In these rough economic times where everyone's pinching pennies and trying to look for ways to save a couple of bucks when they can, filling income tax deductions can be a big help and add up to a significant amount that you can invest in your pension or savings. To fill out an income tax deduction, you need to dig out all your receipts so that you can make a list of all the possible deductions.
Tax laws
There are a lot of potential tax deductions that nurses can make, including depreciating properties. However, tax laws change a lot and what was allowed once may no longer be applicable so it is best to discuss your options with a tax advisor.
Uniforms and equipment
Some of the things you can consider including in your tax deductions are the cost of uniforms and their cleaning costs as these are expenses that are directly related to your job. Most medical facilities require nurses to wear discount urbane scrubs. Some facilities provide the nurses with their scrubs and periodically charge a cleaning or rental fee. This expense may be deductible. In addition to uniforms, you can also include any outright purchases for any special shoes and accessories that you are required to wear to work. However, if you are simply required to wear tennis shoes and you use these all the time outside work then they may not be eligible for tax deduction. Stethoscopes, clamps, and PDAs may also be considered as deductible.
License and training fees
Fees that you paid for license renewal or for continuing education may also be deductible; any training, seminar, or course that you have taken (and that you have paid for) to improve your job or advance your nursing career may also qualify for deductions. Books, medical journals, and other documents that contribute to your learning as a nurse may also be considered as deductible.
Travel expenses
You can also include travel expenses that are related to your job such as going to a nursing seminar but most often these are paid for by the medical facility or sponsoring company and does not come out of the nurse's pocket; it can only be deductible if you paid for it with your own money. Some meals may also qualify but there are a lot of restrictions regarding this and you will have to seek professional advice to sort this out. The IRS scrutinizes travel excursions to foreign clinics and hospitals so be wary of this if you have these kinds of deductions to apply. It can be difficult to put a distinction between personal vacation expenses and educational and business travel expenses but this can be done with a little help from a tax advisor. Often, expenses that are too lavish cannot be categorized as a business expense.
Moving expenses
If you have moving expenses related to a new job in another state or town, these can be considered deductions but they have to meet a certain criteria. For example, you had to pay for a new nursing license because your spouse was assigned a job in another state and you also had to pay for a trip to go to an interview about a new job before you moved to the state, then these may be deductible.
Charitable Income Tax Deduction
Humans are predictable in behaviour because, behaviour patterns repeat themselves. Some will watch the huge tax deductions from salary recorded in the W2 and the T4 and T4A slips and will grudgingly resign themselves to pay these taxes deducted from their salary. I have seen Tax Deductions as high as $49,000.00. Indeed, the numbers fall all over the map, depending on your Income source or salary. The majority of these tax deductions fall in the $7,000.00 to $14,000.00 range with an annual salary around $60,000.00.
Three fundamental strategies reduce taxes on incomes and salaries. These tax deductions are: -
1. Contributions to a retirement or to Pension Funds: Such retirement savings are usually allowed as a legitimate tax deduction.
2. Self-employment expenses: These could include home, car and living expenses from the home budget that relate to business activities which are tax deductible.
3. Carrying Charges or using OPM: The secret here is that in business, the cost of money is a business expense allowed as a tax deduction by the IRS and CRA in different forms.
All of these tax deductions are available to just about every Taxpayer in various ways. Religiously, these tax strategies deliver 50% to 75% of the Taxes many a Taxpayer hand over from their salary, needlessly, to both the IRS and to CRA. The reason these tax deductions are not used more often is that as a Taxpayer, you may not yet have the knowledge to apply them to your individual circumstances. For example, you may be able to claim carrying charges or you could set that up for your next year's tax report. If you don't know, you will not understand that this refers to you too. Many finance professionals and Advisors, apply these strategies in the affairs of Clients who receive tremendous, financial benefits all the time. This should make the case that you could afford to use some of those tax dollars to pay for a competent Financial Advisor who would get your money back to you many times over.
The main message here is that the money your Employers send on to Uncle Sam, the IRS and to CRA (Revenue Canada) is not salary money lost to you forever. You still have some time to recover those dollars. Usually, a good Financial Planner will recover around 50% of those dollars. A seventy five percent recovery rate is not unusual. Just think about it. Let's say your numbers fall right in the middle. If your Employer sends over $10,000.00 from your salary paycheques every year you could recover $5000.00 year after year. That sum $5000.00 could do a lot including: --
Buying a yearly $5000.00 vacation
Making a retirement Savings Contribution of $5000.00
Making a $5000.00 contribution to your Children's Education
Making a $5000.00 Extra Mortgage Payment contribution Year after Year.
You don't need any help with the vacation planning. Your private Financial Advisor will help with your education and retirement Plans. As for the fast Mortgage payment option, these tax refund dollars will stretch in ways you would hardly dream of. If you pay down your mortgage with new money as extra mortgage payments, then the benefits are exponential. Unfortunately, more Home Owners, from Seniors to working professionals to Young Couples with a tight home budget, must become more acutely aware of the exponential benefits of extra mortgage payments. Too often, such fast mortgage payment dollars exist in the home budget. We just don't know where to look to find them. In addition to Brian Costello's book: Making Money From Your Mortgage, only a limited few specialize in giving specific details on the huge savings to be found in your mortgage payments.
Additional or faster mortgage payments immediately gain a return of whatever the mortgage interest rates are. If for example your mortgage is written at a 5% interest charge, then you gain an immediate 5% return on your tax Reund money. Saving Accounts at the bank pay less than 3.00%. In addition, the $5000.00 tax refund cheque, if paid to your mortgage every year, will pay the mortgage off entirely maybe two years, may be five years faster. Here is where some startling, but hidden savings apply. Most People fail to understand this because few understand the finer points of how mortgage payments really work. As a rule professionals are not involved in this field since the focus is on placing mortgages not repaying them. Your total Tax Refund Savings would then include those months and years of mortgage payments you would not have to make because of the earlier fast payments. So, if your monthly, mortgage payments were $1000.00 then, five years of mortgage payment savings would deliver real cash savings of:
$1000.00 X 12 Months X 5 Years = $60,000.00
A $60,000.00 benefit is the result for each $1000.00 of tax reduction!! That sum of $60,000.00 are dollars you are contracted to pay as regular mortgage payments. Here is one powerful reason that many working professionals find it hard to make ends meet while many Business Owners and a few Employees-with-the-Knowledge enjoy a life of luxury. This year, make yourself a wealth promise to get your 50% share of excess tax dollars. Don't just make this an empty promise, but do something about it.
Both Brent Mcnutt & Alfred Fraser are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.