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Singletary: CPA experts answer 2019 tax-return questions

By Michelle Singletary
Published: March 8, 2019, 6:05am

Some taxpayers are feeling a little battle weary after filing their 2018 returns.

Either they got less of a refund than expected, got a surprise tax bill or discovered a favorite tax break was no longer allowed.

The season started with a downward trend for refund amounts. But last week, the IRS said refunds were up slightly by 1.3 percent, or $40. The average refund as of Feb. 22 was $3,143, an increase from $3,103 the year before.

Here’s input from members of the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants on common tax questions.

Is it true that I will be paying less in taxes and getting a bigger refund?

“Lower overall taxes don’t always translate to a bigger refund during tax time,” says Cari Weston, a CPA and director of Tax Practice &Ethics for AICPA. “The IRS issued new withholding tables in early 2018, and many of the tax savings have been paid throughout the year. So, if your refund is not what you were expecting, go back to your paystubs and see if you got a little more in each check.”

Can I still deduct business meals and entertainment expenses?

“Entertainment expenses are non-deductible, and calling them marketing expenses won’t help,” Weston says. “With some recent guidance from the IRS in October, most normal business meals will still be 50 percent deductible.”

Can I deduct home-office expenses?

“The deduction for the business use of a home is still available; however, the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act eliminated employee business expenses on Schedule A,” Weston says. “This means that self-employed people will still be eligible, but employees (W-2 wages) who work from home will no longer get a deduction for this or any other out-of-pocket expenses such as mileage, professional fees, dues, uniforms, etc.”

Can someone who is a wage employee but who also has a side gig deduct work-related expenses?

“Yes, wage employees can deduct allowable expenses attributed directly to their side gigs,” Weston says. “If any expenses are used both for their job and their business, they must use a reasonable method to allocate the portion that is business to deduct.”

Is the interest I pay on my primary mortgage still deductible?

“Yes. However, the tax benefit will depend on the size of the mortgage and whether you itemize deductions,” says Robert Westley, a CPA and financial planner based in New York City. “The limit on the mortgage-interest deduction has been reduced to the interest on a maximum of $750,000 of new acquisition indebtedness. However, acquisition debt taken out before Dec. 16, 2017, is grandfathered and subject to the $1 million limitation under the old law.”

Here’s a question from a reader about a change to the mortgage-interest deduction.

Four years ago, we took a cash-out refinance loan on our principal home to build a vacation cabin. Is it true that we cannot deduct this mortgage interest anymore?

The interest on new or existing home-equity loan is not deductible unless the money is used to buy, build or improve the home that secures the loan. So, if you take out a home-equity loan to build a vacation cabin — but the loan is secured by the primary residence, not the cabin — the interest is not deductible, Westley and the IRS confirmed.

Since I no longer itemize my deductions, is it true I receive no tax benefit for my charitable giving?

“In general, taxpayers who no longer itemize deductions will not receive a tax benefit for their charitable gifts,” Westley says. “However, bunching your charitable contributions into one year, rather than contributing on an annual basis, may put you over the new standard-deduction hurdle and help you receive a more significant tax benefit for your charitable giving.”

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