Articles

Easy ways to ruin your credit score

Investor Warren Buffet once said, “It takes 20 years to build a reputation and five minutes to ruin it.” The same maxim applies to good credit. Stellar credit scores don’t happen overnight or by accident. Instead, you have to exercise financial discipline, sometimes for years. The reward: lenders who are willing to offer mortgages and car loans at favorable interest rates. Unfortunately, like a good reputation, a strong credit score can easily be ruined. Here are

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Is your business using social media tools?

According to a recent survey by a technology company, email, websites, and social media are the top three digital marketing tools used by businesses. Lack of an online presence means your company may be missing opportunities to connect with customers. If you’re neglecting your internet marketing, consider outsourcing the task to a virtual assistant, or assigning an employee to handle website maintenance and social media accounts. Still feeling overwhelmed by the idea? Remember that online marketing

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Start your midyear planning with these tax savers

As you get ready for midyear tax planning, keep these lesser-known tax breaks in mind. Residential energy credit. You can claim a 10% energy credit for qualified improvements (up to a lifetime maximum of $500) when you improve your home with insulation, windows, and certain types of roofing. This credit is presently set to expire after 2016. Commercial building energy deduction. The above-the-line deduction for energy efficiency improvements to lighting, heating, cooling, ventilation, and hot water

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Retiring abroad? Check your long-term care policy

If you’re thinking of retiring abroad, and you want to purchase (or have already purchased) long-term care insurance, be sure to read the fine print on your policy. Not all policies cover care in other countries, and even if they do, the benefits are often reduced. For example, one large insurer pays only 50 percent of the nursing home benefit if your care is received outside the U.S.

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Long-term care insurance deductions increased for 2016

The amount you can deduct on your taxes as a result of buying long-term care insurance has been increased by the IRS for 2016. If you itemize your deductions, you can generally claim a deduction if your premiums, together with your other unreimbursed medical expenses, amount to more than 10% of your adjusted gross income (or 7.5% if you’re 65 or older).

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Veterans face new limits on long-term care help

The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs offers a pension benefit to low-income veterans (and their spouses) who are in a nursing home or who need help at home with everyday tasks such as dressing or bathing. The program is called “Aid and Attendance.” Unfortunately for many veterans, the government recently proposed new regulations that will tighten the qualification rules and impose a look-back period and transfer penalties similar to those under Medicaid. As a result of these changes,

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New technique to qualify for Medicaid more quickly

A recent court decision may make it easier for seniors to use short-term, immediate annuities to qualify for Medicaid more quickly. In general, people who go to a nursing home must spend down their resources before becoming eligible for Medicaid. If you transfer your assets rather than spending them down (such as by making gifts to family members), that triggers a penalty period during which you’re ineligible for Medicaid benefits, even if you would otherwise qualify.

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Major changes to Social Security may require taking action now

Two Social Security strategies that many married couples have been using to maximize their benefits are being eliminated, as a result of the federal budget deal that President Obama signed into law in November. In the past, these strategies could be worth tens of thousands of dollars over a lifetime for some couples. The fact that they are being phased out means that many seniors should take action now, before the changes take effect, to reduce the impact.

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Family trust could prohibit beneficiaries from going to court

People who set up trusts for children, grandchildren and other family members have a greater ability to limit the beneficiaries’ right to challenge trustees’ decisions in court, as a result of a new U.S. Tax Court decision. Here’s the background: You may know that you can give up to $14,000 a year to any person without incurring the federal gift tax. But that rule generally doesn’t apply if you put the money in a trust for

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Many people miss a tax deduction for inherited IRAs

If you inherited a retirement account, and if the estate of the person you inherited it from owed an estate tax, you might be missing a big income tax deduction when you withdraw funds from the account. Many people forget to claim this deduction. The deduction applies not only to inherited IRAs, but also to inherited 401(k) accounts, certain stock options and unpaid dividends, pretax gains in certain annuities, and some other assets. The idea is

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