Posts

Showing posts with the label expense

Burial Insurance Information and Questions

Image
We’ve all heard about the importance of having life insurance, but is it really necessary? Usually, the answer is “yes,” but it depends on your specific situation. If you have a family who relies on your income, then it is imperative to have life insurance protection. If you’re single and have no major assets to protect, then you may not need coverage. In the event of your untimely death, your beneficiaries can use funds from a life insurance policy for funeral and burial expenses, probate, estate taxes, day care, and any number of everyday expenses. Funds can be used to pay for your children’s education and take care of debts or a mortgage that hasn’t been paid off. Life insurance funds can also be added to your spouse’s retirement savings. If your dependents will not require the proceeds from a life insurance policy for these types of expenses, you may wish to name a favorite charity as the beneficiary of your policy. Permanent life insurance can also be used as a source of cash in t

We Can Write-Off Work-From-Home Deductions on Our 2020 Tax Forms, Right? Right??

Early on, working from home was a matter of adjusting on the fly. Your new desk? The kitchen table will do, thank you. No quiet place for conference calls? The front seat of the car is now your Zoom chamber. But as COVID-19 wears on and telecommuting becomes a long-term reality, however, a lot of workers have purchased items to transform their home into a functional office space. Folks have spent money on everything from increased Internet speeds and hi-def Zoom cameras to printers and more comfortable desk chairs. But this begs the question: How will this effect 2020 tax deductions? Can we write off work from home expenses accrued during the COVID pandemic when we file our taxes? What kind of work from home office tax deductions or tax write-offs can we expect? Or, dun dun dunnn, are we on the hook for the items we purchased to do our jobs better?  Well, here’s the thing: if you’re working remotely because of the pandemic,  you can’t write off those work from home expenses. No, you pr