12 Tax Deductions You Probably Missed

7. Jury Pay Handed To Employer

JuryDuty
Image source: yucommentator.org

It’s good to have an employer who is supportive of the American judicial system and sympathetic to employees who are called to jury duty. These employers might continue to pay your regular salary while you sit for your civic duty…which pays a paltry daily stipend. If your employer ask for the stipend in exchange for your higher salary, you will still be taxed on both: your salary and the stipend you gave away. After you list the amount of the stipend on the “other income” line of your 1040, claim it as an “adjustment to income” on line 36. You can even claim expenses related to your time on the jury if you itemize your deductions.

8. Military Travel

U.S. Army Spc. Cruser Barnes, 1st Squadron, 299th Cavalry Regiment, Hawaii Army National Guard (HIARNG), maneuvers through obstacles during a combat army readiness test as part of the 2015 Hawaii Army National Guard and Reserve Best Warrior Competition March 6, 2015, at Marine Corps Training Area Bellows, Hawaii. Competitors included eight Soldiers from the U.S. Army National Guard and 13 Soldiers from the U.S. Army Reserve assigned to units throughout the Pacific Region. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Christopher Hubenthal)
Image source: dod.hawaii.gov

If you’re part of the National Guard or Reserves (Thank You!), you can deduct travel costs to meetings and drills. There are two requirements: 1) You must travel 100+ miles from home and 2) you need to stay overnight. If you satisfy these criteria, then you have these write-offs waiting for you: mileage plus the costs of lodging, parking, tolls and half the expense of your meals.