October 06 2011
Ways to Get Tax-free Income (part 2)
Tagged Under : free income, tax, tax-free, tax-free income
(continued from Ways to Get Tax-free Income (part 1))
5. Pay Off Credit Cards
Where ese are you going to earn 18% on your money? To top it off, this 18% devidend is totally tax free.
6. Rent Your House Out
If you rent out a house for 14 or fewer days, the income is scot-free. Not only that, you don’t have to prorate or reduce your otherwise deductible mortgage interest and property taxes. Unlike the remodeling gambit, this one works on vacation homes, too.
7. Be a Good Neighbor
You babysit the neighbor’s children, and in return he paints your garage. You’re both earning money, in effect, by providing services. While the IRS can assess taxes for people in barter exchanges that involve account books and transactions with strangers, there’s no way to levy a tax on helping out a friend.
8. Have a Charity Tag Sale
You were going to send $ 500 to doctors without borders anyway. Do it this way. Have a tag sale, unloading tchotchkes from your attic, and advertise that a 100% of the proceeds will go to the worthy cause. If you haul in $ 490, that sum becomes, in effect, tax free income for your day of labor.
9. Set Up an HSA
In combination with a high-deductible health insurance policy for you family, you set up a health savings account and put $ 6,150 a year, $ 7,150 if you’re over 55, of tax deductible money into it. You can use the bucks right away to pay uncover medical costs. But you don’t have to eat into the account in this fashion. Instead, pay your doctor bills out of your checking account. Then let the $ 6,150 compound tax free until you are retired. If you use the HSA later in life for medical costs, which will be considerable, medical is going bankrupt then both the principal and the earnings come out tax free.
10. Hire The Kids
If you have your own business, make your teenage children into employees. If the pay is reasonable for what they do, you can deduct the payroll, lowering your high-bracket net income. On the receiving end a child laborer owes no federal income tax on earned income below the $ 5,700 standard deduction. If the kid also has invesment income, the exact value of the freebie gets more complicated.but, in round numbers, $ 5,000 of summer job income is going to be free of income tax. You will, however, have to caught up for social security and medicare taxes.