Make money work for you!

  • Home
  • Personal Finance
  • Budgeting
  • Shopping
  • Taxes

Want to Reduce Your Taxes? Here Are 7 (Necessary) Tips 

February 23, 2023 · Taxes
retirement, taxes
Photo by Andrey_Popov From Shutterstock

2. Don’t forget about your retirement account

Experts say that another easy way to lower the amount of taxes you have to pay each year is by opening your retirement account. The best part is that this method can be used by anyone. If you’re a young adult who thinks that you don’t need something like this, you’re going to retire someday, aren’t you? See, so you need it.

If you think of opening a traditional 401(k) plan or an IRA account, those amounts of money can actually be deducted from your taxable income, which means that you won’t have to pay as many federal taxes as you would’ve without this method. And that is not all: those funds also grow without any taxes until you decide to retire. Isn’t that great?

If the first 2 types of accounts mentioned aren’t for you, you can open a Roth account, which is funded with after-tax dollars. However, you won’t receive any tax deduction, but the money that is in that specific account will grow tax-free, and you’ll also be able to withdraw it in retirement without paying anything extra.

Don’t forget that you should make your contributions to workplace 401(k) accounts by the end of the calendar year (by the end of 2023, for example), while tax-deductible contributions for traditional IRAs can be made until the tax-filing deadline.

Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

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Your email address will not be published.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

  • 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
  • A person thoughtfully choosing a card from their wallet at a checkout counter. 5 Places to Avoid Using Your Debit Card and 3 Safe Spots

Newsletter

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

Related Articles

tax tricks

8 Tax Tricks Rich People Use—and They Work!

Professionals brainstorm financial plans over coffee and pastries, unlocking the tax-saving secrets that help the…

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 →
Editorial illustration of a gold gavel striking tax forms on a navy background.

Trump’s $10B IRS Lawsuit Could Upend the 2026 Tax Filing Season

President Trump's $10 billion lawsuit against the IRS adds to a chaotic 2026 tax season.…

Read More →
change return

9 States That Made Big Changes to Their Tax Laws

#2 Iowa If you have some older relatives or you think you may be up…

Read More →
tax deduction

Bigger Refunds Ahead? What the New SALT Cap Means

3 Key Questions to Ask Before You Count on a Bigger Refund 1. Should You…

Read More →
property taxes

Here Are 10 States With the Most Favorable Property Taxes

2. Alabama Average House Value in 2022: $189,976 Effective Property Tax Rate in 2019: 0.37%…

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

Understanding Provisional Income: The Key to Social Security Taxes The concept of “provisional income” sounds…

Read More →
free tax assistance avoid

Frugal Tax Solutions: 5 Ways to File Your Taxes for Free

Every year, there is the tax season when everyone needs to file their taxes. It’s…

Read More →
Tax credits, reduce, veteran, climate return

Here Are 10 Tax Credits You May Qualify For

While all tax software are a shortcut through which you can find any eligible tax…

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.