Financial Records
The following, extracted in part, from the Winter edition of FDIC Consumer News (2010/2011 received March 21, 2011, the day following the beginning of Spring—but just in time for Taxes). In view of it being “Tax Time” it is also a reminder of the disposition of personal and other records related to financial matter; this may be a timely subject to share with you.
Every year at tax time, I destroy such records as a practice from long ago. This information made me feel confident that what I’ve been doing is right on target. I must have learned it many years ago,it just comes naturally. You may find something useful here, as I did.
Bank statements, credit card bills, canceled checks and other documents can be useful for tax purposes, as proof of a transaction or payment, or for other reasons. But how long should you keep them? Read on:
FDIC Consumer News can’t tell you when it’s safe to throw away financial documents. One thing to remember is that federal tax rules require you to have receipts and other records that support items on a return for as long as the IRS can assess you additional tax. “In very general terms, because the IRS has about six years to assess additional tax if you under-reported your income by more than 25 percent, many tax advisors recommend holding all tax records for about seven years, building in extra time for any unforeseen delays in processing your return,” said Rick Cywinski, an FDIC tax policy manager. He also noted that the tax period is unlimited if the IRS suspects fraud.
With tax considerations in mind, here are suggestions that may be reasonable for many people: -
Credit card and bank account statements: Save those with no tax significance for about a year, but those with tax significance should be saved for seven years.
Canceled checks: Those unrelated to anything you claimed on your income tax form and not needed to show you’ve paid a bill or debt probably can be destroyed after you’ve verified that your bank statement is correct. But canceled checks that support your tax returns, such as charitable contributions or tax payments, probably should be held for seven years.
And, you may want to keep indefinitely any canceled checks and related receipts or documents for a home purchase or sale, renovations or other improvements to a property you own. But once a home has been sold and another seven years have passed, checks related to renovations or improvements can be destroyed.
You know, of course, that many banks no longer send cancelled check to you, although they may provide copies of the originals. “You can keep the copies of your tax-related checks if you get them from your bank, but if you don’t get copies with your statement, you have some options,” said Evelyn Manley, a Senior Consumer Affairs Specialist at the FDIC.
“The most conservative approach is to order copies of important checks soon after your statement arrives,” she said. “Another (option) is to keep the information on your bank statement to order copies if you’re audited in the future because, in general, banks that do not return original checks to customers are required to keep copies of checks for seven years.”
Deposit, ATM, credit card and debit card receipts: Save them until the transaction appears on your statement and you’ve verified that the information is accurate. You may make and exception for receipts for expensive items. If they are under warranty or you have to file an insurance claim, the receipt may be helpful.
CAUTION
If you are one of those confident people that transact your banking business electronically, be sure to “back up” your data.
As above, some data ought to be backed up. Other data, toss away. BUT before tossing any document that contains a Social Security number, bank account number or other personal information of any sort, it’s a smart person that will shred it to avoid becoming a victim of the increasing identity theft problem.
May you find this information worth your time—and useful.
Thanks for visiting. -- Bob Eph 5:1-17
Wednesday, March 23, 2011
Friday, March 11, 2011
Monday, March 7, 2011
This Picture is Worth A Trillion!
This just stopped me in my tracks… Unbelievable!
This picture is worth a trillion $$
THE MISSING PHOTO IS OF THE ELECTED OFFICIALS ASSEMBLED AND PLAYING CARDS AND
OTHER EVENTS seen on their computer monitors THAT HAS ABSOLUTELY NOTHING TO DO WITH THE "People's Business." I am so sorry for not being sufficiently capable and knowledgeable to wring the photo for you to see.
I was in the process of cutting and pasting when I realized the photo did not come along with the narrative that explained it. The best I can hope for is that you visualize what the report says.And the names of the people unknowingly captured flaunting the time that is suppose to be for serious budget business.
House Minority Leader Lawrence F. Cafero Jr., R-Norwalk, pictured standing, far right, speaks while colleagues Rep. Barbara Lambert, D-Milford and Rep. Jack F. Hennessy, D-Bridgeport, play solitaire Monday night as the House convened to vote on a new budget. (AP)
The guy sitting in the row in front of these two....he's on Facebook, and the guy behind Hennessy is checking out the baseball scores.
These are the folks that couldn't get the budget out by Oct. 1, and are about to control your health care, cap and trade, and the list goes on and on….
Should we buy them larger screen computers - or - a ticket home, permanently?
This is one of their 3-DAY WORK WEEKS that we all pay for (salary is about $179,000 per year).
We must keep an eye on these arrogant people. If these people represent you, you ought to have no second thoughts in carefully replacing them. No matter what we do, they'll have retirement income for life - another sad state of affairs that needs tending to.
Thanks for visiting. - Bob Prov. 10:14
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