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You can still reduce your 2022 tax bill with some last-minute moves


‘Take lemons and make lemonade’ with tax-loss harvesting

Karen Van Voorhis, a CFP and director of financial planning at Daniel J. Galli & Associates in Norwell, Massachusetts, also suggested the strategy since “we haven’t seen losses like this in more than a decade.”

“Harvesting losses is an easy way to take lemons and make lemonade at the end of a less-than-optimal year for the stock market,” she said.

Consider a year-end Roth conversion

Sharon Epperson's money moves to make heading into 2023

Of course, you’ll want to know how the conversion affects your 2022 taxes because more adjusted gross income may trigger higher Medicare premiums, among other tax consequences.

But with the year nearly over, it’s easier to estimate 2022 income and see how the conversion may affect your taxes, said Kevin Burkle, a Jacksonville, Florida-based CFP and founder of HCP Wealth Planning. 

‘Bunch’ multiple years of charitable giving with a donor-advised fund

One way to optimize charitable giving is to “bunch” multiple years of gifts into one through a so-called donor-advised fund, explained Philip Herzberg, a CFP and lead financial advisor at Team Hewins in Miami. The account acts like a charitable checkbook and offers an upfront deduction.

The best investments to give are “highly appreciated publicly-traded stocks,” he said. You’ll avoid the capital gains taxes you’d otherwise owe from selling, which reduces levies while “maximizing philanthropic impact,” he said.

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