Tax Strategies for High Income Earners to Help Reduce Taxes

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  • Опубликовано: 31 янв 2025

Комментарии • 63

  • @daveray6335
    @daveray6335 2 года назад +86

    1. Retirement accounts
    a. TSP
    b. Roth IRA
    c. Backdoor Roth
    d. After tax TSP
    2. Investments in Taxable Accounts
    a. Short term (1yr) focus
    b. Tax efficient funds (individual stocks, ETFs, not mutual funds)
    c. Growth focused
    d. Tax exempt interest (municipal bonds or municipal bond funds)
    3. Health savings account
    4. Deferred compensation plan (if your employer offers this)
    5. 529 Plans
    6. Tax-deferred annuity
    a. you will pay ordinary income tax when you tap into this
    7. Business structure
    8. Life insurance that builds cash value
    a. can take a tax-free loan later on these
    9. Invest in real estate
    a. use it to increase deductions via depreciation
    10. Charitable contributions
    a. Donor-advised fund
    b. Gift appreciated stock
    c. Qualified charitable distributions (QCDs) (give part of your IRA distribution to a charity while in retirement)
    11. Gifting
    a. to heirs early, rather than waiting until death

  • @JunePerkins-o1k
    @JunePerkins-o1k 11 месяцев назад +2

    Great summary of bigger picture for high income earners ! Thanks a lot for creating and sharing this video.

  • @PriyankYagnik
    @PriyankYagnik 11 месяцев назад +1

    Great summary of bigger picture for high income earners ! Thanks a lot for creating and sharing this video. 👍

  • @lunamorris2091
    @lunamorris2091 Год назад +1

    I extremely like the video, man. Very helpful and informative. Thank you very much. It is presented so well too. Great, positive work.

  • @carolinaespinoza154
    @carolinaespinoza154 2 года назад +9

    Such a great, concise video. Easy to understand, but not as easy to swallow. It would be easier to follow if you could include more bullet points along with your verbal explanation for reinforcement and to keep the listener engaged. Again, Loved the info!

  • @marianagirgis2083
    @marianagirgis2083 3 года назад +2

    Guys you are answering the easy question. We need to reduce our tax on the little income that raised and will obstacle our kids from taking full scholarship … and this income is needed, not extra to throw it away in a retire plan

    • @TheQuickyouknow
      @TheQuickyouknow 3 года назад +2

      If you make enough to worry about your tax bill then you make enough to put money away in a ESA or 529 to save for your kid's education.
      The average person who qualifies for FAFSA effective tax rate is less than 10%.

  • @therealrichot
    @therealrichot Год назад +1

    Fantastic overview!

  • @wal2ban
    @wal2ban 22 дня назад

    Great video. Thanks

  • @090usa
    @090usa 2 года назад +6

    Great information! but it is very hard to digest. Can you please put some sample numbers and explain on board in your next video, please.

  • @douglashart5059
    @douglashart5059 Год назад

    This video is very helpful! Thank you for your time!!

  • @johannaguzman9521
    @johannaguzman9521 Год назад +2

    What type of life insurance do I need to get? Do I also need health insurance? If I buy a school, will my taxes be lowered? For charity...what if I make my own charity or buy stuff from a thrift store and "donate" it within a month or two...would that count?

  • @disavvynurse8858
    @disavvynurse8858 2 года назад +2

    Awesome video. Thank you 🙏

  • @ponnusamy1
    @ponnusamy1 Год назад

    Great video!! Very valuable

  • @outdoorsnevada4138
    @outdoorsnevada4138 2 года назад +8

    wife and I just entered the next tier tax bracket. we went from 80k a year to 103k. can you say ouch on taxes this year. you make more but government takes so much more. sigh.....

    • @conlawmeateater8792
      @conlawmeateater8792 Год назад +1

      Donatebto your local church. 60% of your adjusted gross income off.

    • @outdoorsnevada4138
      @outdoorsnevada4138 Год назад +6

      @@conlawmeateater8792 so my options are robbed by the government or robbed by religion...

    • @pileusdag6461
      @pileusdag6461 Год назад +2

      Yeah bro i feel the pain wife and I are going to be doing 300k next year... the past 2 years we made 180k .... The IRS is the MOB

    • @danielleon5074
      @danielleon5074 Год назад

      @@pileusdag6461 Are you and your wife W2 employees or 1099 ?

    • @outdoorsnevada4138
      @outdoorsnevada4138 Год назад

      @@pileusdag6461 Facts

  • @khongcolong
    @khongcolong 2 года назад +2

    Thank you! Excellent content.

  • @cindyhardi
    @cindyhardi 2 года назад +2

    Thank you for the info!

