July 15, 2026 - Think Outside the Tax Box

July 15, 2026

2026 Changes to Form 2441 and Dependent Care Benefits

The credit for dependent-care expenses (such as daycare costs) has long been stuck at 20% for "average" taxpayers. It finally gets a permanent boost in 2026 (for returns filed in 2027). Also, the amount of money a taxpayer can put into a dependent care assistance program is increasing by $2,500 for 2026. This change presents a chance for taxpayers and tax pros to reevaluate which is better – claiming the credit or using a flex plan.

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Turning Intellectual Property into Interest Deduction Capacity: Use of an IP Holdco After the OBBBA

Many taxpayers have lived with a frustrating mismatch since the Section 163(j) limitation tightened after 2021 – the business may generate plenty of cash, yet its interest deductions are limited because adjusted taxable income (“ATI”) is too low, e.g., due to capex. The 2025 restoration of depreciation and amortization addbacks makes ATI planning relevant again, especially for groups that own valuable intangible property (“IP”), and the choice of legal entity to house group IP may have very different tax consequences as discussed in this article.

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Do You Know U.S. Tax History?

In recognition of the 250th anniversary of the adoption of the Declaration of Independence on July 4, 1776, let’s review 250 years of tax history. Our nation’s tax systems have evolved over two and a half centuries as ways of doing business and living have changed. Also, expectations of services the public wants and needs from the government have grown, resulting in tax changes to generate increasing amounts of tax revenue. Along the way, lawmakers have considered principles of simplification, equity, fairness, economic growth and effective tax administration that have shaped our tax laws. This article offers questions and answers to cover a range of interesting aspects of our federal tax history.

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No Goods Or Services? Say It Explicitly: Tax Court’s Message In Martin v. Commissioner

Two recent Tax Court opinions , both about the same transaction, reinforce the importance of a contemporaneous written acknowledgement (CWA) to solidify charitable contributions. It is a good illustration of Reilly’s Fourth Law of Tax Planning – Execution isn’t everything, but it’s a lot.

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TAX COURT ROUNDUP – July 2026

Dealing with deficiency and restitution in a tax evasion case is a minefield, but there's a good example of how it's done this month. There's architecture, both additional research credits for buildings and software in discovery. There are the fine points of the innocent spouse checklist, Rev. Proc. 2013-34. Two common deductions, home office and hobby losses, get reexamined. Cryptocurrency staking is taxed. A brilliant move earns a much-belated refund of an enhanced accuracy penalty. And the scoresheet in the Boechler jurisdiction-vs-claim-processing gets a new entry.

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