Tax Information
We strive to provide valuable and useful information to our clients. Here you will find the latest tax preparation and planning tips as you prepare for the upcoming tax season.
Tax Law Highlights & Changes
No More Paper Checks
Effective January 1, 2026 if you have a refund coming you will need to provide bank routing and account numbers to receive the refund. If you owe, you will have to make a payment online. See further information below on how to make online payments for both Federal and Wisconsin.
2025 Bonus Deduction for Seniors
There is a new, temporary, $6,000 bonus deduction for seniors for the 2025-2028 tax years. This is in addition to the normal standard deduction or itemized deductions. Must be 65 or older by year-end and MAGI must be below $75,000 for single filing status and $150,000 for married filing joint filing status. Both spouses are entitled to the extra $6,000 but there is no deduction on a married filing separate tax return. The deduction is reduced 6% for MAGI that exceeds the income limits noted.
Child Tax Credit
Increased from $2,000 to $2,200. Income limits apply.
Digital Assets
Although this may only apply to a small subset of our client base, there have been some substantial changes in this area. Crypto brokers will now be required to track basis. This will be tremendously helpful at tax time for filing gains and losses. Full reporting for this begins on 1/1/2026. Digital assets will now also be treated as cash. Therefore, if there is a transfer of $10,000 or more of digital assets in one transaction there will be a reporting requirement on Form 8300. You have two weeks to file the form after the transfer. If you accept digital assets as a form of payment in your business, you will need a lot of information in order to fill out and file that form if you receive over $10,000 or more in a single transaction. The time to get that information is before they transfer the $10,000 or more to you, not after.
Gamblers
For 2026 and forward wagering losses are limited to 90% of your losses during the year and allowed only to the extent of your gains/winnings.
Estate Tax Exemption
Permanently (until they change it again) increased to $15 million, including annual inflation adjustments.
Trump Accounts
Trump accounts are non-ROTH accounts for the benefit of someone under the age of 18. No distributions are allowed before the calendar year where the beneficiary attains the age of 18, except under very limited circumstances. Investments are limited to index funds; contributions are non-deductible and limited to $5,000 annually. Employers can contribute up to $2,500. They are reported on Form 4547. For children born in years 2025-2028, a check the box option is available to receive a $1,000 contribution from the government to the Trump account. Those amounts will be available sometime after July 4, 2026 and it is unclear at this time exactly how those deposits will be made.
Section 529 Plans - Qualified Expenses Broadened
Expenses now qualifying under the Section 529 Education plans include: Tuition and fees, required books, supplies and equipment, room and board up to the school’s published costs for room and board, computers and internet access needed for coursework, student loans up to $10,000 lifetime limit per beneficiary, K-12 tuition up to $10,000 in 2025 and up to $20,000 in 2026, apprenticeships, certifications and licenses for professional credentials, and tests for AP, SAT, ACT and other college entrance exams.
Remember there is an interplay between paying expenses from the Section 529 account and the education credits. You can have one or the other, but not both on the same dollars. We are set to optimize that interplay for you and it can have some very beneficial outcomes as the American Opportunity Credit is up to a $4,000 tax credit.
1099 Reporting Threshold (NEC, MISC)
This is the amount paid that would require a 1099 to be issued by a business. In the past it was $600. It has now been increased to $2,000 and will be adjusted for inflation. This begins tax years after December 31, 2025.
1099-K Reporting
We have been discussing this for the past few years. This will apply to Venmo, PayPal, and other services. The newly adopted rule is for calendar years beginning after December 31, 2024, the requirements for reporting are $20,000 and more than 200 transactions. If you get a 1099-K, there will be reporting even if the amounts on the 1099-K are not taxable.
Sales Tax - Racine County
Effective in April of 2025, Racine County now has the added .5% sales tax so the total rate now in Racine County is 5.5%
WI Retirement Subtraction
WI now has a $24,000 retirement subtraction from income. To qualify you must be at least 67 years old at the end of the taxable year. If both spouses are over 67, they both get the subtraction. Eligible income is basically any retirement plan income that is not excluded from WI income under a separate provision. This is pro-rated for part-year residents. Non-residents do not qualify.
Credit Card & Sales Taxes
If you charge a fee for the use of a credit card, that fee is subject to sales tax if the underlying sale would be subject to sales tax.
