Skip to main content

Tax Saving for 2016 Part 2

 Tax Saving Online
 
Tax Planning Strategies article in Advisorkhoj - Tax Planning at different stages of life: Part 2
 

In the previous article of this series, Tax Planning at different stages of life – Part 1, we have discussed some tax planning ideas for people in the age group of 20 – 30 years and 30 – 40 years. Tax planning is an integral part of our financial planning process. While there are various aspects of tax planning, our focus in this series is on tax saving. Tax saving investments under Section 80C should be aligned with our financial planning objectives. In other words, investors should ensure that tax-saving investments are in sync with our financial goals, financial situation, risk profile and the optimum asset allocation guidance. Our financial situation and goals are not static and change over time. Accordingly, tax planning should not be a mechanical exercise to meet the Section 80C requirement, but should be tuned according to the needs of the different stages of life. In this article, we will discuss tax planning ideas for people in the age groups of 40 – 50 years, 50 – 60 years and beyond 60 years. The tax planning strategies discussed in this article are general guidelines. Your tax planning strategies will depend on your own financial situation and specific financial goals.

Tax planning in the age group of 40 – 50

By the time you reach your forties, you are well settled in your respective careers. Your income is much higher than in the previous stages of life. Your children are also growing up and their education is an important goal at this stage. Retirement planning is also a very important financial planning objective in this stage of life. The risk tolerance of the investor in the forties is moderate to high. Non investment related tax savings should comprise a major portion of the 80C deductions of the tax payers in the age group of 40 - 50. Here are some tax-planning ideas for this age-group.

  • If you have a home loan, you should try to prepay part of your home loan principal on a periodic basis. By prepaying your home loan principal you will reduce the interest burden on your home loan (please read our article, Should you Pre Pay your Home Loan). Home loan principal payment qualifies for deduction under Section 80C of the Income Tax up to a limit of Rs 1.5 lacs as per the new Budget. One should note that for calculation of principal payment, both principal payment under Equated Monthly Instalments (EMIs) and principal prepayment should be considered. Prepaying principal is always a good idea since it reduces your interest cost. Interest rate on home loan is almost always higher than interest earned on fixed income investments. Also by prepaying the principal, you will be debt free in a shorter period of time. Hence, principal prepayment should be a priority.

  • You should also claim deduction for interest paid on home loan for a self occupied property under Section 24 of the Income Tax Act up to a limit of Rs 2 lacs as per the new Union Budget

  • With increase in salary the 80C deduction on account of contribution to the employee provident fund is also substantially higher.

  • If you have children, you can claim 80C deduction towards their school tuition fees.

  • As discussed in our previous article, Tax Planning at different stages of life – Part 1, your life insurance premiums will also qualify for 80C deductions. At every stage of life you re-evaluate your life insurance cover and make sure they are adequate for your needs.

  • With your contribution to EPF, home loan principal payment, children's tuition fees, insurance premium and home loan principal payment, you should be able to meet the 80C tax saving limit and therefore you may not have to make any tax saving investment. In case you have to make tax saving investment under section 80C, you should make retirement planning your investment objective. Tax saving mutual funds (ELSS), National Pension Scheme (NPS) and Public Provident Fund (PPF) are preferred investment choices. You should ensure optimum asset allocation in your tax saving investments.

Tax planning in the age group of 50 – 60

Your income is now at the highest level of your entire career. Debt repayment and retirement planning are two most important financial goals in this stage of life. The risk tolerance of the investor in this stage of life is moderate to low. Here are some tax-planning ideas for the 50 – 60 age group:-

  • If you have a home loan principal outstanding, you should try to prepay it part or full. You can claim 80C deduction for home loan principal payment.

  • If you are paying home loan EMIs, you will get deduction for the interest paid under Section 24.

  • Since your salary is now at the highest level of your entire career, your EPF contribution will be a substantial part of your 80C tax saving

  • You should continue to claim 80C deduction towards your children's school tuition fees.

  • With home loan principal payment, EPF, children's tuition fees and your life insurance premiums, you may not have to make any tax saving investments under 80C. But if you have to make tax saving investments under 80C, make retirement planning the only investment objective. Tax saving mutual funds (ELSS), National Pension Scheme (NPS) and Public Provident Fund (PPF) are again preferred investment choices. Since your risk tolerance is moderate to low in this stage of life, you should make sure your asset allocation is aligned with your risk tolerance.

