The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act is posing a $3.4 trillion question to financial advisors, tax professionals and their clients: Which expiring provisions will remain law after 2025?
That's the cost of extending every one of the sunsetting rules around estates, the higher standardized deduction, lower income brackets,
The uncertainty of the timeline presents another layer of challenges and opportunities from the legislation that one expert has described as "
As often happens in wealth management, a political issue facing the federal government is playing out at tax and advisory firms as a matter involving practice management and planning strategies for maximizing potential savings while avoiding risk. Financial Planning compiled the below list of 26 tips for review before 2026 after speaking with the following 10 professionals:
- Garrett Watson, senior policy analyst and modeling manager for the
Tax Foundation , another nonprofit, nonpartisan policy research organization - Liting Chuang, a certified public accountant who's the director of tax planning for Menlo Park, California-based
Bordeaux Wealth Advisors - Adrienne Davis, a CPA and certified financial planner with Philadelphia-based
Zenith Wealth Partners - Amy Irvine, an enrolled agent and CPA who's the founder of Corning, New York-based
Rooted Planning Group - Rupa Pereira, an EA and founder of Apex, North Carolina-based
FWJ Planning - Robert Keebler, a CPA and partner with Green Bay, Wisconsin-based
Keebler & Associates - Corey Hulstein, a CPA who's the director of tax for Lenexa, Kansas-based
Modern Wealth Management - Matthew Foster, a CFP and juris doctor who's a senior wealth advisor in the New York office of
The Colony Group - Elliott Brack, managing director of tax services for Los Angeles-based
Manhattan West - Jarot Scarbrough, a JD who is a manager in the Tax Advisory Services Department of CPA firm
Anglin Reichmann Armstrong
Scroll down the slideshow to see their tips on the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. For a look at the most important year-end tax questions,