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A2Z Business & Tax - February 2026

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February 2026

Upcoming Dates:

- February 14 - Valentine's Day - February 16 - President's Day

A

little preparation can change the entire tax return experience. In this month's newsletter, read about how getting organized early with a clear checklist can help you gather the right information and avoid last-minute pressure. You'll also learn how spotting easy-to-miss income sources can

Reminders: - Organize filing records (1099s, 1098s, W-2s, etc.) - Begin tax planning for 2026 help you avoid a long and frustrating cleanup later, how to find and stop paying hidden costs that are all around us, and ways to help protect your kids online. As always, should you have any questions, please call. And feel free to forward this information to someone who could use it!

YOUR ULTIMATE TAX FILING CHECKLIST

A smooth tax filing experience starts before your return is prepared. When your information is organized and easy to follow, everything moves faster and feels far less stressful. This checklist gives you a simple, practical way to gather all your tax information. • Use last year as your cheat sheet. Start with your most recent tax return. Skim it to remind yourself what showed up last year and what’s likely to appear again. This keeps you from forgetting income sources or hunting for documents you never needed in the first place. • Lock down the basics first. Confirm names, addresses, Social Security numbers, and bank details. Small errors here can cause outsized delays later, so handle this upfront before you touch anything else. • Create one home for everything. Pick a single folder, digital or paper. Give every tax-related document one clear landing spot so nothing drifts off and disappears. • Sort documents by income or expense type. Group forms by what they represent, not who sent them. Keep job income together, side income together, and investment income together. This mirrors how a return is built and makes patterns obvious. • Capture income that doesn’t come with a form. Write down cash, side gigs, resale activity, or digital payments that didn’t generate official paperwork. If money came in, assume you need to report it on your tax return. • Pull records that support deductions and credits. Gather mortgage interest, property taxes, charitable donations, medical costs, education expenses, and childcare records. When in doubt, include it with your tax documents.

• Flag big life changes in plain language. Make a short list of what changed last year – new job, move, marriage, divorce, baby, home purchase or sale. These details often drive tax outcomes more than numbers alone. • Summarize business or side income cleanly. Provide totals instead of a shoebox full of receipts. List income, categorize expenses, include mileage and home office details, and note any estimated payments you made. Clarity here saves real time. • Label files like a stranger will read them. Name documents so someone else instantly understands them. Include the year and a brief description. Clear labels prevent follow-up questions and missing pieces. • Note what’s missing instead of guessing. If a document hasn’t arrived yet, say so. Don’t estimate, round, or substitute last year’s numbers. Accuracy beats speed every time. • Write down questions outside the documents. Collect your questions in one place rather than scattering comments throughout your files. This keeps the review process clean and focused. • Do one final scan before. Does everything make sense? If yes, you’re ready to hand it off with confidence. A little preparation goes a long way. When you organize your information clearly, your tax return can be prepared more efficiently, reviewed more thoroughly, and filed with greater confidence. ■

EASY-TO-MISS INCOME SOURCES THAT CAN CAUSE TAX HEADACHES LATER

The IRS is getting pretty good at comparing your income reports against what you claim on your tax return. The result is a notice in the mail called a correspondence audit. If you get one, it unfortunately takes a long time to straighten it out. In an effort to help you avoid this hassle, here are several easy-to-miss income sources and some ideas to help capture this IRS reported income when filing your tax return.


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