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Top 7 Reasons to File Your Taxes Electronically

Posted by Jacquelyn Rioux

Did you know that efiling (filing your taxes electronically) has been around for 25 years? In 1986, five tax preparers from various U.S. cities efiled 25,000 tax returns. In 2011, over 79% of all individual income tax returns were efiled. That’s over 100 million people!

Efiling is more popular than ever. In fact, the IRS highly recommends that you efile your tax returns. If you are not among the two-thirds of Americans who already efile tax returns, here are the top 7 reasons that you should choose efiling over traditional filing:

Efiling Is Easier

You don’t need previous knowledge of complicated tax laws to efile. All you have to do is answer a few easy-to-understand questions during a simple online interview, which is often part of the tax software. The software will make sure you do not miss any important information, such as tax credits and deductions.

Efiling Is Faster

If you efile, the IRS receives your tax return instantly, and you’ll generally receive a confirmation of acceptance or rejection within 48 hours. You can receive your tax refund in half the time it would have taken if you filed a paper return. With a direct deposit, it can take as little as eight days if the IRS accepts your return.

Efiling Is Accurate

According to the IRS, efile returns have a 1% error rate, while paper returns have an error rate of 20%. Efile returns also eliminate the possibility of transcription errors that sometimes occur with paper returns, since an IRS employee will not have to enter your data into the computer system by hand.

Efiling Is Secure

With efiling, there is nothing getting lost, damaged, or stolen in the mail. You can confidently submit your tax return to the IRS and keep your personal information safe.

Efiling Is Convenient

The IRS says that at the IRS (and most U.S. states), you can file early and pay any balances due before tax season in April. You can also check your tax return and tax refund status online, from anywhere and at any time throughout the year.

Efiling Is Good for the Environment

Efiling eliminates endless printing of forms that leads to wasting paper and ink. You don’t have to drive to the post office either-do everything at home and decrease carbon monoxide fumes!

Efiling Is a Good Way to Avoid Penalties

Even if you cannot afford to pay all of your taxes by the April deadline, you should still efile your tax return to avoid penalties for not filing on time. This includes interest charges that could increase your tax bill by 25% or more.

Why do you prefer efiling over traditional tax return filing? Share your comments below!

Bio: Jacquelyn works and writes for efile.com, a company that provides an online platform for tax return preparation and secure electronic filing. They aspire to be a less expensive and more user-friendly alternative to the big online tax companies, with all of the same capabilities and more benefits.

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Additional Ways to Save Money

8 Hidden Ways To Save Money On A Daily Basis

Posted by Andrianes Pinantoan

Are you a frugality maestro looking for even more ways to save money? As an enthusiast, it amazes me that there are always parts of my life I can trim expenses from. Without further ado, here are the 8 ways that I find a lot of people miss:

1. Opportunity Cost

The opportunity cost of an action is the potential foregone benefit you could have had if you took the alternative. A lot of people don’t consider the opportunity cost of a so-called “frugal” activity.

For example, I often read personal finance “gurus” recommend that people cook their own food. Yes, it saves a lot of money but do it only if you like cooking! Cooking your own food – especially if you want it to taste good and you want it healthy – takes time… time that you could’ve spent doing something else. For most people, that time could’ve been spent freelancing, and thus make more money than they could save from cooking their own food.

If you don’t feel like freelancing outside of a full time job, you can always spend more time with your family, or pursuing a hobby – so that missed opportunity is the opportunity cost of cooking your own food.

This doesn’t apply to everyone, of course. It assumes you want to do something else with your time. It is, nonetheless, important for you to consider the opportunity cost of every “how to save money” advice you get.

2. Waste

Did you know that as a country, America throws away up to 50% of their food? That’s about 51.8 million tons of food – and it’s costing the country approximately $1 billion just to dispose of it. Our surplus alone, the U.N. World Food Programme said, could have satisfied “every empty stomach” in Africa.

The easiest way I know of to save money, without changing your lifestyle or depriving yourself, is to simply eliminate food waste. There are techniques that I used to do that. First, always take away your left-overs in a restaurant and reheat it later. Second, if I plan to cook or throw a party, I plan for exactly how many people I need to prepare for.

If I need a backup, “just in case”, I get something that can be stored if they are not used. Like a frozen lasagna or pizza.


3. Supermarket Tricks

Supermarkets are businesses. As such, they are designed to extract as much money out of you as possible. For example, you’ll notice that staples like milk are always to the back of the store. They do that because they want you, the customers, to walk through isles of other higher-margin products before you can reach for what you want. The more products you are exposed to, of course, the higher the chances you’ll buy more unnecessary stuff like a bag of chocolates.

This is why it’s crucial that you make a list of what you need. Eat a nice filling lunch, leave your kids at home, THEN drop by the supermarket with your list. If that doesn’t work, try reducing your supermarket trips from twice a week to once every two weeks. You’ll see a marked difference in your grocery spending immediately.

