market. Non-US startups often arrive at the point where they wish to seek funding from a US venture capital firm or establish a presence in the US. Sophisticated investors tend to prefer to…
Derek Lobo of SVN Rock Advisors
Derek Lobo of SVN Rock Advisors interview transcript, by Alan Olsen for the American Dreams Show: Alan Olsen: Can you give us your background of how you got to where you are today and start with your educational experience and the entrepreneurial model that that you built here? Derek Lobo: Well, you know, I guess…