Financial Planning
9 min read

Tax Planning Basics: Keep More of What You Earn

Learn essential tax planning strategies to reduce your tax burden legally. Understand deductions, credits, tax-advantaged accounts, and year-round planning tips.

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Taxes are one of your largest lifetime expenses—often larger than your mortgage or cars combined. Yet many people only think about taxes once a year, at filing time. Smart tax planning happens year-round and can save you thousands of dollars every year.

The goal isn't to avoid taxes (that's illegal), but to arrange your financial life to legally minimize what you owe while keeping more of what you earn.

Tax Planning vs. Tax Preparation

Tax PreparationTax Planning
Backward-lookingForward-looking
Happens once a yearHappens year-round
Records what happenedShapes what happens
ReactiveProactive
Minimal savings opportunitySignificant savings potential

Tax preparation is filling out forms to report last year's activity.

Tax planning is making decisions throughout the year to minimize future taxes.

đź’ˇ Pro Tip: By the time you're doing your tax return, it's too late to change most outcomes. Tax planning happens before December 31.

Understanding Your Tax Bracket

How Progressive Taxes Work

The U.S. uses a progressive tax system—higher income is taxed at higher rates, but only the income in each bracket is taxed at that rate.

2025 Federal Tax Brackets (Single)

Taxable IncomeTax Rate
$0 - $11,92510%
$11,926 - $48,47512%
$48,476 - $103,35022%
$103,351 - $197,30024%
$197,301 - $250,52532%
$250,526 - $626,35035%
Over $626,35037%

2025 Federal Tax Brackets (Married Filing Jointly)

Taxable IncomeTax Rate
$0 - $23,85010%
$23,851 - $96,95012%
$96,951 - $206,70022%
$206,701 - $394,60024%
$394,601 - $501,05032%
$501,051 - $751,60035%
Over $751,60037%

Marginal vs. Effective Tax Rate

TermMeaning
Marginal rateTax rate on your last dollar of income
Effective rateTotal tax Ă· Total income (your actual rate)

Example (Single, $80,000 income):

  • Marginal rate: 22%
  • Effective rate: ~14%

Understanding your marginal rate helps you evaluate tax-saving strategies.

Tax Deductions: Reducing Taxable Income

Standard Deduction vs. Itemizing

Everyone gets to choose between:

Deduction Type2025 Amount
Standard (Single)$15,000
Standard (Married Filing Jointly)$30,000
ItemizedSum of qualifying expenses

Itemize if your qualifying expenses exceed the standard deduction.

Common Itemized Deductions

DeductionLimit
State and local taxes (SALT)$10,000 cap
Mortgage interestOn first $750,000 of debt
Charitable contributionsUp to 60% of AGI
Medical expensesExceeding 7.5% of AGI

Above-the-Line Deductions

These reduce your income even if you take the standard deduction:

DeductionDetails
Traditional IRA contributionsUp to $7,000 ($8,000 if 50+)
HSA contributionsUp to $4,300 individual, $8,550 family
Student loan interestUp to $2,500
Self-employment expensesHealth insurance, half of SE tax

📌 Key Takeaway: Above-the-line deductions are valuable because they reduce AGI, which affects many other tax calculations.

Tax Credits: Direct Savings

Credits vs. Deductions

TypeEffectValue
DeductionReduces taxable incomeWorth marginal rate Ă— amount
CreditReduces tax dollar-for-dollarWorth full amount

A $1,000 deduction in the 22% bracket saves $220.
A $1,000 credit saves $1,000.

Common Tax Credits

CreditMaximum AmountEligibility
Child Tax Credit$2,000 per childChildren under 17
Child and Dependent CareUp to $3,000/$6,000Working parents with childcare
Earned Income Tax CreditUp to $7,830Low-to-moderate income
Saver's CreditUp to $1,000/$2,000Retirement contributions, lower income
Lifetime Learning CreditUp to $2,000Education expenses
Clean Vehicle CreditUp to $7,500New electric vehicles

Refundable vs. Non-Refundable Credits

TypeIf Credit > Tax Owed
Non-refundableReduces tax to $0, no refund
RefundableCan result in a refund

Tax-Advantaged Accounts

Retirement Accounts

AccountTax Treatment2025 Limit
Traditional 401(k)Pre-tax in, taxed out$23,500 (+$7,500 catch-up)
Roth 401(k)After-tax in, tax-free out$23,500 (+$7,500 catch-up)
Traditional IRAPre-tax in, taxed out$7,000 (+$1,000 catch-up)
Roth IRAAfter-tax in, tax-free out$7,000 (+$1,000 catch-up)

