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Medical Expense Deductions Available and the New 10% Expense Threshold

On the medical front, there’s good news. Though medical expenses cost a bundle, medical insurance premiums, co-pays and uncovered medical expenses are deductible as itemized deductions on your tax return, and that can help defray the costs.

But before you breathe a sigh of relief, here’s a little bad news: In the past you could deduct those medical expenses that exceed 7.5% of your adjusted gross income; beginning in 2013, that threshold has been raised to 10%.

That means your expenses have to be higher than before in order to take the medical expense deduction.

If either you or your spouse are 65 or older in 2013, you will have some relief, since the new 10% threshold won’t take effect for you until 2017.

Don’t worry about calculating your medical expense deduction.  TurboTax will ask you questions about your medical expenses and give you the medical expense deduction you’re eligible for.

Don’t forget to include these often overlooked medical expenses:

Be sure you include medical expenses for yourself, your spouse, and everyone else listed on your tax return.

If you pay medical expenses for your child, you can claim those expenses even if you do not claim them on your tax return.

And you can claim medical expenses you pay for your parents if you furnish over half of their support. If you paid bills for a dependent who died during the year, you can claim those expenses as well.

With careful planning about when medical expenses are incurred and paid, you may be able to concentrate them in alternating years. That way, you can maximize your deductions in one year, and then not claim the deduction the next year.

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