4. Store Brands

Multiple studies have shown that there are absolutely no difference in quality between store brand and premium brand products in most industries. In fact, many of them come from the same producer.

The premium you’re paying for branded goods are going towards the marketing dollars they spent to get you to believe it’s really superior. Unless store brands taste significantly different in blind taste tests for you, keep to it.

5. Electricity

Electricity is one of those things that people never consider when they want to save money. There’s a reason for that: because you assume it’s negligible. But it’s not true at all. According to the Green Blogger, the average American family spends about $1400 a year on electricity alone.

The good news is it’s easy to save on electricity. Reducing your water heater from 140 degrees to 120 degrees – which is negligible, temperature-wise – will save up to 10% of your heating cost. And if your phone, laptops, digital cameras aren’t charging, plug it out. Americans spend about 8% of our electric bills simply because they didn’t plug their electronics out when they finish recharging.

Last, heat and cool your house sparingly because they are responsible for about 50% to 70% of your electricity bill.

 

6. Banking

You’ve probably read about all the ways about how banks rip their customers off, so I won’t go there. My only advice here is this: bank loyalty is dead. If anything, new customers are always treasured more than loyal ones, what with the special rates offers and other bonuses. CEOs are incentivized for the short-term, so they always choose short-term tactics to increase their bonuses.

So don’t get lazy with switching banks! Compare credit card offers, savings accounts and even home loans at least once a year. The larger your debt, the more you can save in interests by actively switching and making the banks compete with each other.

7. Exercise

Want a surefire way to save at least $50 a month by tomorrow? Ditch your gym membership. A gym membership is useless unless you want to build your body. Everything else can be done in the comfort of your own home, or in the great outdoors.

For example, doing body exercises like push ups, lunges, pull ups, crunches, skipping, etc, are great ways to tone your body and lose weight. If that’s not enough, go for a quick walk/jog around town.

8. Taxes

You don’t do taxes on a daily basis but you sure are getting taxed every single day you’re making money. So it puzzles me why people only get busy with their taxes at the end of the financial year.

For example, I intentionally attend educational conferences throughout the year so I can then claim the expenses against my income. I also often work from home so I can claim part of my home office expense. And if you’re unemployed, make sure you keep track of your job-hunting expenses – they can be claimed in the U.S.

Note that I am not an accountant so make sure you consult with one before you make any tax decisions.

This guest blog is written by Andrianes Pinantoan, a personal finance enthusiast hailing from personal finance sites that provide tips on how to save money and budgeting spreadsheet. He finds it weird to write in third person so he’s going to stop now.

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Find The Best Checking Accounts

FindTheBest Tip: Checking Accounts

Posted by Kyle Espinola

In my last post I discussed selecting a savings account. Today I’d like to apply the same informative structure to checking accounts. Namely I’ll discuss what criteria make up a quality checking account, and recommend some potential options. Remember that everyone has a different best so make sure to do your research, and be an informed consumer.

Again lets start with a reflection. Think of how you currently spend your money. When are you paying your bills? What are your monthly spending habits? Where do you want to be in 5, 10, and 15 years? Don’t ever make a financial decision without first clearly and honestly analyzing your spending tendencies.

Now that you’ve reflected lets dive into the metrics you need to consider in order to find the best checking account for your needs:

Account Type: Interest or Non-Interest? With interest checking your money can grow but is still accessible. The only problem is interest checking accounts generally impose minimum balance requirements and limit your transfers per month. Honestly if your seeking to grow your money there are better means than a checking account, such as a savings account, CDs, stock, etc. I use my checking to hold my locked in monthly expenses with a little buffer. Any extra money goes into savings, or a more profitable investment.

Bank Type: Internet or Branch? Again the Internet is becoming a popular medium for finance because it reduces physical overhead costs. Since the online banks need not worry about maintaining branch locations they can pass the savings along to you in the form of higher interest rates and reduced fees. Managing your account online may take some getting used to, but don’t count the option out as you shop around.

Interest Rate (APY) is the same as the APY for a savings account, however it is generally a much lower rate. Like I mentioned earlier your checking account isn’t the vehicle by which you should grow your money. An APY of 0% is fine for a checking account because funds are variable in a checking account, meaning there are more transactions relative to a savings account. Your APY won’t have any significant impact unless you let the money sit and grow interest in a checking account.

Fees, Watch Out! The uproar over charging a fee for debt card use has recently been resolved. The verdict? Banks decided not to charge debit card fees. However, there are a plethora of other fees you need to look out for when researching checking accounts. Many fees are waived by meeting certain requirements, so make sure to ask a lot of questions and find out how you can waive fees.

Finally, I’ll leave you with some checking accounts to consider. Remember though that every person has a different best, so always do your research (I can’t stress it enough):

Byline: Post provided by Kyle Espinola, unbiased data-driven platform designed to help you find the best of anything from a credit card to section 8 housing.

 

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