  • Children's higher education is an important goal for many parents. As such you should start saving and investing for your child's future on a long term basis from a young age (please read our article, Investing for the future of your children). If unfortunately, you have not been able to save and accumulate enough for your child's higher education by your fifties, you should not prioritize funding your child's expensive higher education over your retirement planning. You should avail of educational loans for your child's higher education. Once your children complete their higher education and start their careers, they can pay off the educational loan. You can claim deduction on the interest paid on your child's education loan under Section 80E of the Income Tax Act. There is no upper limit and the entire amount of interest paid in the year is eligible for deduction.

  • If you still do not have health insurance cover, apart from the group health insurance plan of your employer, now is the time to get your own Mediclaim. Getting Mediclaim after your retirement is difficult. As discussed in our previous article, Mediclaim premiums are eligible for deduction from taxable under Section 80D of the Income Tax Act

Tax planning above 60

After retirement capital protection, income and health insurance are important financial objectives. Though capital protection is an objective after retirement, with increasing life spans and high inflation, equities, appropriately weighted in your asset allocation, should continue to form a part of your investment portfolio. Having said that, at this stage of life, your investment should pre-dominantly be in debt

  • You should consider investing in Senior Citizens Savings Scheme (SCSS). The minimum investment limit in this scheme is Rs 1,000 and the maximum limit is Rs. 15 lacs. This investment qualifies for deduction under section 80C of the IT Act. From a liquidity perspective, the scheme has a period of 5 years and carries an interest rate of 9 per cent, one the highest applicable rates for similar instruments. A penalty of 1.5% per cent is levied on the amount deposited, in case the deposit is withdrawn before 2 years and 1% if the amount is withdrawn after 2 years, but before the expiry of the term. If the returns from this instrument do not exceed the basic exemption limit of Rs 2.4 lacs, they stand to earn tax-free returns. Seniors who have their immediate liquidity concerns addressed though other instruments, should try to maximise investments under this scheme using their surplus funds, since this offers attractive returns and capital safety

  • Health is an important aspect of our life at any age, but is extremely important at this stage. It is important that you have a long term health insurance plan to address you and your spouse's healthcare needs, even in your retirement years. Senior citizens, who were covered under their employer's group health insurance plan before retirement and did not have an additional individual health insurance or Mediclaim plan, have two options, upon retirement.
  • Immediately on retirement, seniors can switch to the retail policy of the insurer offering the group insurance plan to their former employer. IRDA's portability guidelines cover policy transfers from group to retail, allowing retiring employees to exercise this option. However, the premiums and the policy terms may change once you switch to the retail plan. In this option certain benefits like waiting period of pre-existing medical conditions, will be carried over from the group plan to the individual plan. However, in this option, you have to continue with the group plan insurer.

  • The senior can consider buying an individual health cover from an insurer of his or her choice. Essentially this means that you are buying a new policy, with new terms and conditions.

Seniors should evaluate both the options and then make an informed decision depending on their personal situation. As discussed earlier, you claim tax benefits under Section 80D for your Mediclaim premiums.

Conclusion

Tax Planning is an important financial planning objective. With prudent tax planning, you can not only save taxes but make appropriate investment decisions that will help you meet your long term investment objectives. However, we should be careful in interpreting the various provisions under the different sections of the Income Tax Act and in case of any confusion consult a chartered accountant or tax consultant.

-----------------------------------------------
Invest Rs 1,50,000 and Save Tax under Section 80C. Get Great Returns by Investing in Best Performing ELSS Mutual Funds

Top 10 Tax Saving Mutual Funds to invest in India for 2016

Best 10 ELSS Mutual Funds in india for 2016

1. BNP Paribas Long Term Equity Fund

2. Axis Tax Saver Fund

3. Franklin India TaxShield

4. ICICI Prudential Long Term Equity Fund

5. IDFC Tax Advantage (ELSS) Fund

6. Birla Sun Life Tax Relief 96

7. DSP BlackRock Tax Saver Fund

8. Reliance Tax Saver (ELSS) Fund

9. Religare Tax Plan

10. Birla Sun Life Tax Plan

Invest in Best Performing 2016 Tax Saver Mutual Funds Online

Invest Online

Download Application Forms

For further information contact Prajna Capital on 94 8300 8300 by leaving a missed call