Health Savings Account (HSA)

The only account with triple tax benefits:

BenefitDetails
Tax-deductible contributionsReduces taxable income
Tax-free growthInvestments grow without tax
Tax-free withdrawalsFor qualified medical expenses

2025 HSA limits: $4,300 individual, $8,550 family (+$1,000 catch-up if 55+)

529 Education Plans

FeatureDetails
ContributionsNot federally deductible (state varies)
GrowthTax-free
WithdrawalsTax-free for education expenses

Year-Round Tax Planning Strategies

Strategy 1: Maximize Tax-Advantaged Contributions

AccountStrategy
401(k)Max out, especially for employer match
IRAContribute full amount by tax deadline
HSAMax if you have HDHP

Strategy 2: Harvest Tax Losses

Sell investments at a loss to offset gains:

SituationStrategy
Gains + lossesLosses offset gains
More losses than gainsDeduct up to $3,000 against income
Excess lossesCarry forward to future years

Wash sale rule: Can't repurchase "substantially identical" investment within 30 days.

Strategy 3: Time Income and Deductions

If You ExpectConsider
Higher taxes next yearDefer income, accelerate deductions
Lower taxes next yearAccelerate income, defer deductions
Retirement (lower income)Roth conversions in low-income years

Strategy 4: Bunch Deductions

If close to standard deduction threshold, bunch two years of charitable donations in one year:

Example:

  • Annual giving: $8,000
  • Standard deduction: $15,000
  • Solution: Give $16,000 every other year, itemize that year

Strategy 5: Roth Conversions

Convert traditional IRA/401(k) to Roth strategically:

Best TimesWhy
Low-income yearsPay taxes at lower rate
Early retirement, pre-Social SecurityIncome gap creates opportunity
Before RMDs beginReduce future required distributions

đź’ˇ Pro Tip: Roth conversions are "buying" future tax-free income at today's rates. If you expect higher rates later, convert now.

Tax Planning for Different Life Stages

Early Career (20s-30s)

PriorityAction
Contribute to RothTax-free growth while in lower brackets
Get employer matchNever leave free money
Start HSABuild healthcare reserve

Peak Earning (40s-50s)

PriorityAction
Max all accounts401(k), IRA, HSA, catch-up
Tax-loss harvestOffset gains in taxable accounts
Charitable givingBunch or use donor-advised fund

Pre-Retirement (55-65)

PriorityAction
Roth conversionsFill lower brackets before RMDs
Medicare planningIncome affects IRMAA surcharges
ACA subsidy planningControl income for lower premiums

Retirement (65+)

PriorityAction
Withdrawal sequencingTax-efficient drawdown
RMD managementQCDs for charitable giving
Estate tax planningRoth conversions for heirs

Common Tax Planning Mistakes

1. Only Thinking About Taxes at Filing Time

The best opportunities are before December 31.

2. Not Taking the Employer Match

This is literally free money—always take it.

3. Ignoring Tax-Advantaged Accounts

Every dollar in a tax-advantaged account saves taxes.

4. Selling Investments at the Wrong Time

Short-term gains are taxed much higher than long-term.

5. Not Coordinating Spouses' Strategies

Joint planning can save thousands.

6. Forgetting State Taxes

State taxes matter too—especially for high earners.

When to Get Professional Help

Consider a tax professional if you have:

SituationWhy
Self-employment incomeComplex deductions and estimated taxes
Stock options or RSUsTricky tax treatment
Rental propertiesDepreciation, passive losses
Multi-state incomeState tax complexity
Large estateEstate tax planning
Major life changesMarriage, divorce, inheritance

Your Tax Planning Action Plan

  1. Know your marginal bracket: This determines the value of deductions

  2. Max tax-advantaged accounts: 401(k), IRA, HSA

  3. Review withholding: Aim to owe/receive <$500

  4. Harvest losses in taxable accounts: Before year-end

  5. Bunch deductions if close to threshold: Charitable giving especially

  6. Evaluate Roth conversions: In lower-income years

  7. Keep good records: Document everything

  8. Review by November: Most strategies need action by December 31

  9. Consult a professional: For complex situations

Tax planning is a year-round activity, not a once-a-year chore. The effort you put into understanding and optimizing your tax situation can save you thousands of dollars every year—money that can compound for decades in your investments.

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