Search for a command to run...

Timestamps are as accurate as they can be but may be slightly off. We encourage you to listen to the full context.
This episode delivers a comprehensive end-of-year financial checklist covering critical tax decisions, retirement planning, and credit card strategies that could save listeners thousands of dollars. Chris walks through 10 key tax topics including the new increased SALT cap from $10,000 to $40,000, strategic charitable giving using donor-advised funds, and essential retirement account deadlines. (01:00)
Chris is the host of the All The Hacks podcast and a financial optimization expert who helps ambitious professionals maximize their money, points, and life strategies. He previously worked at Google and has extensive experience in financial planning, credit card rewards optimization, and tax strategy implementation.
The foundation of year-end tax strategy lies in understanding whether you'll take the standard deduction ($15,750 single, $31,500 married filing jointly) or itemize deductions. (01:03) This decision drives nearly every other tax move you'll make. The key insight is to "bunch" deductions strategically - loading up itemized deductions in one year to exceed the standard deduction threshold, then taking the standard deduction the following year. This approach allows you to maximize tax benefits across multiple years rather than settling for marginal gains annually.
The state and local tax (SALT) deduction limit increased dramatically from $10,000 to $40,000 for taxpayers under $500,000 income. (03:02) This creates opportunities to prepay property taxes or mortgage payments due early next year, effectively pulling future deductions into the current tax year. For business owners, pass-through entity taxes offer an additional workaround, allowing businesses to pay state taxes on behalf of owners and deduct them as business expenses, bypassing personal SALT limitations entirely.
Rather than donating cash, donate appreciated securities to avoid capital gains taxes while receiving the full market value as a deduction. (07:07) Donor-advised funds solve the complexity of donating stocks to multiple charities by creating a personal charitable account where you contribute now, get the deduction immediately, but decide on distributions later. This strategy becomes even more valuable in 2025 since 2026 will introduce a 0.5% AGI floor for charitable deductions, making this the optimal year to front-load charitable contributions.
Employee 401(k) contributions ($23,500 limit, $7,500 catch-up) must be completed through payroll by December 31st. (25:46) The mega backdoor Roth strategy allows high earners to contribute up to $69,000 total to their 401(k) by making after-tax contributions and converting them to Roth within the plan. For those with side income, solo 401(k)s must be established by year-end, though contributions can continue until tax filing deadlines. These accounts provide powerful tax-deferred growth opportunities that compound over decades.
Systematically review investments for tax-loss harvesting opportunities to offset gains or reduce ordinary income by up to $3,000 annually. (20:52) The critical rule: avoid buying substantially identical securities within 30 days of selling for a loss, including across all accounts (spouse's IRA, etc.). Instead, swap to similar but not identical ETFs or index funds. Conversely, if you're in a low-income year, consider gain harvesting to take advantage of 0% capital gains rates. Remember that wash sale rules don't apply to crypto or charitable donations of appreciated assets.