What to keep and shred
(BPT) – Whether you use old-fashioned
manila filing folders, a flash drive or
cloud storage, tax and personal finance
authorities agree on the importance of
saving tax documents and records. In
addition to using the information for
preparing your next income tax return,
it may come in handy years from now.
Organizing and saving information
throughout the year will cut tax return
preparation time and can even save you
money. Save any information related to:
• Income from wages, dividends,
interest or business: Forms W-2, 1099,
and K-1, bank statements, brokerage
statements
• Deductions and credits (child care expenses, medical and dental expenses, business use of home, charitable gifts, vehicle sales tax, alimony): Receipts, invoices, mileage logs, bank or credit card statements, canceled checks
• Home and property: Closing statements, invoices, proof of payment, insurance records, receipts for improvements
• Investments: Forms 1099 and 2439, brokerage statements, mutual fund statements
While you don’t need a fancy or hightech
organizing system, you do need to
keep the information in a secure place.
Consider saving electronic copies to the
cloud or on a backup storage device in
addition to, or in place of, your paper
files.
“One of the key advantages of going
digital is that your tax information is
better protected from natural disasters,”
says Dolmage.
Apps and websites make digitizing
documents easy. TaxACT DocVault is a
free mobile app and website specifically
designed to create and save secure,
digital copies of tax documents.
At
tax time, import DocVault images into
TaxACT Deluxe to save with your return.
Certain documents should be
saved longer. “Information related
to your home, property, investments
and retirement plans should be kept
indefinitely,” says Dolmage. “If you
dispose of an asset, be sure to keep the
information for another three years.”
Business owners should keep tax
information for at least four years. That
includes employment records, gross
receipts, invoices, bank statements,
proofs of purchase, asset records,
databases, emails and even voicemails.
Refer to IRS Publication 552 at www. irs.gov for more information about tax recordkeeping, Publications 583 and 463 provide specific information for businesses. Visit www.taxact.com/apps to download TaxACT DocVault for free.