Qualified Vehicle Loan Interest Deduction
For tax years beginning after December 31, 2024 and before January 1, 2029, taxpayers can deduct interest to purchase a qualified vehicle. The maximum deduction is $10,000 and income phaseouts for modified adjusted gross income above $100,000 (single) and $200,000 (joint) apply. Loan must originate after December 31, 2024 for a new, personal use vehicle. Vehicle must be qualified, meaning weight less than 14,000 pounds with final assembly in the United States. NHTSA has a feature on their website where you can enter the automobile’s VIN, and it will tell you where final assembly took place.
State and Local Tax Deduction Limitation
Limitation increased to $40,000. A 30% phase out will begin for taxpayers with modified adjusted gross income over $500,000. Practical Considerations: 1) Instead of using the standard deduction, which has been the case in the last several years, itemized deductions could be higher again. So even though we have always continued to need charitable contributions, and medical information as it may have applied to Wisconsin, now it could likely apply again in Federal. 2) Some taxpayers can go back to bunching itemized deductions. For most this means paying real estate taxes and charitable contributions twice in one year so itemized deductions apply and then skipping the next year, so the standard deduction applies. For RE Taxes, you accomplish this by paying in January and July as scheduled and then the full next year bill in December. But be careful, you lose the $300 RE Tax Credit in WI if you do this, so the bunching must make up for that loss. For charitable contributions, you make payment in December for the next year and typically let the charity know that that is a contribution for the following year.
New Charitable Deduction
For those that do not itemize deductions, starting in tax year 2026 you will have the ability to deduct up to $1,000 (single) or $2,000 (married filing joint) in charitable contributions. The contribution must be cash and to a public charity. GoFundMe campaigns are not a public charity; those are a gift to the recipient of the funds.
Tax on Tips
Up to $25,000 of qualified tips will be tax free from 2025-2028. The deduction will be reduced by $100 for every $1,000 of MAGI over $150,000 (single) and $300,000 (joint). Qualified Tips are cash tips received in a business which customarily and regularly received tips on or before 12/31/2024. The tips must be paid voluntarily without any consequence in the event of non-payment. This brings into question whether or not the standard application of a “service fee” of 15% or 20% for groups of six or eight or more legally qualifies as a tip in this case. Most do not believe that those are qualified tips thus creating a nightmare from a compliance standpoint. In August the IRS published a list of 68 occupations that it will recognize as ordinarily receiving tips for the tips deduction. Your occupation must be on that list in order to take the deduction. This is to prevent industries that do not normally receive tips from changing the way they do business and charging $20 for services rendered with a “voluntary (wink wink)” tip of $150. The deduction is income tax only; you still pay social security tax on the tips.
No Tax on Overtime
You will be able to deduct up to $12,500 (single) and $25,000 (joint) for qualified overtime compensation. The deduction will be limited by $100 for every $1,000 of income over $150,000 (single) and $300,000 (joint). Overtime is defined as only the extra ½ of time and a half for overtime. For 2025 if you have overtime, you must provide that number to us. Employers are not required to report that number in 2025. Any reasonable method to calculate it will be accepted for 2025.
Gain from Qualified Farmland Property
Gain on the sale of qualified farmland property may be elected to be paid over 4 years. Qualified farmland property is property that was used by the taxpayer as a farm or leased to a farmed during substantially all of a 10-year period ending on the date of sale.
Health Insurance and ACA Subsidies
The Covid expansion of the premium tax credit no longer applies for tax years after December 31, 2025. Obamacare (or marketplace insurance) provides a premium tax credit for health insurance. The premium tax credit is a government payment on your behalf to the insurance company for part of the health care premium. The original premium tax credits were available to anyone who had a marketplace insurance policy and had income below 400% of the Federal poverty limit. For a household of two that limit was $21,150 in 2025, so four times that is $84,600. If your income was over $84,600 for a household of two, you did not get any government assistance towards the premium. You had to pay the full amount. During Covid that limit was changed from 400% of the Federal poverty limit to 8% of your adjusted gross income. This meant you would not pay more than 8% of your adjusted gross income for health insurance. Anything over that amount the government would pay on your behalf. That 8% limit is now gone and we are back to the straight 400% of Federal poverty limit.
