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Internal Revenue Service (IRS) 1040 Individual Income Tax forms
Daniel Acker / Bloomberg
Internal Revenue Service (IRS) 1040 Individual Income Tax forms
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This year, more than in most years, filing your taxes may appear especially daunting because there have been a lot of changes to the tax code. Fortunately, you can ignore most of them when figuring out your 2017 taxes.

However, Congress did make changes that do affect last year’s taxes when it extended retroactively some key benefits that had expired. Thus, if you were worried that you could no longer deduct your mortgage insurance premiums or claim a credit for non-business energy property because those provisions had expired, you can relax.

Because of these late changes to the tax code, this may be the one year where it made sense to wait to file your taxes, especially if you delayed because you thought you weren’t getting a refund. That said, make sure to claim all available tax breaks before you push the send button and whisk your electronic return off to the IRS.

Don’t move too quickly – because April 15 is a Sunday and April 16 is a holiday for Emancipation Day in the District of Columbia, you have two extra days to file this year – taxes aren’t due until April 17.

Here are some tax breaks that you may not know about:

1. Itemize your deductions instead of taking the standard deduction. If you take the standard deduction in your hurry to get your tax return done, you might miss some key deductions.

UCLA economist Youssef Benzarti found that taxpayers left an average of $644 “on the table” by choosing the standard deduction instead of itemizing their deductions.

If you think your deductions exceed the $6,350 standard deduction for individuals, or $12,700 for married couples filing jointly, and you have some spare time, then go ahead and itemize. This may be the last time you have to incur the pain of finding those receipts because the tax bill increased the standard deduction for individuals to $12,000 and for married couples filing jointly to $24,000 for next year and eliminates or scales back some itemized deductions.

For this year, itemizing may still matter. The main categories to look at are state and local sales, income or property taxes, medical and dental expenses, mortgage interest you paid, charitable contributions, casualty and theft losses (including losses in federally declared disaster areas), and job and miscellaneous expenses, tax preparation fees and gambling losses (yes, you can deduct the cost of those losing bingo, lottery and raffle tickets that you bought, but only if the losses exceed your winnings).

You may deduct either the state and local general sales taxes or the state and local income tax, but not both. You may also be able to deduct state and local taxes on your personal property (e.g., your car or boat) under certain conditions.

As has been widely noted, the 2017 tax bill limits the deduction for state and local sales, income, real estate or property taxes to just $10,000 starting next year. This means that if you pay lots of property taxes, for example, you won’t get much of a tax break going forward. However, for your 2017 tax return, if you happened to prepay your 2018 real estate or personal property taxes in 2017, the IRS’s latest guidance says that you may be able to deduct the prepaid amount on your 2017 taxes, but only if the 2018 taxes were assessed last year.

Remember, however, that you can’t just claim these expenses. You have to keep canceled checks, financial statements, receipts and any other evidence to prove that you are entitled to these tax breaks.

If you need time to figure out whether you benefit from all of these tax breaks, then you should ask the IRS for a six-month extension to file. A filing extension, however, doesn’t extend the time you have to pay your taxes. You still have to pay your estimated taxes by April 17 to avoid being penalized even though you’ll have until October to find all the paperwork needed to file your return.

Also, some of these items fall under the rule that you can only deduct them if they exceed 2 percent of your adjusted gross income. Examples are for job search costs, union dues, tax preparation fees and fees paid to keep a safe deposit box (these fees aren’t deductible if all you’ve put in there is your jewelry or other personal items).

IRS publication 529 explains it all.

While most of the changes in the 2017 tax act don’t affect your 2017 tax calculations, the act did make one important change for people with medical expenses. Under the old law, you could deduct medical costs only if they were more than 10 percent of your adjusted gross income (7.5 percent if you were 65 or older) and only the amount that’s above that threshold.

The law reduces the limit to 7.5 percent. You can deduct basic medical costs, such as doctor visits, deductibles and your co-pay, and also less common costs, such as the cost to get to the doctor or to the pharmacy to pick up your medicine. Don’t be too aggressive with this deduction. There’s a long list of expenses that you can’t deduct, such as funeral expenses, over-the-counter medicines, toothpaste and most cosmetic surgery.

If you searched for a job last year in your existing field, then you may be entitled to deduct expenses like employment agency fees, amounts spent preparing and mailing your resume, and travel expenses related to the job hunt. As with all these expenses, you can deduct them only if your employer doesn’t pay them for you.

