Fall Cleaning For You and Your Financials!

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Ah … Fall and Spring cleaning — a fresh desk, a clean home, a new perspective with the changing of the seasons. Why is this such a good idea, especially when it comes to your financial documents? It’s simple. Clutter can be dangerous – especially when it involves your finances. When your financial documents are cluttering your desk or spread across your home, it can be easy to lose the ones you will need for tax season, it can be easy to toss them in the trash where dumpster-diving thieves can collect them and steal your financial identity, and it can be easy to simply be distracted by the mess and miss payments or opportunities to secure your money.

file-cabinet

Photo by mrmanc via Flickr

Keeping your financial documents organized and neat takes only a few short minutes each week once you know what to keep and what to toss. Stop right now…if you don’t already have one, go out and buy a shredder right now. Then, we’ll work on which documents can be tossed and which you have to keep and for how long.

Let’s get started.

What to keep and how long?

Keep these forever

  • Tax returns and proof of filing
  • IRA and Roth IRA contribution records
  • Statements proving remodeling jobs on your home or condominium
  • Statements proving the purchase or sale of property

Keeping the documents recording purchase price and the cost of permanent improvements is important because those expenses are added to the original purchase price to establish the home’s cost basis. When you sell the home, however, these expenses reduce your overall profit and help keep your capital gains tax in check.

Keep these for 6 years

Why six years? The IRS keeps three years’ worth of returns on hand for everyone. They use these to look for errors and verify any big changes. They have up to six years to challenge your return if they suspect under-reported income. There is, however, no limit on how many years they can ask you to go back if fraud is suspected or if you failed to file a return.

  • Statements for securities you have sold
  • W-2s
  • 1099s
  • Receipts proving  deductions
  • Medical bills deducted on your taxes

Keep these for 1 year

  • Medical bills (unless they are deducted on your taxes, then keep them for 6)
  • Retirement plan statements (until you verify the annual statement, then shred everything else)
  • Monthly bank statements
  • Utility bills
  • Paycheck stubs (until you verify your annual W-2, then shred them)

… and as you put the latest one into the folder, take the oldest one out and shred it.

What about receipts for purchases?

Keep those until the warranty expires (if it has a warranty) or as long as you need them for tax purposes. For clothing or other returnable items, hang onto the receipt until the return period has expired so that if you change your mind, you have the receipt.

What can be shredded?

  • Receipts of bank deposits and ATM transactions — once you have verified the transaction on your statement or account
  • Canceled checks (except those relative to your income taxes)
  • Bills — once they have been paid and the check is cashed
  • Credit checks on employees — in accordance with the Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act
  • Credit card offers and pre-approved home equity loan offers

Now, with a simple system established, you will be ahead of the game when it comes time for tax season. Each week, as you examine statements, you’ll know your current financial status and keeping track of that is invaluable.

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Identity Theft, identity protection, financial documents, financial record, dumpster diving, financial identity, roth ira contribution

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Craig Kessler (Staff Writer)
Craig Kessler is the marketing director of BudgetPulse. He manages and writes on the BudgetPulse Blog. Please visit BudgetPulse to learn more about the personal budgeting software.

All posts by Craig Kessler (Staff Writer)

5 Comments

  1. gravatar
    Amey
    October 13, 2009, 20:16

    I find putting all these things on the computer makes it easier for me to manage everything (via scanning). I am the complete opposite of a pack rat, so I would normally have a hard not throwing away these things.

    Obviously, you have to make sure you have a good backup system in place to do this way though.

  2. gravatar
    Financial Samurai
    October 13, 2009, 23:26

    You sure I can throw away and shred all my tax documents after 6 years? I’d just play and safe and keep all the documents for 10 years.

    Craig, I didn’t realize you were a staff writer here. Finally, I discover where you are, cuz I see you everywhere!

  3. gravatar
    money man
    October 14, 2009, 16:22

    You can complain or you can take advantage of this government’s spending. Slickbudget.com shows you how to get thousands in government money as well as beat the credit industry at their own game. You want an 800 credit score…go there. You want free money from banks…go there. You want to get groceries for next to nothing…go there. They are not selling anything or making you sign up, they are just helping Americans get through this mess of a recession. You want a break from bills…go there.

  4. gravatar
    Money Funk
    October 15, 2009, 11:48

    Just the other day, I was just thinking about doing this task. Before you know it tax Season will be here and I will be frantically trying to find documents. I don’t need that stress. Especially because i will just be getting over Holiday stress. lol.

  5. gravatar
    John DeFlumeri Jr
    October 16, 2009, 12:35

    Financial clutter, and correct secure storage of important papers. Time to get organized, I admit it.

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