Kiplinger.com
Tools
Columns
E-mail Alerts
Online Forum
Quizzes
Site Map
The Kiplinger Letter
Kiplinger Store
Customer Service
Corporate Sales
About Kiplinger
Give A Gift

KIPLINGER TAX CENTER

 | 

TRUSTED ADVICE TO HELP YOU LOWER YOUR 2007 TAX BILL

Home > Tax Center > Feature

Slideshow Videos Slideshow
FEATURED SLIDE SHOW
Save Money on Transportation
No doubt getting around can be a huge budget buster. Here are ten tips to help cut your costs
KIPLINGER'S MONEY POLL
What has thrown the biggest wrench in your budget?
High gas prices
High food prices
Increasing debt and bills
A frozen home-equity line of credit
None of the above
       View Results!
TAX PLANNING FOR LIFE'S EVENTS
Tax Relief for Major Illness or Injury
You can lighten your tax burden if you or a dependent faces a costly health issue.

Fighting a major illness or injury can be enormously expensive, but you can find some help in the tax law.

Medical expense deductions. Although everyone knows medical expenses are deductible, in truth very few taxpayers actually get to deduct them. The catch? You must itemize deductions to write off medical expenses, and only about 25% of taxpayers itemize. And, such costs are deductible only to the extent they exceed 7.5% of your adjusted gross income (AGI). So, if your AGI is $50,000, the first $3,750 of unreimbursed medical expenses don't count. If you, your spouse or your dependent children are facing a major illness or injury, however, you may well surpass the 7.5% threshold. If so, be sure you tote up all your qualifying expenses.

HSA and MSA distributions. If you have a health saving account or an Archer Medical Savings Account, withdrawals used to pay qualifying medical expenses are tax-free.

Flexible spending account. Generally, employees are allowed to adjust the amount of salary earmarked for a medical reimbursement account only once a year. If during your open-enrollement season you anticipate higher medical bills in the year ahead, consider increasing the amount of money you set aside. Salary diverted into a reimbursement account and then used to pay medical bills escapes both income and Social Security taxes. There is no legal limit on how much can be set aside, but most companies set a limit of $5,000 or less per year. A $5,000 set-aside that avoids a 25% federal income tax rate and the 7.65% Social Security and Medicare tax would save you more than $1,600. Any state tax savings would make this an even better deal.

IRA and 401(k) plan payouts. Although using retirement funds for anything other than retirement is generally discouraged, crushing medical bills could force you to tap your account. On the bright side, the 10% penalty that normally applies to payouts before age 59½ is waived to the extent that you have qualifying medical expenses in excess of 7.5% of AGI.

Disability insurance payments. If your condition results in your receiving benefits under a disability insurance policy, the taxability of the income depends on who paid for the policy. If you paid, the benefits are tax-free. If your employer paid for the insurance, the benefits are fully taxable.

Damages. If you receive a settlement in a damage suit that includes money for medical expenses you deducted in an earlier year, that amount is considered taxable in the year you receive it but only to the extent that the deduction actually reduced your taxable income for the year you wrote off the expenses. If a settlement includes funds for future medical expenses, the amount is not taxable. Those future medical expenses aren't deductible either until they exceed the amount of the award allocated to future medical care.

Return to: Tax Planning for All Life's Events


FIND THIS ARTICLE HELPFUL?
SIGN UP FOR DELIVERY OF COLUMNS AND SITE UPDATES
SPONSORED LINKS