- The tax deadline is approaching, and there are still a few ways to reduce your 2022 bill or boost your refund, experts say.
- You may qualify for a deduction by making contributions to your pretax individual retirement account, spousal IRA or health savings account.
- However, you need to weigh the upfront deduction vs. long-term tax savings when weighing pretax vs. Roth IRA contributions.
The tax deadline is approaching, and there are still a few ways to reduce your 2022 bill or boost your refund, experts say.
Once the calendar year ends, “the toolbox of options is much smaller,” said certified financial planner and enrolled agent John Loyd, owner at The Wealth Planner in Fort Worth, Texas.
However, there are a few last-minute moves to consider before the federal tax-filing deadline, which is April 18 for most Americans.
1. Save to your individual retirement account
Tommy Lucas, a CFP and enrolled agent at Moisand Fitzgerald Tamayo in Orlando, Florida, said pretax individual retirement account contributions are the first option to consider.
You can make pretax IRA deposits for 2022 through the federal tax filing deadline, which may offer a deduction to reduce your adjusted gross income. Roth IRAs provide tax-free growth without the upfront deduction.
The IRA contribution limit is $6,000 for 2022, with $1,000 more for investors age 50 and older, and eligibility for the deduction depends on your workplace plan participation and income.
However, you need to consider more than the current year’s tax break before making pretax IRA contributions, Lucas said.
“Typically, if you’re in the 10% or 12% [tax] bracket, you’re probably better putting money into the Roth IRA,” he said. But if you expect higher earnings in retirement, you may skip the upfront deduction for tax-free withdrawals in the future.
2. Contribute to a spousal IRA
Married couples filing taxes jointly may also consider a lesser-known option before the tax-filing deadline: spousal IRA deposits.
IRA contributions require “earned income,” such as wages from a job or self-employment earnings. But Loyd said spousal IRAs allow both partners to contribute to separate accounts based on one spouse’s earnings. “It’s definitely a surprise for clients,” he said.
It’s definitely a surprise for clients.owner at The Wealth Planner
For example, if one spouse doesn’t work outside the home or retires early, they can still contribute to their own IRA, as long as their partner has earned income.
For 2022, you can make total contributions of up to $12,000 or $14,000, as long as one spouse had at least that much taxable income. Collectively, annual spousal IRA deposits can’t exceed joint taxable income or two times the yearly IRA limit.
3. Boost your health savings account
Another way to score a deduction before the tax filing deadline is by contributing to your health savings account, or HSA — provided you had eligible high-deductible health insurance in 2022.
These accounts offer three tax benefits: an upfront deduction for contributions, tax-free earnings and tax-free withdrawals for qualified medical expenses.
“That’s an easy one, especially if you weren’t making contributions through your employer,” Lucas said.
For 2022, the HSA contribution limit for individuals is $3,650 and families can deposit up to $7,300, which qualifies for a deduction to reduce adjusted gross income.