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Abitz Tax and Accounting, LLC Personal Tax Services We offer a full range of tax and accounting services

Plan on a new furnace/AC, windows, doors, etc.? Get it done before 12/31/25 to take advantage of the expiring credits!
16/10/2025

Plan on a new furnace/AC, windows, doors, etc.? Get it done before 12/31/25 to take advantage of the expiring credits!

18/06/2025

TAX CHECKLIST FOR NEWLYWEDS

Summertime is common time for wedding bells to ring, and newlyweds can make their tax filing easier by doing a few things now. A taxpayer's marital status as of December 31 determines their tax filing options for the entire year, but that's not all newlyweds need to know.

Report a name change:
Report any name changes to the Social Security Administration. The name on a person's tax return must match what’s on file at the SSA. Otherwise, it could delay any tax refund. Taxpayers should file Form SS-5, Application for a Social Security Card with their updated information. It’s available on SSA.gov, by phone at 800-772-1213, or at a local SSA office.

Update address:
Notify their local post office, employers, and the IRS of any address change. To officially change their mailing address with the IRS, taxpayers must compete and submit Form 8822, Change of Address. See page 2 of the form for detailed instructions.

Check withholding:
Newly married couples must give their employers a new Form W-4, Employee's Withholding Certificate, within 10 days. If both people work, this could move them into a higher tax bracket or be affected by the additional Medicare tax. The Tax Withholding Estimator on IRS.gov can be used to check withholding and provide tips for completing a new Form W-4.

Review filing status:
Married people can choose to file their federal income taxes jointly or separately. While filing jointly is usually more beneficial, it's best to figure the tax both ways to find out which makes the most sense.

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LET'S TALK TAXES  -  $29.99 FLAT FILING FEE (plus tax)!!!If you normally buy Turbo Tax, consider saving money with using...
15/01/2025

LET'S TALK TAXES - $29.99 FLAT FILING FEE (plus tax)!!!

If you normally buy Turbo Tax, consider saving money with using my partner program by going to my website at www.abitztax.com and click on the link on the left or use this link directly https://www.1040.com/?did=288946

No hidden costs. As many forms as you need, as many states as you need...all included! My software vendor offers this perk for anyone who wants a more economical solution to tax preparation. Files are saved year to year, so there is no need to buy new software to load on your computer each year.

Any questions, just let me know and we can talk!

Prepare and file your federal and state income taxes online. Maximum refunds, 100% accuracy guaranteed. One flat-rate price for everyone – just $29.99.

06/11/2024

PLEASE READ CAREFULLY!

If you have an entity created with the State of Wisconsin Department of Financial Institutions (LLC, S-Corp, C-Corp, Partnership, or other) in which you are a beneficial owner (defined as 25%), it's extremely important that you are informed about the new requirement you may have under the Corporate Transparency Act (CTA). You will need to file a separate report for any entity in which you are a beneficial owner.

As of Jan 1st of this year, you are required to file a new, "Beneficial Ownership Information" (BOI) report now with the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN).

CLICK HERE TO FILE
https://secure.boi-efile.com/form/abitztaxandaccountingllc

Failure to file by the 1/1/2025 deadline can result in significant penalties, including:

- Fines up to $500 per violation, per day.
- Imprisonment for willful violations.
- Reputational damage and potential business disruptions.

While we cannot directly assist with the filing, we strongly urge you to take immediate action to ensure compliance. We are recommending that you use TRUSS BOI eFile to make this easy and quick (~ 8 minutes). It will guide you through the filing process. If you do not want to file on your own, please contact an attorney who is preparing BOIs.

Please act now! Taking 8 minutes now can help you avoid costly penalties and potential legal issues.If

21/06/2024

“40% of Americans don’t pay income taxes. The income tax system has become so progressive that 97.7% of the taxes are paid by the top 50% of income earners”...

Replacing Taxes With Tariffs

Last week, Donald Trump proposed replacing the income tax with a tariff on imports. Washington DC let out a loud, and collective, scoff. The average American was intrigued. More on this in a few…but to be clear, the idea as it stands won’t work in our current system. The US cannot replace income tax revenues without sky-high tariffs, and sky-high tariffs would shut down world trade. Remember…much lower Smoot-Hawley tariffs in 1930 helped kick off the Great Depression.

But that doesn’t mean we shouldn’t use this as a starting point for discussion. Have you followed Elon Musk and SpaceX? Specifically, the Starship, which just had its fourth launch? Well, what we are witnessing is the process of iterative development. Each launch has gone further and had more success. Henry Ford did the same thing with the automobile and assembly lines.

