Make money work for you!

  • Home
  • Personal Finance
  • Budgeting
  • Shopping
  • Taxes

6 New Ways Retirees Can Save on Taxes This Season

January 20, 2023 · Taxes
save
Photo by hareluya from Shutterstock

#5 Make more contributions to your retirement account in order to reduce the taxable income

If you are close to retirement age or you will be retiring later this year, it is a great idea to make more contributions to your retirement accounts before this tax season in order to reduce your taxable income. This means that if you have a 401(k), 403(b), or traditional IRA, you can easily cut down on the final sum you are going to get taxed on.

The contributions to these types of accounts are generally made with pre-tax dollars, so if you have some money and you add it as a contribution to either of those three savings accounts we mentioned, you will be reducing the final sum of your taxable income.

Not to mention, if you are over the age of 50, you can make what are called catch-up contributions (check your plan to see how they define it and what the limitations are), and thus you can reduce between $1,000 and $7,500 depending on the type of account. Look into what types of extra contributions you can make, and you will see how easy it is to save more money. After all, not only are you adding more money to your nest egg, but you are also spending less in taxes!

Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7

Share this article

Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Email

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Search

Latest Posts

  • check Social Security SSI $994 Payment for May 2026: Deposit Date, Eligibility, and Who Qualifies
  • tax deduction Bigger Refunds Ahead? What the New SALT Cap Means
  • Trump's Signature Is About to Appear on U.S. Dollar Bills — Here's What That Means
  • Drowning in $10,000+ of Credit Card Debt? Here’s the "No-Shame" Way Out in 2026
  • Social Security Alert: Up to $5,181 Hitting Accounts This Week
  • A senior couple reviews their household budget on a laptop in a bright, modern kitchen. Social Security's 2027 COLA Could Be the Smallest in Years
  • A person showing a digital discount coupon on their phone to a pharmacist at a bright, modern pharmacy counter. TrumpRx Is Here - But Will It Actually Lower Your Drug Costs?
  • A happy couple shopping with a full cart at a warehouse club in 2026. Top 10 Sam's Club Deals You Can't Ignore in 2026
  • A couple shopping for high-end deals at a modern warehouse store. 12 Costco Deals Shoppers Are Jumping on for 2026
  • A high-end desk setup with a Social Security card and a gold pen, representing presidential financial benefits. Is Trump on Social Security? A Look at Presidential Benefits

Newsletter

Get money-saving tips and personal finance advice delivered to your inbox.

Related Articles

tax breaks for retirees

Over 65? Check Out These 5 Tax Breaks!

If you want to save some money, you need to know that there are many…

Read More →
tax season, save

8 Tax Season Preparation Steps (2023)

5. List Your Personal Information Here’s one tax season step that most people tend to…

Read More →
Holiday Scam

10 Holiday Tax Scams That Turn Your Ho-Ho-Ho Into Oh-No!

Fake IRS Accounts and Help Offers Another evolving scam involves fraudsters offering to help you…

Read More →
change return

9 States That Made Big Changes to Their Tax Laws

#5 Washington If you’re generating income from capital gains, then you should be looking closer…

Read More →
check, tax your social security

You’re Free! These 5 States Won’t Tax Your Social Security

5. Florida The Sunshine State has been one of the top spots for retirees over…

Read More →
refund

All About Tax Refunds: 7 Important Things You Need To Know

A woman uses a stylus and tablet to review financial documents, staying organized to avoid…

Read More →
stealth

7 Stealth Taxes that Can Destroy Your Retirement

Widow’s income tax penalty The widower’s income tax is definitely the healthiest tax of them…

Read More →
ridiculous taxes

9 Most Ridiculous Things You’ll Get Taxed for

5. Candy tax No. 5 on our list of ridiculous taxes is the candy tax…

Read More →
A graph showing IRS income thresholds for determining the taxability of Social Security benefits for single filers and married couples filing jointly, along with the corresponding tax percentages.

The Tax Implications of Your Social Security Benefits

Paying the Tax: Withholding vs. Estimated Payments If you determine that a portion of your…

Read More →
The Money Place

Make money work for you!

Inedit Agency S.R.L.
Bucharest, Romania

contact@ineditagency.com

Trust & Legal

  • Subscribe
  • Unsubscribe
  • Newsletter
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Do not sell my personal information
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Request to Know
  • Request to Delete
  • CA Private Policy

Categories

  • Budgeting
  • Personal Finance
  • Shopping
  • Taxes

© 2026 The Money Place. All rights reserved.