As a reminder, don’t be confused by changes, such as the overall limit on state and local tax deductions or the reduction in the mortgage interest deduction that Congress passed in December. These limits don’t matter until you file your taxes next year. And, some of them may not matter at all. The limitation on the mortgage interest deduction only applies to mortgages entered into after Dec. 14, 2017.

2. Your children may entitle you to education and dependent child tax benefits.

The main education benefits come from the American opportunity tax credit – this credit can be as high as $2,500 for qualified education expenses for each eligible student and is partially refundable – and the nonrefundable lifetime learning credit that can go up to $2,000 per tax return. You can’t double dip, however. Check out the IRS’s interactive tax assistant to find out whether you are eligible for these education credits.

You may also be able to cut your tax bill if you paid interest on a student loan,?paid tuition or fees or participated in a qualified tuition program, also known as a “529 plan.” (Note: Congress considered eliminating the student loan interest deduction but, instead, kept it through 2025.) While contributions to 529 plans aren’t tax deductible, you don’t pay tax on accumulated earnings and, as long as any funds you withdraw go toward qualified college expenses, they’re not taxable either.

You need to be careful with your 529 plan and not withdraw more than you paid for your child’s qualified higher education expenses. If you do, you will have to pay taxes and a penalty. Likewise, you can’t claim expenses for the 529 plan if you’ve already used them for the other education credits.

This means that even if your children are still in diapers, if you expect them to go to college, you should open a 529 account now. The child tax credit provides similar benefits. Families can obtain a credit up to $1,000 for each dependent child under age 17. This credit is partially refundable and phases out as income increases.

The 2017 tax bill significantly changed the education and child tax credits, so make sure to check your eligibility for these credits when you file your taxes next year.

3. Are you eligible for specific credits, such as the earned income tax credit or the retirement savings contribution credit?

The earned income credit is designed to encourage work and to offset taxes for low-income workers. It’s also refundable so that if the credit is greater than your tax liability, you’ll get money back from the IRS. These provisions are why the EITC has bipartisan support and is in no danger of being repealed. According to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, the average EITC was just over $3,100 for a family with children in tax year 2015.

You should already know that you have until April 17 to make your tax-deductible IRA contribution for 2017. What you might not know is that if you make a contribution to an IRS-approved retirement plan, which includes not just IRAs but also self-employed plans, and your income is low enough (the benefit is greater the smaller your income), then you are eligible for up to $1,000 in the retirement saver’s credit. (You can get this credit even if the only retirement savings contribution you made was to your employer-sponsored 401(k)). You won’t get a refund if the credit is more than your taxes due and any credit is reduced by distributions you have received, but claiming this credit doesn’t affect your ability to deduct your retirement plan contributions.

4. Have you taken advantage of all available state and local tax breaks? In the District of Columbia, for example, if you meet the income test, you are entitled to a homeowner and renter property tax credit. This Schedule H credit has been around essentially unchanged since 1977, according to the DC Fiscal Policy Institute. People with no more than $40,000 in income may claim a $1,000 credit. Like the EITC, this credit is refundable if it’s greater than the taxes you owe.

Are you from one of the 24 states plus New York City and the District of Columbia that has an EITC? Depending on your income level and total tax bill, these credits will reduce your tax bill dollar for dollar. The EITC is real money. For example, the average D.C. EITC was nearly $1,000 in tax year 2015. Some of the state EITCs, like the federal EITC, give you money back if the credit exceeds your tax liability.

5. If you haven’t yet filed your 2014 tax return, do it before April 17.

Maybe you didn’t file a return that year because you didn’t earn enough money to have to file a return. However, you might have had taxes withheld from your earnings, but you can get this money back only if you file a return and only if you file it within three years of when it was due. This means that if you haven’t yet filed your 2014 tax return and you are entitled to a tax refund, then you must file that 2014 return before April 17.

The IRS has more than $1.1 billion in unclaimed tax refunds that it’s ready to pay out, but only if the taxpayer claims them. As with the EITC, these unclaimed refunds are real money. The median amount owed but unclaimed is almost $850. Unfortunately, it’s too late to file your 2014 returns electronically, so if you are eligible for a refund from your 2014 returns, sharpen your pencil and get that return in the mail by midnight April 17.