TikTok: Risky Tax Advice and Supersize Valuations
The IRS debunks some TikTok influencers’ tips to avoid paying taxes on trust income. Meanwhile, why a TikTok IPO could be a ‘unicorn of all unicorns.’
The IRS debunks some TikTok influencers’ tips to avoid paying taxes on trust income. Meanwhile, why a TikTok IPO could be a ‘unicorn of all unicorns.’
The Roth IRA is the ultimate financial gift for retirees and their beneficiaries. Roth individual retirement accounts have no lifetime required minimum distributions, so you’ll never have to worry about paying higher future tax rates on those funds.
IRS released Notice 2023-62 on Friday giving employer retirement plans two additional years to comply with the controversial rule requiring that catch-up contributions for employees age 50 or over whose wages for the prior year exceeded $145,000 be made on a Roth basis.
The last Tax Report examined a new law requiring greater use of Roth 401(k) plans by older, higher-earning savers, and it prompted a flood of questions from readers about traditional and Roth IRAs and 401(k)s and similar plans.
Join Michelle Gessner, CFP®, a member of Ed Slott’s Master Elite IRA Advisor Group℠, as she chats with tax attorney and educator Sarah Brenner from Ed Slott and Company, LLC. With over 20 years of experience, Sarah has become a trusted resource for financial advisors and their clients across the nation. Listen as she shares her insights on how you can navigate through the complexities of retirement and tax regulations.
When life as we knew it was put on hold in March 2020, so were federal student loans. The coronavirus had prompted broad shutdowns that reduced health risks but created financial hardships.
New rules for inherited IRAs could leave some heirs with a hefty tax bill. In the first quarter of 2023, Americans held more than $12 trillion in IRAs. If your parents saved diligently throughout their lives, there’s a good chance you’ll inherit some of that money.
Pay taxes now or later is often a consideration when people decide how to save for retirement, but Congress decided the only option for some older Americans should be now for certain retirement accounts.
Pay taxes now or later is often a consideration when people decide how to save for retirement, but Congress decided the only option for some older Americans should be now for certain retirement accounts.
Stop contributing to your IRAs and 401(k)s? That has to be a typographical error. After all, traditional retirement planning has always preached maximizing contributions to tax-deferred individual retirement accounts and 401(k)s to build retirement savings.