The Bottom Line
The Bottom Line is where Klatzkin’s advisors provide analysis and insight into key developments in taxation, accounting, and other issues and how they affect businesses and individual taxpayers.

What Nonprofits Need to Know About the Universal Charitable Deduction

Nonprofits, Tax

For the past several years, most donors have received little to no federal tax benefit for giving to charity. Taxpayers who claimed the standard deduction could not deduct traditional charitable contributions. To receive a tax benefit, a donor had to itemize on the return. Beginning in 2026, that changes. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) creates a permanent universal charitable deduction for taxpayers who take the standard deduction, which today applies to roughly 86% of filers. For nonprofit organizations, this provides federal incentive to a larger group of potential donors.

Read More >>

Preparing for a Nonprofit Audit

Nonprofits

Many nonprofit organizations undergo an independent audit each year, often as a condition of receiving grant funding or meeting state requirements.  An audit involves an evaluation of financial statements, review of supporting documentation, and gaining an understanding of internal procedures. It is a complex process that requires staff to provide significant information about operations and related documentation. Preparation largely determines how efficiently the process moves and how many follow-up requests arise during fieldwork.

Read More >>

Ways to Lower Your Adjusted Gross Income

Tax

Now is a great time to review your finances and plan for 2026 taxes.  Taxpayers have opportunities to take advantage of beneficial deductions which can reduce their federal tax liability. Some popular strategies include contributions to certain retirement plans, contributions to health savings accounts (HSAs), and student loan interest deductions.

Read More >>

Last Chance to Claim Tax Year 2022 Refunds

Tax

The IRS has announced that the 1.3 million taxpayers who have unclaimed tax refunds for tax year 2022 have until April 15, 2026 to submit their returns.  It is estimated that more than $1.2 billion in refunds is as yet unclaimed, with a median refund of $686.

Read More >>

Job Costing for Manufacturing

Manufacturing

Manufacturing companies use costing methods such as standard costing and process costing to measure profitability and monitor production efficiency. These approaches are helpful for seeing overall gross margin and cost variances at the plant or product-line level. What they do not always show, however, is why one job is profitable and another barely breaks even. When that happens, leaders often need a closer look at results job-by-job.

Read More >>

IRS Issues Guidance on Trump Accounts

By KLATZKIN TAX TEAM

Tax

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), enacted on July 4, 2025, established Trump Accounts and the Trump Account Pilot Program.  The IRS recently released interim guidance on definitions related to Trump Accounts, election rules to open an initial Trump Account, and rules for the accounts’ responsible parties.

Read More >>

IRS Releases List of “Dirty Dozen” Tax Scams for 2026

Tax

Each year, the IRS releases its “Dirty Dozen,” a list of tax scams that taxpayers should be wary of. 

Read More >>

Interest Rates to Decrease for Second Quarter of 2026

Tax

In February 2026, the IRS announced that interest rates will decrease for the second quarter of 2026, which begins April 1, 2026. 

Read More >>

IRS Issues Guidance on Bonus Depreciation

Tax

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), signed into law on July 4, 2025, amended certain depreciation deductions for business taxpayers, making permanent a 100% bonus first-year depreciation for qualified property placed in service after January 19, 2025. Bonus depreciation allows eligible business property to be fully expensed in the year it is placed in service rather than depreciated over its normal recovery period.

Read More >>

New IRS Guidance on Car Loan Interest Deductions: What Taxpayers Need to Know

Tax

The IRS has released proposed regulations that clarify how certain taxpayers may deduct interest paid on passenger vehicle loans, along with new reporting requirements for lenders. This guidance affects individuals who purchase vehicles for personal use between 2025 and 2028 and may be eligible for a temporary tax deduction of up to $10,000.  Here’s what you need to know and how it may apply to your tax situation.

Read More >>

By Date

Receive Blog Updates

Contact Us

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.