This process of iterative learning, which is prevalent in the private sector, seems non-existent in government. To use an example that writer Glenn Harlan Reynolds shared in a recent Substack post: Ad Astra, Per Ardua, the Space Shuttle was supposed to be reusable, but it never truly was – it cost over $1 billion per flight. Musk, on the other hand, by figuring out how to re-use boosters has driven the cost per flight down to the range of $3-5 million.

The cost to put a kilogram of payload in space was $55,000 in the Shuttle but is only $2,700 in a SpaceX Falcon 9, a 20-fold reduction. And this cost will keep coming down. It’s an amazing thing to watch, how the private sector can simply crush the government in efficiency and progress.

Which takes us back to Donald Trump’s proposal to scrap the income tax and replace it with tariffs on imports. If you look at this proposal like the permanent fixtures of the Beltway do, it’s absolutely ludicrous. Paul Krugman (on X) couldn’t resist running all the numbers, showing how the tariff would have to rise to 133%, or higher, to raise the same revenue.

At least he admitted that in the 1800s the US funded itself with tariffs and excise taxes, but that was when the federal government was significantly smaller. Instead of wondering if we could run the government like SpaceX, and not NASA, he just said anyone who thinks we can shrink government that much is just plain “ignorant.” For the record, calling people ignorant is not proving them wrong. It is rude, though.

Krugman comes from the left, but even those on the right said Trump’s idea was crazy. Most used the same logic as Krugman. Inside the Beltway, the only way to look at anything is to use static scoring models, and very little imagination. Social Security can’t be imagined anew, bureaucracies are entrenched and have decades of momentum. They have no incentive to become more productive or to learn iteratively. Doing so means fewer jobs and smaller budgets. There is no profit incentive at all…government cannot possibly think like the private sector, even though it should.

At least Donald Trump is thinking outside the Beltway Box. The pundits are right, taxing just imports would increase the deficit “hugely” to use his word. We have no idea if that’s what he was thinking. We doubt it, but it takes an idea to lead to iterative thinking. Science fiction writer, Steve Stirling, wrote about Starship: “That's what iterative development does; you don't try to make it perfect the first time. You make it 'good enough for a first try', push it until it breaks, fix what broke, try again, and again and again... until it works all the way.”

One could argue that the government keeps trying to iteratively learn. But Great Society programs have led to several generations of welfare and apparently permanent poverty. Programs to fix inequality led to more of it, public schools (especially in inner cities) have failed, Social Security will run out of money in 2033, the Federal Reserve has a $1 trillion loss on its books and has to borrow money to make payroll. The government is so big that even Sports Illustrated, ESPN, and the Weather Channel can’t help but talk about politics.

The problems the US has today are no different than the problems the US had in the 1960s or the 1930s. One could actually argue that they are worse even though the government has grown and grown. So, this proposal by Donald Trump is a breath of fresh air. Instead of immediately declaring it dead-on-arrival, why don’t we take this opportunity to discuss the size of government, and how we pay for it.

We know it’s more comfortable for the Beltway crowd to just move on…don’t rock the boat…analyze the same things the same way as always. We, on the other hand, are going to take this opportunity to grab this idea by the horns and discuss it in the context of history, and the current state of affairs in the US.

The Founders did not have an income tax to fund the government, which wasn’t instituted until 1913. What they could do was use excise (sales) taxes and tariffs. In the 19th century, actually up through 1930, the peacetime government spent less than 3% of GDP. Today, federal spending is roughly 23% of GDP, while state and local governments spend about 14% of GDP on goods and services. Add in the cost of complying with government rules and regulations and we estimate the government either spends, or directs to be spent, roughly 50% of our annual output.

The private sector can’t afford it…that’s why federal deficits alone are running nearly $1.7 trillion per year, with no end in sight. State debt and unfunded pension liabilities have also grown exponentially. Clearly something is broken, but bureaucrats, lobbyists, politicians, and think tank employees go to work every day and color inside the lines. Every once in a while someone comes up with a new idea, which immediately gets crushed by vested interests.

A couple of things. It is clear China has used existing tariffs and global trade to dominate markets in all kinds of areas. The US would have a tough time, today, producing all the pharmaceuticals, ammunition, batteries, and many other items it needs without trade. We believe trade is a positive for economic growth; we are free traders. However, we are also realists that understand not all our trading partners have our best interests at heart. Counting on imports for our national security is a risk that few talk about.

