Also, I believe you can give tax free gifts of up to $10,000 per person (in USA). So if you have any dependents (each child, elderly parent, whatever), and you are in a position to do so...
Quote from TraderZones:
Also, I believe you can give tax free gifts of up to $10,000 per person (in USA). So if you have any dependents (each child, elderly parent, whatever), and you are in a position to do so...
May I deduct gifts on my income tax return?
Making a gift or leaving your estate to your heirs does not ordinarily affect your federal income tax. You cannot deduct the value of gifts you make (other than gifts that are deductible charitable contributions). If you are not sure whether the gift tax or the estate tax applies to your situation, refer to Publication 950, Introduction to Estate and Gift Taxes.
Quote from professorkev:
They even penalize you for OVER-paying estimated taxes, thats fucked up!
Quote from trefoil:
I don't know if it still happens, but I had a colleague years ago who did pay his estimated taxes in advance for a couple of quarters. Took him years to disentangle himself from paying penalties. The professor is likely correct.
Quote from Bob111:
http://www.moneychimp.com/features/tax_brackets.htm
agree with Tide on options or any type of hedge\lock (if you want to pay long term cap. gains you have to hold it for more than a year)
pay estimated taxes. on 250K realized profits penalties alone could be 1-2K or more
Quote from shortie:
as far as estimated taxes goes, i think, as long as you pay 90 or 100% of the PREVIOUS year taxes you are fine. for example if you earned 30K last year and paid 5K in taxes, you just pre-pay ~5K for 2009 tax year and IRS won't penalize you. you may own 70K on april 15, but are still allowed to pay only 5K before december 2009.
google "safe harbor tax"