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Organized
Artistry, LLC
All Rights Reserved.
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• Home Organization
• Paper/Filing Systems •
Time Management
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ARTICLE
Uncle Sam is Ready…Are
You?
Organizing Tips for Tax
Time
Anyone who is closely related to an accountant knows that
there are not four, but five seasons in a year: Spring, Summer, Fall,
Winter, and 'Tax Season.' During the other seasons, we accumulate
leaves, snow, and mosquito bites. During 'Tax Season' we accumulate
paper. And more paper. And if you have a small business or investments--even
more paper.
Whether you hire someone to prepare your taxes or attempt
to decipher the forms yourself, it is imperative that your papers
be in order for this 'fifth season.' Organizing your tax-related documents
is not just a project for the evening of April 13th. Good tax organization
is a year-round process.
Some pitfalls of being disorganized
at tax time:
• You run the risk of misplacing important receipts/documents
• You feel stressed from the mad dash to the tax preparer/post
office
on April 14th
• Your tax preparer may charge you more money if they
have to spend time wading through your piles of loose receipts.
How to remedy these tax-time situations?
Prepare now for next year by
getting organized!
Set up an all-year round file system
Designate a box, accordion file, or a file cabinet for
year-round paper storage and retrieval. Create folders for receipts,
credit card and bank statements, anything you have spent money on or
need to keep track of for tax purposes. As you acquire such documents,
place them in the appropriately labeled folder. This is beneficial not
only for tax time but for when you have to retrieve certain papers throughout
the year.
Give your tax-related papers a home
Every January, our mailboxes become flooded with documents
necessary for filing your taxes. At the beginning of the year, designate
a large envelope or box in one area of your home or a file in your
file cabinet for these papers. Examples of these are:
• W2's
• 1099's
• Mortgage interest statements
• Bank interest statements
• Real estate tax statements
• Investment statements
• Receipts for charitable donations
Sort and create categories for your
papers/receipts
By early February you should have received all paperwork
necessary to complete your taxes. Take that envelope/box/file of collected
papers and sort them by category. This process will enable you or
your tax preparer to quickly locate your papers and receipts. Some
basic categories are:
• Salary
• Real Estate
• Medical
• Childcare
• Investments
Save your tax preparer aggravation by throwing away the
envelopes that your statements came in and tear off the perforated
edges from your income statements. Group the documents into the categories
you’ve created and paper clip them together. Place all of these papers
in a folder or large envelope.
Call your tax preparer early
If you're using a tax preparer, call in January to schedule
a mid to late February tax appointment. Doing this forces you to
organize and compile all the necessary information by that date. Also,
accountants get very busy as April 15th approaches. You don’t want
an exhausted accountant doing your taxes…
Being organized at tax time will give you greater control
over the tax preparation process. Instead of feeling overwhelmed,
you will feel a sense of calm and accomplishment. Instead of frantically
searching for documents you will be able to produce them at a moment’s
notice. Instead of your accountant cursing your name, he/she will sing
your praises when you present them with an envelope of organized papers
and receipts.
The sooner you get organized for tax time the sooner you
may get that
big refund check. If that’s not motivation enough,
I don’t know what is…
*Browse the
Article Archive
for Organized Artistry's
time, money, and
sanity-saving tips and ideas...
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Editors/Publishers:You are granted permission
to publish the above article in its entirety provided that the
following 'footer' is
included after each article:
Article by Stacey Agin Murray, professional organizer and owner
of Organized Artistry, LLC. Visit http://www.organizedartistry.com
for your FREE e-list of 'Top Ten Tips for Organized Living.'
A courtesy copy e-mailed
or snail mailed to the address below is appreciated.
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WHAT AREA OF YOUR
LIFE NEEDS ORGANIZING?
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