EPISODE · May 7, 2019
Money Talks: Spring Cleaning
from Money Talks · host MPB Think Radio
You've got 11 months before the next tax day. What can you do to make it easier on yourself?How long do you need to keep what paper? It's time for Financial Spring Cleaning. Listen to the show to learn what you should do about your retirement accounts, insurance, beneficiary information, debts, and automated payments.It's time to evaluate your tax withholding, charitable giving, and scheduled medical procedures. Keep good records for yourself and your family for emergencies, disasters, or in case of death. Keep Sales Receipts until warranty expires or can no longer return or exchangeWhat to keep for 1 month: ATM Printouts (When you balance your checkbook each month throw out the ATM receipts)What to keep for 1 year:Paycheck StubsUtility BillsCancelled ChecksCredit Card ReceiptsBank StatementsQuarterly Investment StatementsWhat to keep for 3 yearsIncome Tax Returns (Please keep in mind that you can be audited by the IRS for no reason up to three years after you filed a tax return. If you omit 25% of your gross income that goes up to 6 years and if you don't file a tax return at all, there is no statute of limitations.)Medical Bills and Cancelled Insurance PoliciesRecords of Selling a HouseRecords of Selling a StockReceipts, Cancelled Checks and other Documents that Support Income or a Deduction on your Tax ReturnAnnual Investment StatementWhat to keep for 7 years: Records of Satisfied LoansWhat to hold while active:ContractsInsurance DocumentsStock CertificatesProperty RecordsStock RecordsRecords of Pensions and Retirement PlansProperty Tax Records Disputed BillsHome Improvement RecordsKeep ForeverMarriage LicensesBirth CertificatesWillsAdoption PapersDeath CertificatesRecords of Paid Mortgages*These documents should be kept in a very safe place, like a safety deposit box. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
What this episode covers
You've got 11 months before the next tax day. What can you do to make it easier on yourself?How long do you need to keep what paper? It's time for Financial Spring Cleaning. Listen to the show to learn what you should do about your retirement accounts, insurance, beneficiary information, debts, and automated payments.It's time to evaluate your tax withholding, charitable giving, and scheduled medical procedures. Keep good records for yourself and your family for emergencies, disasters, or in case of death. Keep Sales Receipts until warranty expires or can no longer return or exchangeWhat to keep for 1 month: ATM Printouts (When you balance your checkbook each month throw out the ATM receipts)What to keep for 1 year:Paycheck StubsUtility BillsCancelled ChecksCredit Card ReceiptsBank StatementsQuarterly Investment StatementsWhat to keep for 3 yearsIncome Tax Returns (Please keep in mind that you can be audited by the IRS for no reason up to three years after you filed a tax return. If you omit 25% of your gross income that goes up to 6 years and if you don't file a tax return at all, there is no statute of limitations.)Medical Bills and Cancelled Insurance PoliciesRecords of Selling a HouseRecords of Selling a StockReceipts, Cancelled Checks and other Documents that Support Income or a Deduction on your Tax ReturnAnnual Investment StatementWhat to keep for 7 years: Records of Satisfied LoansWhat to hold while active:ContractsInsurance DocumentsStock CertificatesProperty RecordsStock RecordsRecords of Pensions and Retirement PlansProperty Tax Records Disputed BillsHome Improvement RecordsKeep ForeverMarriage LicensesBirth CertificatesWillsAdoption PapersDeath CertificatesRecords of Paid Mortgages*These documents should be kept in a very safe place, like a safety deposit box. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
NOW PLAYING
Money Talks: Spring Cleaning
No transcript for this episode yet
Similar Episodes
Apr 29, 2025 ·12m
Apr 27, 2025 ·11m
Apr 24, 2025 ·11m
Apr 22, 2025 ·14m