Practical Pointer:
What this means for our clients is we are back to the “cliff” that we had to navigate prior to the 8% rule. If your income is $1 over the 400% Federal poverty limit for your household size, you will have to pay back 100% of any premium tax credits you received that year. When this rule was in place prior to the Covid adjustment, we saw paybacks of up to more than $10,000, for very small amounts over the 400% income limit. This means if you are receiving premium tax credits you must monitor your income very very carefully and if you have any surprises, please let us know immediately as there are a few things that can be done to lower income, but if you wait too long those options are lost. Some of those options are lost on December 31st of the tax year and others on the April 15th filing date.
Making Tax Payments Online
IRS
Wisconsin Department of Revenue
The IRS has been ordered to go paperless. At this time, we do not have good guidance as to whether they will still accept paper checks. If you are able, we strongly encourage you to pay online. With staffing cuts, do everything you can to avoid having any issues with the IRS at this time. One way to do that would be making online payments on your account.
First Option:
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Visit https://www.irs.gov
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On the main page, click on Make A Payment
Options for paying are:-
From your bank account directly
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Pay by debit card, credit card or digital wallet
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Processing fees will apply to the debit card, credit card or digital wallet.
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Second Option:
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Visit https://www.irs.gov/payments/online-account-for-individuals
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Sign In or Create An Account
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If you are creating an account, you will need to have a Photo ID ready and be prepared for identity verification. The benefit to this method is you will have an IRS account in your name and will be able to access tax records, view and make payments, view or create payment plans, view balances, manage profile, and authorizations.
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We believe everyone should set up their own individual IRS account so that when questions arise, they can access this information, but if you need to just make a payment and do it quickly, the first option works just fine.
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Chose “Personal My Tax Account”
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This will take you to an information page about the My Tax Account program.
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Visit https://tap.revenue.wi.gov/mta/_/ to get to the My Tax Account main page
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Here you have the option of signing up for your own My Tax Account page, where you can do all the things listed on that page. This is very similar to the IRS site and allows you to view a lot of information about your account.
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Also, under “Additional Services” is “Make / Cancel Payments”
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Click that link and you can make a one-time fast payment to the WDR without signing up for My Tax Account.
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As with the IRS site, we believe everyone should sign up for the WDR My Tax Account as it will allow you greater access to the information the WDR has on your account.​​
Filing Requirements
Presented below are the filing requirements for Federal and Wisconsin Tax returns. If your income is below these numbers, you do not have a filing requirement. If you collect social security the computation is a bit more complicated but basically will compare your income plus ½ of the social security against a base amount, if over you have a filing requirement. This is presented as we will start charging a minimum fee to determine whether you have a filing requirement.
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Federal
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Single filing status:
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$15,750 if under age 65
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$17,750 if age 65 or older
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Married filing jointly:
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$31,500 if both spouses under age 65
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$33,100 if one spouse under age 65 and one age 65 or older
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$34,700 if both spouses age 65 or older
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Married filing separately — $5 for all ages
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Head of household:
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$23,625 if under age 65
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$25,625 if age 65 or older
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Qualifying widow(er) with dependent child:
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$31,500 if under age 65
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$33,100 if age 65 or older
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Single Dependent
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Unearned Income over $1,300
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Earned Income over $15,750
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Earned income of $15,750 plus $450 of unearned income
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Anyone with earnings from SE of at least $400 must file
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Anyone with advance payments of premium tax credit. Should have received a Form 1095-A showing the amount of the advanced payments. If not it is available on the marketplace insurance website.
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There are other obscure requirements to file or reasons you would want to besides above. The above are the general requirements.
Social Security
You must determine combined income when social security is present. Combined income is your AGI plus Nontaxable interest plus ½ of the social security benefits. If this is between $25,000 and $34,000 single or $32,000 and $44,000 joint, you likely have a filing requirement.
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Wisconsin
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Single filing status:
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$13,930 if under age 65
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$14,180 if age 65 or older
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Married filing jointly:
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$25,890 if both spouses under age 65
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$26,140 if one spouse under age 65 and one age 65 or older
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$26,390 if both spouses age 65 or older
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Married filing separately:
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$12,330 under age 65
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$12,580 age 65 or older
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Head of household:
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$17,790 if under age 65
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$18,040 if age 65 or older
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Single Dependent
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You have gross income of more than $1,300 and it includes at least $451 of unearned (non-wage) income, or
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You have gross income (total unearned income and earned income combined) of more than:
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$13,230 if single
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$24,490 if married filing jointly
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$11,630 if married filing separately
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$17,090 if head of household
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Non-Resident
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$2,000 gross income or more