Contact: Jennifer Nimmo
800.428.0272, ext. 652 jnimmo@tscpa.net
NEW
YEAR, NEW FINANCIAL RECORDS
Texas CPAs Explain What to Keep and For How Long
DALLAS — Personal financial records
are a necessary part of our lives, but it’s easy
to get overwhelmed by the volume of papers that can accumulate.
According to the Texas Society of Certified Public Accountants,
January is an excellent time to get your financial records
in order. Texas CPAs offer the following advice to help
you determine what you should keep and what you should
purge from your files.
PERMANENT RECORDS
Personal papers you should safeguard for your family include
birth certificates, Social Security cards, marriage certificates,
divorce decrees, insurance policies, Veteran’s discharge
papers, wills, living wills and powers of attorney, real
estate deeds and mortgages, automobile titles and important
contracts. These and other permanent records that are
difficult to replace should be kept indefinitely, preferably
in a safe deposit box. You’ll need them to reestablish
your financial life in the event of a fire, theft or other
disaster.
TAX RECORDS
What often determines the records you need to keep - and
for how long – is whether they are related to your
tax return. You should save tax-related documents, such
as receipts that support your deductions, a minimum of
three years after you file your original return. Under
normal circumstances, the IRS has three years from the
date you file to audit you.
If you omit an amount in excess of 25 percent of the amount
of gross income stated in your tax return, the statute
of limitations extends to six years. There is no time
limit if you failed to file a return or filed a fraudulent
return.
CHECKING ACCOUNT
AND CREDIT CARD STATEMENTS
Once you have reconciled your checking account statement,
you may discard it, unless it shows deductible expenses.
If so, you should retain your statements and canceled
checks for at least three years after you file. The same
holds true for credit card statements. You can discard
bank deposit slips and ATM receipts after you verify the
transactions on your statement.
INVESTMENT ACCOUNT
STATEMENTS
Monthly or quarterly investment statements can be shredded
once you get your year-end statement and confirm that
it accurately recaps your transactions for the year. Keep
trade confirmations, showing the purchase and sale of
mutual funds and stocks. These records should be held
for three years after you report the capital gain or loss
on your tax return.
RETIREMENT PLAN STATEMENTS
Keep your quarterly statements from your retirement plans
until you receive your annual summary. Once you’ve
compared the information, you can toss the quarterly statements.
If you make nondeductible IRA contributions, keep the
records to prove your cost basis when it comes to receiving
distributions.
PAY STUBS
Keep pay stubs until you’ve reconciled the totals
with your Form W-2. If the amounts match, you can destroy
them.
UTILITY BILLS
Unless you need them to support the home office deduction,
you can generally dispose of utility, phone and cable
bills once you have paid them.
HOME IMPROVEMENT
RECORDS
Even though most home sale gains may be tax-free, it’s
still a good idea to hold onto your original purchase
contract and receipts for major home improvements. You
could potentially face a tax bill should you need to sell
a home you have lived in for less than two years, or if
the sale of your home results in a gain of more than $500,000
for joint filers ($250,000 for single filers).
RECEIPTS AND WARRANTIES
Receipts for major purchases and warranties should be
kept for as long as you own the items. Receipts can be
useful in proving the value of property that is lost or
damaged.
CHECK WITH YOUR CPA
CPAs agree that you should review your financial records
at least once a year and carefully discard what is no
longer necessary or relevant. With identity theft on the
rise, the best advice is to invest in a paper shredder
and use it to destroy all documents with personal identifying
information.
PERSONAL FINANCE
INFORMATION
For more information about personal finance issues, visit
www.ValueYourMoney.org.
While there, sign up to receive a free monthly electronic
newsletter with personal finance tips on variety of topics.
ABOUT TSCPA
TSCPA (http://www.tscpa.org) is a nonprofit, voluntary,
professional organization representing Texas CPAs. The
society has 20 local chapters statewide and has 27,000
members, one of the largest in-state memberships of any
state CPA society in the United States. TSCPA is committed
to serving the public interest with programs that advance
the highest standards of ethics and practice within the
CPA profession.
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