  • @stevenwheelwright572
    @stevenwheelwright572 Месяц назад

    you missed the whole point of after tax 401k contributions: you can do an in-service Roth conversion, a "mega backdoor Roth". I can't see any reason someone would want to do a non deductible 401k contribution without a Roth conversion, instead of just using a taxable brokerage account

  • @huypham9458
    @huypham9458 20 дней назад

    Am I’m wasting my money by buying whole life insurance for me and my wife ? We pay about 1100 a month for this whole life insurance

  • @mlee9049
    @mlee9049 3 года назад +4

    Hi, in regards to the tax-deffered annuity, is this also ideal for a small business owner that wants to reduce taxes? I'm interested in learning more, Thank you.

    • @scallahanco
      @scallahanco 3 года назад +1

      an annuity will not reduce your income taxes in the current year, only (potentially) investment taxes (capital gains) or taxes down the road.

  • @hremaddox
    @hremaddox Год назад

    Amazing video! I really want a HSA but my employer doesn't offer one. Is there a way to get one as a private person?

  • @VeenaKolloru
    @VeenaKolloru 7 месяцев назад

    You are amazing taxadvisor

  • @randymuller8728
    @randymuller8728 Год назад +1

    Good stuff but we are screwed either way.

  • @jcarlosdream22
    @jcarlosdream22 6 месяцев назад +3

    Do you really think 401K it’s a good idea ?? I ear from economists it’s not.

  • @franciscoferrer6419
    @franciscoferrer6419 7 месяцев назад

    Define hight income?

  • @lakbirmo4540
    @lakbirmo4540 3 года назад +1

    Thank you very much for your help , I’m self employed driving for Lyft and Uber . I don’t have any collateral or assets beside my car and my furniture… when I received the invitation for the loan increase ; I did apply and received the increase and this is the second time I’m receiving the increase , after the original loan from last year . When I opened my loan account portfolio today : I found the blue box , sending me an invitation asking me for the increase up to $198K . My question please; can I get the whole amount even though I don’t have any collateral ? God bless

  • @jaym.4611
    @jaym.4611 2 года назад +20

    Did he say his name is scat?

  • @WealthResume
    @WealthResume 5 месяцев назад

    Just go to the point!

  • @LASLOEGRI
    @LASLOEGRI 3 месяца назад +1

    Ten minutes of excellent points diluted to 30 minutes of vamping, filler feel good empty phrases, “let’s keep this simple..” delaying the topics. Too tedious to watch. Use the chapters feature to reduce the filler.

  • @PierreFromCanada
    @PierreFromCanada 7 месяцев назад

    your Video title should mention "for US citizens"!!! takes a while before I figured out this wasn't for me....

  • @dudleybrown7030
    @dudleybrown7030 4 месяца назад

    You used “Recognized gains” repeatedly. Did you mean “realized”?

  • @NeilH-k4j
    @NeilH-k4j 11 месяцев назад

    Good gravy ads

  • @nikhilgandhi01
    @nikhilgandhi01 2 года назад +2

    I am sorry but your analysis on MF taxes is completely wrong. One doesnt pay any taxes on Mutual Fund units until the units are sold! It doesnt matter what the fund manager is doing behind the scenes to generate returns on the fund.

    • @tbowers581
      @tbowers581 2 года назад +2

      you do if it's not in a retirement account. any time a fund manager sells one stock to buy another, if that sale generates capital gains, it is a taxable event

    • @thetruth3514
      @thetruth3514 2 года назад +1

      @@tbowers581 when you sell it taxable event regardless if it’s a gain or loss.

  • @marvinbrando722
    @marvinbrando722 5 месяцев назад

    This is for poor people

  • @Sam-i7d4u
    @Sam-i7d4u Год назад +2

    Zero value all of know these things

  • @Bill0102
    @Bill0102 Год назад

    This content is exceptionally well-done. A kindred book was a transformative read for me. "Mastering Money Mindfulness" by Benjamin Hawk

  • @LuisluigiTexas
    @LuisluigiTexas 3 года назад +6

    Too much bs to get to the point man

  • @jeancrabtree3819
    @jeancrabtree3819 Год назад +1

    this guy talks in circles im done

  • @reyanddad2402
    @reyanddad2402 2 года назад +6

    Too much BS, cut the nonsense man.

    • @drigocrews
      @drigocrews 2 года назад +1

      lmao. what's your strategy?

  • @richard9827
    @richard9827 11 месяцев назад

    High income earners don’t need to be talked to like newbie’s.

  • @ParkerEdwardsParties
    @ParkerEdwardsParties Год назад +3

    Holy ads Batman