Second, roughly 40% of Americans don’t pay income taxes. The income tax system has become so progressive that 97.7% of the taxes are paid by the top 50% of income earners. In other words, half of America has no, or little, skin in the game when it comes to income taxes. As a result, top tax rates (along with deductions, etc.) are likely higher than they would be if everyone paid the tax. When there is no pain to you, why care what others have to pay? And to all those who say tax rates don’t matter, just look at all the people and businesses leaving California, Illinois, and New York.

A tariff is a tax on consumers because it will be passed on. In other words, it’s a form of a consumption, or sales, tax. Just about every state has one. So, this idea to replace income taxes with tariffs is a step toward a consumption tax. Some say this tax is regressive because low-income earners spend more of their income than high income earners. But this can be dealt with and, don’t forget, high-income earners (or their heirs) eventually spend their savings and therefore pay consumption taxes in the future. If everyone has to pay, then maybe voters will look differently at how the government spends.

It seems clear that if we step back, look at the size of federal, state, and local government debts – the fact that after trillions in spending we have not really improved poverty, nor have we addressed the inefficiencies in government – the system is broken. Maybe some kind of iterative process of change is the only way to break the cycle. As a result, we think immediately scoffing at a new proposal is wrong.

We rarely write more than one page but found this idea to be so amazingly new that we couldn’t help it. It is time for America to have a discussion about how much it spends and how it pays for it. Maybe, just maybe, Donald Trump has started that discussion. If so, we will be better for it.

Brian S. Wesbury – Chief Economist
Robert Stein, CFA – Deputy Chief Economist

First Trust Retirement

Consensus forecasts come from Bloomberg. This report was prepared by First Trust Advisors L. P., and reflects the current opinion of the authors. It is based upon sources and data believed to be accurate and reliable. Opinions and forward-looking statements expressed are subject to change without notice. This information does not constitute a solicitation or an offer to buy or sell any security.

Approved for Public Use

Have you heard about BOI Reporting? If you are a small business owner you may be required to file. Please read the attac...
10/05/2024

Have you heard about BOI Reporting? If you are a small business owner you may be required to file. Please read the attached pages.

Please note, this is not something we can help with due to restrictions, however, we wanted to pass along the info.

16/04/2024

🎉 Tax Season is officially over! 🎉

Congratulations to all who successfully filed their taxes on time! I know it can be a stressful time, but you made it through, and I'm so grateful to have been part of your journey.

Now that the dust has settled, it's the perfect time to reflect on your financial goals for the rest of the year. Whether it's saving for a vacation, investing in your future, planning for retirement, or trying to get those withholdings in order, I'm here to help you every step of the way.

Send a message to learn more

24/01/2024

TAX TIME 🫣 If you have an easy return, I have a cheaper solution for you than TURBO TAX! 💸💰

For just $25, you can e-file your federal and state returns with no hidden fees! Go to my website (www.abitztax.com) and click on the "File Your Federal and State Taxes Online" button on the left. It is my tax software vendor's partner program.

As always, if you'd like to have ME involved, you can always do that too as I do take on a few new clients each year😉

Kids are back in school, days are getting shorter, and nights are getting cooler, which means the sun is beginning to se...
18/09/2023

Kids are back in school, days are getting shorter, and nights are getting cooler, which means the sun is beginning to set on this year. Now is a great time to check on your withholding for the year. If you’d like me to take a look at it, please reach out! Have a great Monday!

30/12/2022
The IRS is warning taxpayers that refund checks may not be as high this year or amounts owed may be higher due to some t...
30/12/2022

The IRS is warning taxpayers that refund checks may not be as high this year or amounts owed may be higher due to some tax credits (such as the Child Tax Credit $3,600 to $2,000, Earned Income Credit ($1,500 to $500, and the Dependent Care Credit $8,000 to $2,100) reverting to previous levels.

From the IRS December 6th newsletter...
Some tax credits return to 2019 levels. This means that affected taxpayers will likely receive a significantly smaller refund compared with the previous tax year. Changes include amounts for the Child Tax Credit (CTC), Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC), and Child and Dependent Care Credit.

~Those who got $3,600 per dependent in 2021 for the CTC will, if eligible, get $2,000 for the 2022 tax year.
~For the EITC, eligible taxpayers with no children who received roughly $1,500 in 2021 will now get $500 in 2022.
~The Child and Dependent Care Credit returns to a maximum of $2,100 in 2022 instead of $8,000 in 2021.

No above-the-line charitable deductions. During COVID, taxpayers could take up to a $600 charitable donation tax deduction on their tax returns. However, in 2022, those who take a standard deduction may not take an above-the-line deduction for charitable donations.

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