---------------------------------------------

Leave your comment with mail ID and we will answer them

OR

You can write to us at

PrajnaCapital [at] Gmail [dot] Com

OR

Leave a missed Call on 94 8300 8300

-----------------------------------------------

Popular posts from this blog

Group Health Insurance

Buy Group Health Insurance Online   For Human Resources, the biggest challenge today is to decide whether medical benefits should be offered to employees or not, what type of plans should be offered, what will be the cost and how will the cost be split between employees and employer. Well, most of these are subjective and would depend on a lot of factors including company size, average employee salary, etc. However, this article will give you a fair idea on how you should go about deciding these factors: 1. Why offer group health insurance benefit to employees : Studies have proved that retention rates among employers offering GHI are much higher than the ones who are not offering. Moreover, the cost of providing this benefit as a percentage of salary is very low as compared to the perceived value. As an example, say if average salary of an employee in your organization is 4 LPA. If you decide to offer a health insurance benefit to him for a Sum insured of ...

ICICI Prudential Dynamic Plan Invest Online

Download Tax Saving Mutual Fund Application Forms Invest In Tax Saving Mutual Funds Online Buy Gold Mutual Funds Leave a missed Call on 94 8300 8300   ICICI Prudential Dynamic Plan             Invest Online This fund does remarkably well during falling markets, but fails to show the same prowess during a rising market. The fund sticks to its mandate to adapt to the dynamic nature of the market by shuttling between debt and equity. It takes aggressive asset calls in equity when the market surges by investing in quality mid-cap stocks. At the same time, it adopts a defensive strategy by investing in debt and cash when markets get overvalued, making it a good long-term choice.     For further information contact Prajna Capital on 94 8300 8300 by leaving a missed call     Leave a missed Call on 94 8300 8300   Leave your comment with mail ID and we will ...

Birla Sun Life MIP II Savings 5

  Birla Sun Life MIP II Savings 5 - Invest Online   Have you traditionally been a debt investor but now wish to test waters in equities? Then, debt-oriented funds such as Birla Sun Life MIP II Savings 5 (Birla Savings 5), which have limited exposure to equities, may fit your requirement. With a five year return of 10.5 per cent compounded annually, the fund managed a good 3-3.5 percentage points more than its benchmark Crisil MIP Blended Index, as well as its category average. The fund appears well poised to capitalise on a falling interest rate scenario and has increased the average portfolio duration of its debt instruments in recent times. Suitability Birla Savings 5 is suitable only for conservative investors. If you want to make a beginning in equities and cannot take any short-term declines in your stride, then this fund will suit you. If you are already an equity investor and want to use a debt-oriented fund merely as a diversifier, then you may prefer peers from the HDFC and Re...

Why credit history is critical?

Will you need a loan to buy a car or a house? Do you know why some people get their loans sanctioned quickly without any hassle, whereas others find that their approval is delayed or their application is rejected? If you want a loan, you will need to work to build a solid credit history because this can have a bearing on the ease with which you get loans. Read on to learn more about what is a credit history and how to build a good credit score. What is a credit history? Your credit history is a way of tracking your credit behaviour and habits — basically it shows how disciplined and regular you are when it comes to repaying your dues on loans that you have taken. It will show a complete record of your past borrowing and repayment record including details about any late payments or if you have defaulted on a loan. This track record is readily accessible to lenders and is used by them to when reviewing your loan application. Borrowers who have historically had a bad record of managing...

Lump Sum or SIP?

Invest Mutual Fund Online     You have a lump sum in hand and you wish to invest in equity funds. However, you have heard a lot of talk about investing in equity funds through Systematic Investment Plans (SIPs) because they help average costs, ensure you do not ill-time the market, and help you invest in small sums, besides giving you many other advantages. So, should you invest the money you have in hand in one go, or let it remain in your bank account and then do an SIP? There is no harm in investing a lump sum amount. For all you know, compounding, over the long term, could work better with lump sum. However, make sure you fulfill all of these three criteria if you want to invest in one go. Else, SIP is the way to go. #1: You invest for the long term According to past data, ideally, if you have a time frame of 12 years or more, you can consider lump sum investing (provided you satisfy the other two conditions that follow). So, what is the sanctity behind 12 years? Is it because only...
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...
Invest in Tax Saving Mutual Funds Download Any Applications
Transact Mutual Funds Online Invest Online
Buy Gold Mutual Funds Invest Now