How Bunching Can Preserve Your Right to Itemize
December 10, 2007 · Print This Article
Tax laws are at times nothing if not infuriating. Indeed, with
phaseouts and sunsets coming and going, taxpayers may find it difficult
planning from one year to the next.
Case in point: In 2006 and 2007, the overall limitation on itemized
deductions that reduces the value of certain itemized deductions
claimed by upper-income individuals is scheduled to be phased out.
In effect, higher income individuals will have a small tax rate
reduction, according to PricewaterhouseCoopers 2007 Guide to Tax and
Financial Planning.
By way of history, the tax law limits the amount of certain itemized
deductions that individuals can use to reduce their taxable income.
For instance, miscellaneous deductions are limited to those in excess
of 2 percent of Adjusted Gross Income or AGI.
But Congress has also placed what’s called an "overall" limitation on
the deductibility of itemized deductions, according to The Ernst &
Young Tax Guide 2006. For 2007, the total of this group of deductions
must be reduced by 2 percent (down from 3 percent) of the amount of
your AGI in excess of $156,400 for married couples filing jointly and
$78,200 for married filing separately. Itemized deductions will,
however, never be reduced by more than 80 percent of the amount by
which they exceed a specified group of deductions, including, but not
limited to, medical expenses, investment interest, and theft losses.
This reduction in itemized deductions is applied after the taxpayer has
used any other limitations that exist such as the AGI limitation for
charitable contributions and miscellaneous itemized deductions. The
reduction falls to 1 percent in 2008 and 2009 and is phased out in
2010. Medical expenses, casualty and theft losses, investment interest
expense, and gambling losses are not subject to this rule, insofar as
calculating the 80 percent limitation is concerned, according to the
Ernst & Young Tax Guide.
So what happens to taxpayers who for whatever reason (a bonus, a salary
increase, or new job) will find themselves losing their ability to use
itemized deductions fully in 2008? What kind of planning can they do
in 2007?
Among other things, taxpayers may want to consider a technique called
"bunching," otherwise accelerating or deferring itemized deductions
where possible. Bunching may work if the taxpayer is able to
accumulate deductions so that they are high in one year and low in the
next.
According to Deloitte Tax’s Essential Tax and Wealth Planning Guide,
taxpayers should explore opportunities to time deductions for
charitable contributions, state and local taxes, and other payments
within the taxpayer’s control. In some cases, it may be better to take
deductions in the current tax year; the caveat emptor of this strategy
is Alternative Minimum Tax or AMT.
For instance, if the taxpayer isn’t subject to AMT in 2007, they should
consider paying 2008 real estate and property taxes before yearend.
Also, the taxpayer might consider paying any remaining state and local
estimated income tax payments before the end of the year. State and
local taxes are not deductible for AMT purposes, so taxpayers should
consider the consequences of AMT before bunching these or other
"non-deductible for AMT" itemized deductions in one year.
In another example, taxpayers might also accelerate mortgage payments.
According to Deloitte, cash-basis taxpayers can, in most cases, deduct
expenses in the year paid. Thus prepayment of mortgages due in 2008
may provide a deduction for interest to 2007.
According to Ernst & Young’s Tax Guide, in certain situations, it’s
possible for the 2 percent limitation to reduce allowable itemized
deductions below the standard deduction. Thus, it’s worth considering
this possibility when choosing whether to itemize or not.
Taxpayers contemplating bunching should read the Instructions for
Schedules A & B for Form 1040, which is available on the IRS’ Web
site at www.irs.gov. In order to make sure that the strategy of
bunching deductions makes sense in your particular situation, it is
generally a good idea to consult with a tax professional before
proceeding. At the very least it is important that you are comfortable
using tax planning software and are capable of identifying all of the
ramifications of any tax planning technique.
This column is produced by the Financial Planning Association, the
membership organization for the financial planning community, and is
provided by Kristine McKinley, a local member of FPA






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