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Onlinemortgagemortagage Online Mortgage Mortagage Szh Education Training Training Online Mortgage Mortagage

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16 common tax filing errors to avoid

Your Financial Action Plan: 12 Simple Steps to Achieve Money Success

Unfortunately, when it comes to taxes, that “D’oh!” can cost dough. Sometimes an error means paying more in taxes. Other times it delays refunds. To help make sure your return is perfect, here are 16 common tax-filing errors that you can avoid.

  1. Mis-figuring the child tax credit. The good intentions of lawmakers have turned into a tax-filing nightmare for more than a million taxpayers.
  2. Making math errors. Every year, the most common mistake on tax returns is bad math. Mistakes in arithmetic or in transferring figures from one schedule to another will get you an immediate correction notice.
  3. Not including Social Security numbers. Since the IRS stopped putting  taxpayer  Social  Security  numbers  on  tax  package  labels  in response  to  privacy  concerns,  many  taxpayers  forget  to  write  in their identification numbers.
  4. Not signing and dating your return. For legal purposes, the IRS will not process a return if it does not have a signature. Continue reading ‘16 common tax filing errors to avoid’ »
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Ten ToDo to Get Ready for Tax Time

12 Simple Steps to Achieve Money Success

  1. Check  and  adjust  your  paycheck  withholding  to  make  sure  you have enough taxes taken out of your paycheck—especially if you married, had a child, bought a house, or are expecting a large bonus at  the  end  of  the  year.
  2. Make your January 1 mortgage payment (which really represents interest for the month of December) before the end of the year so that  you  can  take  an  additional  deduction  this  tax  year  for  the interest  paid.
  3. You may benefit from the recent law which cut the capital gains rate to 15 percent and reduced taxes on dividends from the ordinary  income  rate  to  15  percent. You  can  help  your  tax  situation even more by selling poorly performing stocks at a loss to balance out any gains.
  4. Get philanthropic. Itemized gifts of cash or goods can be deducted to reduce Continue reading ‘Ten ToDo to Get Ready for Tax Time’ »
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The Three C’s to Consider in Health Insurance

12 Simple Steps to Achieve Money Success

Some 44 million Americans—one in seven—have no health insurance. For those who do, nearly 85 percent receive it through their employer or their spouse’s employer. While companies still pay the bulk of their workers’ health  care  costs,  their  contributions  have  slipped  in  recent years  and  now  hover  around  70  percent. This  means  that  workers’ copayments and deductibles are up. Even though the stakes are high here, just 17 percent of us spend more than an hour reading our health plan manuals. Fewer than half read the materials with anything more than a cursory glance—until we need to make a claim.

Continue reading ‘The Three C’s to Consider in Health Insurance’ »

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Your Financial Action Plan

Your Financial Action Plan: 12 Simple Steps to Achieve Money Success

Title:Your Financial Action Plan: 12 Simple Steps to Achieve Money Success
Author: G. Cotter Cunningham
Publisher: Wiley
ISBN-10: 0471650307
ISBN-13: 978-0471650300
Start: 2010-10-17
End: 2010-10-24

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Ten Donts In Estate Planning

Here are 10 Don’t in estate planning:

  1. Omitting foreign-owned assets from your estate plan
  2. Holding all assets jointly
    If you hold all assets jointly, these assets pass by law to the survivor when one  holder  dies, which  can  render  ineffective  otherwise  carefully  constructed estate plans. Continue reading ‘Ten Donts In Estate Planning’ »
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Ten Mistakes You Need To Know In Insurance

Ernst & Young's Personal Financial Planning Guide

Top 10 mistakes you should avoid when looking for insurance:

  1. Knowingly underinsuring any major risk that you could cover inexpensively
  2. Naming minor children as beneficiaries of a life insurance
    policy
  3. Using term insurance for permanent insurance needs
  4. Calculating life insurance needs by rules of thumb rather than by assessing your actual circumstances
  5. Generally overestimating coverage under Medicare
  6. Expecting Medicare to cover a sustained need for long term care
  7. Ignoring the need for disability insurance
  8. Carrying unrealistically low limits under your liability policies
  9. Carrying inadequate deductibles on property/casualty insurance
  10. Carrying collision coverage on an inexpensive automobile
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