Got Unused Gift Cards? – Better ways to spend them

Recently we had a combined birthday party for my kids at MonkeyBizness bouncing place which is really priced right and offered option to bring external food for fee of just $10 additional to the party fee. We had invited most of our close friends and also Ashwin(my elder son) school friends. With a good and decent size party, kids had great and fun time.

At the end, Kids got lots of presents and many gift cards from various shops like Toysrus, Walmart, Kohls. We wanted to buy something for both kids in one place so we have option to buy bigger item. So I started looking for options to exchange or trade gift cards and surprised to know that you will almost lost 15-20% of the value of the card and so decided not to waste money on selling or exchanging it. We choose to use them in their respective shops and add little more money if needed to get better item.

Here are some options which I came across when I was searching what to do with our gift cards and may be it is useful to you guys.

Cash/Exchange it
These are the favorite options which everyone like to use so they can get some money in hand and use it where ever they want. There are websites like PlasticJungle.com, Cardpool.com, giftcardbin.com, ebay.com, where people can sell your cards for discounted price. You cannot expect to get full value instead they take 5-15% depending on the gift cards. They have to make money somehow right! Instead of going to these individual sites, you can go to GiftCardGranny.com and compare how much various sites will pay for a card as a percentage of its value. You can also try Card Hub’s exchange where you can exchange your card to another card but still not for the same price.

Invest it
Another interesting option, you can invest your gift card money in a checking account at GoalMine.com. It offers a limited range of stock and bond mutual funds, plus an FDIC savings account option. For a limited time they will be accepting gift card trade-ins as a means for you to fund your investment and savings accounts. I checked today when I was writing this blog and found no traces about this offer anymore. They accept their own gift cards and not other anymore. May be keep looking and they might come back.

Donate it
Last but not the least, you can always donate the gift cards to charity of your liking using a website Donatemycard.com. It looks like they have wide selection of famous charities like Redcross, Habitant for Humanity, GirlsScout which you can choose to donate your money after taking 10%-30% of processing charges depending on the amount to offset their cost. It is not a bad idea instead of throwing them in to trash or not using them.

I also happen to come across an article in the Kiplinger Magazine which had similar options and little more info. You can read that article at Kiplinger.com

TDAmeritrade: Essentials for Trading Stocks – Free Webinar

This one of those free seminars from TDAmeritrade Education division helps investors to learn about investing and also market their product at the same time. I have attended some of it and they are good and you don’t have to buy anything.

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5 Steps to help you start planning for 2012 Tax year now…

It is June of 2012 already, half of the year is almost over. In no time, we will see another new year. Time flies and it flies fast taking for a ride along with it. We should always plan and prepare for every possible situation. 2012 Tax season has come and gone but it’s time to evaluate and plan for next year so you don’t have to scramble at the last minute. Being organized and planning ahead can save you time, money and headaches when you have to file your 2013 taxes. Here are 5 quick steps you can follow to make next April 15 easier.

1. Save your Past Return

Always take a print out of your previous tax return and store it away. Even if your system crashes or online site gets shutdown for some reason, you have the hard copy for your reference. Put away your 2011 tax return and supporting documents somewhere secure so you’ll know exactly where to find them.

2. Organize your Bills & Receipts

There are lot of tools like Intuit or Quickbooks which helps people to track their expenses. But I use the simple excel sheet which is easy to maintain and does a good job. But whatever the tool may be, establish a common place/folder where everyone in your household can put tax-related records all year long. You can use Mileagebug App to track your business miles and have it send the report periodically to your email and keep them safe. Just try to follow periodically and be consistent to avoid a scramble for misplaced mileage logs or charity receipts come tax time.

3. Estimated tax payments

I am self employed and pay my estimated tax every April, Jun, September and December(I pay early not April). I have adjusted this year’s estimated payment according to the tax paid last year. If you’re self-employed, you should also check your tax payment to see you overpaid and received a refund or paid penalty to pay more taxes? If so, you should make sure you adjust your estimated payment so you don’t overpay too much and give free money to uncle Sam. You should pay the minimum estimated tax possible without incurring an underpayment penalty. You’ll do so if your estimated tax payments amount to 90 percent of the tax due for 2012 or 100 percent of the tax you paid for 2011 (110 percent if your adjusted gross income is more than $150,000).

4. Retirement contributions

IRA is one of the best tax breaks the self-employed have. If you have Solo 401k which is even better. As you know you have till April 15th of the next year to make your contributions and take deduction for the previous year tax return. Don’t wait that long and try to contribute more now rather waiting till the last minute. This way you will earn more income for longer period which are all tax free. It is always good to maximize your contributions on 401(k) and Roth before finding another avenue for tax free retirement savings.

5. Prepare for Itemized deductions

Many of you use Itemized deductions, Schedule A to take advantage of deductions like mortgage interest, charity contributions and other things. For 2012 this is $5,950 for singles and $11,900 for married people filing jointly. Last year I wasn’t able to do Itemization because I couldn’t go above the standardized deduction amount. If your expenses typically fall just below the amount to make itemizing advantageous, a bit of planning to bundle deductions into 2012 may pay off. May be you can prepay mortgage payment, pre-deadline property tax payments, planned donations or strategically paid medical bills could equal some tax savings. This way you can add up good amount of deductions which can be claimed for 2012 year. Check with your CPA/Tax professional and plan accordingly. If you don’t have one, try to hire one early before the busy tax season starts.

These are the quick win steps to get prepared for the next tax year. Try to start early and you won’t have to file extension next year and can file tax on time.