Tax season brings both opportunities and challenges for your budget. A refund can accelerate your financial goals, while a tax bill can derail them. Either way, proper planning makes tax season less stressful and more financially productive.
This guide covers how to prepare for tax season, what to do with your refund (or how to handle a bill), and how to optimize your taxes for next year.
Preparing for Tax Season
Gather Your Documents
Collect everything you'll need:
- Income documents: W-2s, 1099s, investment statements
- Deduction records: Mortgage interest, charitable donations, medical expenses
- Business expenses: If self-employed, all business-related receipts
- Last year's return: For reference and carryover items
- ID information: Social Security numbers for you and dependents
Review Last Year's Return
Look for:
- Deductions you might have missed
- Changes in your situation that affect taxes
- Carryover items (capital losses, etc.)
Organize Throughout the Year
Use Expense Flow: All-in-One to track deductible expenses year-round:
- Create categories for tax-deductible expenses
- Scan and store receipts digitally
- Export data at tax time
What to Do with Your Tax Refund
The average tax refund is around $3,000. Here's how to use it wisely:
Priority Order
- Emergency fund: If you don't have 3-6 months expenses saved
- High-interest debt: Pay off credit cards (15-25% APR)
- Retirement: Contribute to IRA (deadline is tax day)
- Other debt: Student loans, car loans
- Sinking funds: Car maintenance, home repairs, annual expenses
- Goals: House down payment, vacation, education
The 80/20 Split
A balanced approach:
- 80%: Financial goals (debt, savings, investments)
- 20%: Something enjoyable (guilt-free)
This prevents the "refund as windfall" mentality while acknowledging you deserve some reward.
What NOT to Do
- Don't blow it all: A refund isn't free money — it's your money you overpaid
- Don't finance purchases: "I'll pay with my refund" leads to debt if refund is smaller than expected
- Don't ignore it: Have a plan before the money hits your account
Handling a Tax Bill
Owing taxes is stressful, but manageable with a plan:
If You Can Pay in Full
- Pay by the deadline to avoid penalties and interest
- Use savings if available (that's what it's for)
- Consider a 0% APR credit card if you can pay it off quickly
If You Can't Pay in Full
The IRS offers options:
- Short-term payment plan: Up to 180 days, no setup fee
- Installment agreement: Monthly payments over time
- Offer in compromise: Settle for less (rare, strict qualifications)
Important: File on time even if you can't pay. The failure-to-file penalty is much higher than failure-to-pay.
Adjust Your Budget
If you owe taxes:
- Cut discretionary spending temporarily
- Pause non-essential savings goals
- Look for extra income opportunities
- Adjust withholding to prevent next year's bill
Common Tax Deductions to Track
Track these expenses throughout the year:
For Everyone
- Charitable donations: Cash and non-cash contributions
- Medical expenses: If exceeding 7.5% of AGI
- State and local taxes: Up to $10,000 (SALT cap)
- Mortgage interest: On loans up to $750,000
- Student loan interest: Up to $2,500
For Self-Employed
- Home office: Dedicated workspace
- Business expenses: Supplies, software, equipment
- Vehicle expenses: Business mileage or actual costs
- Health insurance: Self-employed health insurance deduction
- Retirement contributions: SEP-IRA, Solo 401(k)
- Professional services: Accountant, lawyer fees
Track with Expense Flow
Create tax-specific categories in Expense Flow: All-in-One:
- Charitable Donations
- Medical Expenses
- Business Expenses (if self-employed)
- Home Office
- Business Mileage
At tax time, export the data for easy reference.
Optimize Your Withholding
A large refund means you gave the government an interest-free loan. A large bill means you underpaid. Neither is ideal.
Goal: Break Even
Ideally, you want to owe nothing and receive nothing (or a small refund). This keeps more money in your pocket throughout the year.
How to Adjust
- Use the IRS Tax Withholding Estimator
- Submit a new W-4 to your employer
- Adjust quarterly estimates if self-employed
When to Adjust
- After major life changes (marriage, kids, home purchase)
- After receiving a large refund or bill
- When income changes significantly
Maximize Tax-Advantaged Accounts
Before Tax Day
You can still contribute to these for the previous tax year:
- Traditional IRA: Deductible contributions reduce taxable income
- Roth IRA: No deduction, but tax-free growth
- HSA: If you have a high-deductible health plan
For Next Year
Maximize these accounts:
- 401(k): $23,000 limit (2024), plus $7,500 catch-up if 50+
- IRA: $7,000 limit (2024), plus $1,000 catch-up if 50+
- HSA: $4,150 individual / $8,300 family (2024)
- FSA: $3,200 (2024), use-it-or-lose-it
DIY vs Professional Tax Preparation
DIY (Tax Software) Works If:
- You have W-2 income only
- Standard deduction makes sense
- No complex investments or life changes
- You're comfortable with tax software
Consider a Professional If:
- Self-employed or business owner
- Complex investments (stock options, crypto, rental property)
- Major life changes (marriage, divorce, inheritance)
- Itemizing with many deductions
- Previous IRS issues
Frequently Asked Questions
Should I be happy about a big tax refund?
A refund means you overpaid taxes throughout the year — essentially giving the government an interest-free loan. While it feels like a windfall, you could have had that money in your paycheck all year. Consider adjusting withholding.
What's the deadline to contribute to an IRA for last year?
Tax Day (usually April 15). You can make IRA contributions for the previous tax year up until you file your return or the deadline, whichever comes first.
How do I track business expenses for taxes?
Use an expense tracking app like Expense Flow: All-in-One with categories matching tax deduction types. Scan receipts immediately. Export data at tax time. Keep records for 7 years.
What if I can't afford to pay my taxes?
File on time anyway — the penalty for not filing is much higher. Then set up a payment plan with the IRS. They offer short-term plans (180 days) and longer installment agreements. Don't ignore it — that makes things worse.
Is it worth itemizing deductions?
Only if your itemized deductions exceed the standard deduction ($14,600 single / $29,200 married filing jointly for 2024). Most people take the standard deduction. Run the numbers both ways to be sure.