5 tax moves to make in June 2022

June 1, 2022
Young-girl-eating-watermelon-slice_pexels-jill-wellington-35545

Summer doesn’t officially start until the solstice a bit later this month, but that doesn’t stop us from celebrating the unofficial arrival of lazy, hazy days today, June 1.

But before heading out to the beach, a cool mountain retreat, your favorite amusement park, or distant family members you haven’t seen in ages, it’s tax time.

Yes, Tax Day was six weeks ago for most of us. But even if you got an extension to file your 2021 return, there still are some tax moves you should make or at least consider this month.

I know you’re eager to get to your long-awaiting seasonal celebrations, so I won’t keep you. Here’s a quick look at June tax matters that you can get out of the way and then be on your way to summer fun.

1. File your 2021 tax return. I know, I know. I just said most of us were done with taxes on April 18. But most isn’t all.

This month, specifically June 15, is Tax Day for U.S. taxpayers who live and work outside the United States and Puerto Rico.

That automatically delayed due date also applies to members of the military who are posted outside the United States and its nearby island territory, and who don’t qualify for a longer combat zone extension.

Speaking of Puerto Rico, some of its residents also face filing by June 15. They were given the extra time due to major flooding in February.

If you’re one of these taxpayers facing the upcoming filing deadline, don’t panic. You can get even more time by sending the Internal Revenue Service an extension request, otherwise known as Form 4868. That will give you until Oct. 17 (the 15th this year is on a Saturday, so it moved to the next Monday) to finish filling out the forms.

But if you think you’ll owe when you do eventually file, you need to send that amount along with your extension paperwork.

In fact, expat taxpayers and service personnel abroad should have paid any tax due by this year’s April 18 deadline. The IRS gave y’all a longer time to file your forms, not pay what you owe.

If you didn’t pay your tax due in April, penalties and interest have been adding up. So get your return and that money, or your extension and that money, to the IRS as soon as possible, but definitely by June 15.

2. Pay your estimated taxes. June 15 also is another Tax Day for millions of folks who get income that isn’t subject to withholding taxes. This mid-June deadline is for the second payment due on such income received in April and May.

Yes, the IRS calendar is, like a lot of tax-related things, a bit different. My post prior to the first 2022 payment due date answers some common estimated tax questions and answers. You also can get more the scoop on estimated taxes and timetables in my estimated tax primer.

3. Take care of work-related taxes. Many folks are making estimated tax payments because they picked up some gig work to make up for salary lost or job changes made during the lingering coronavirus pandemic. This second payment time is a good opportunity to make sure your estimates are accurate. You also might want to check into using the annualized income calculation method for your estimated taxes if your non-withheld earnings fluctuate dramatically during the year.

Even if your job didn’t change, June is a good time to re-evaluate the amount of income taxes that are coming out of your regular paychecks. This is especially important to do if you got a big refund or were surprised by a tax bill when you filed. Adjusting your payroll withholding now will ensure your withheld amounts are closer to your actual tax liability.

And by doing so now, the changes will be spread over six+ months. The IRS’ online estimator can help you determine your appropriate withholding information to give your payroll office via a new W-4 form.

4. Vow to get your newlywed taxes correct. If you got married this year or will in this traditional wedding month, then you’ll also want to say “I do” to the IRS online withholding calculator. It will help you determine proper withholding from your and your spouse’s paychecks now that you’ll most likely be filing one joint Form 1040.

If you don’t coordinate your taxes, specifically how much is taken out of each of your paychecks, then you could end up owing at filing time. Even if only one of you has a job outside your new shared abode, the change in your filing status and possible new dependents will affect your withholding.

Again, getting it right now means that changes to your paycheck(s) won’t be so dramatic because they’ll be spread over more pay periods.

5. Prepare for a possibly mean Mother Nature. There already have been eight deadly tornadoes in 2022, but June 1 marks the start of another potentially disastrous season. Weather watchers marked the official beginning today of the Atlantic (and Gulf of Mexico) hurricane season.

Those of us who track the tropical systems approaching from the east were given a bit of a break. This is the first time in eight years that the Atlantic hurricane season didn’t start well before June.

The storm’s Pacific-based systems, however, are making up for that. Category 2 Hurricane Agatha hit Mexico over Memorial Day weekend as the strongest storm to make landfall in Mexico this early in the season. Officials are attributing at least 11 deaths to Agatha‘s winds and flooding rains, with 20 more missing.

Agatha’s remnants also are a concern for the United States. National Hurricane Center meteorologists say the residue of the storm could drift east and spark a new tropical storm that could threaten Florida by this weekend.

If you live in Florida or the many other U.S. coastal areas (and inland, too, as systems move ashore), now is the time to get ready for when Mother Nature turns into Mommy Dearest. Check out the storm preparation suggestions in my post-Agatha post.

Even if you think you’re safe, myriad other natural disasters strike any time, any place. Those same storm prep tips also can help in those unfortunate instances.

More June tax moves: OK, you’ve checked out these five June Tax Moves and followed through or made a note to take care of them when you get back from your vacation.

And if you’re not heading out for an early summer adventure and want more tax tips to take care of your free time — hey, it could happen! — you can find more suggestions over in the ol’ blog’s usual place, the right-hand column.

The list starts under the red Tax Moves image, which itself is just below the countdown clock ticking off the days and hours left until arrival of the Oct. 17 filing extension deadline.

Here’s to a happy new summer and its tax-saving tips.

 

Advertisements

 

 


 




 

Share:

The More Tax Posts tab at the top of this page will take you to, well, more tax posts. You also can search below for a tax topic. 

Latest Posts
The latest Dirty Dozen tax scam list is familiar because too many are still falling for the schemes

March 5, 2026

Tax filing season is also peak time for tax scams. Be on the lookout for…

Read More
Hello Tax Season 2026

Happy New Tax Year! Are you ready to file your 2025 tax return? I know, too early to ask. But Tax Day 2026 will be here before we realize it. The Internal Revenue Service deadline to file and pay any tax we owe is the regular April 15 date this year. It’s also Tax Day for most of the states that collect income taxes from their residents, which is most of the states! If that seems too far away right now, don’t worry. As is the case every tax season, the ol’ blog’s tips and other tax reminders should help all of us meet our state and federal responsibilities. Procrastinators also will want to keep an eye on the countdown clock just below. It tracks how much time we have until April’s Tax Day, just in case we put off our annual tax task until the absolutely final hours and decide we need to instead get an extension request into the IRS by that date. (Note: I’m in the Central Time Zone, so adjust accordingly for where you live.)

Comments
Leave the first comment