April turns plenty of smart people into sprinters. The calendar gets loud. The inbox gets louder. A tax return becomes a race instead of a review.
High earners pay for speed. Multiple income streams create multiple places for tiny errors to hide. A missing form. A cost basis hiccup. A withholding gap that looks harmless until a penalty appears.
This checklist is the edit pass. It is built for households with W-2 income plus a bonus, equity compensation, business income, taxable investing, rental income, or retirement distributions. Use it to confirm the inputs, reduce avoidable tax drag, and prevent surprise add-ons that arrive after you already felt “done.”
A clean return helps. A repeatable process helps more. Here are 12 moves to run before you sign.
Start simple: match every form to an account or payer you recognize. Then match the totals to your reality.
High earners often have form sprawl: multiple brokerages, a prior employer, a signing bonus, equity comp supplements, a side business. Add “corrected” forms into the mix and the risk rises.
If a K-1 is involved, treat timing as a planning variable. Partnerships and S-corps can issue amended K-1s. Filing early can create a second filing later, with extra admin and extra attention from everyone involved.
Action: Make a one-page list of every payer and every account. Check each one off only when the form is in hand, reflects the correct entity, and matches the correct taxpayer ID.
Brokerage 1099s look tidy. The details inside often carry the trouble.
Two frequent issues:
Cost basis mistakes can inflate taxable gains. Wash sale reporting can get messy when the brokerage only sees activity inside its platform.
Action: Pull a realized gains report from the brokerage and compare it to what ends up on the return. If something feels off, fix it before filing while statements and trade confirms are easy to access.
Cash has been loud lately. Money markets, Treasury bills, high-yield savings, brokerage sweep vehicles, CDs — interest can come from all of them.
The trap: people remember the big brokerage 1099 and forget the smaller 1099-INT forms. Then a “late” form arrives and creates a mismatch.
Action: Check your account list for every place cash lived during the year. Confirm each one issued the needed tax form.
Two of the most valuable “still available” moves often remain open until the filing deadline for the prior year.
For most calendar-year filers, the federal deadline for tax year 2025 returns is Wednesday, April 15, 2026.
IRA contributions: Traditional IRA contribution timing is generally tied to the unextended filing deadline for that tax year, and the IRS Form 8606 instructions reflect this contribution timing framework.
HSA contributions: HSA contribution timing also generally runs through the unextended filing deadline, and IRS HSA reporting instructions reflect that prior-year contributions can be made by that deadline.
Two reminders that matter:
Action: If your income profile supports it, review whether an IRA contribution or HSA contribution still fits. Save proof of contribution timing and eligibility.
Itemizing is a math problem, yet it also becomes a habit problem. Plenty of people itemize because they “usually do.” That habit can drift into wasted effort.
State and local taxes, mortgage interest, and charitable giving drive most itemized returns. IRS Schedule A instructions define what qualifies and how limits apply.
Action: Run the two-path test: standard deduction versus itemized. If itemizing wins, confirm each major category is fully captured and properly supported.
Qualified Charitable Distributions (QCDs) can be a clean way to align giving with tax efficiency for retirees. The IRS explains that a QCD requires age 70½ on the day of distribution, and it can count toward a required minimum distribution.
Execution details matter: the distribution needs to go directly from the IRA custodian to the charity, and the paper trail needs to stay clean.
Action: If charitable giving is part of your plan and IRA distributions are in play, review whether a QCD structure fits your situation and whether your custodian process will run cleanly.
A refund feels like a win. A penalty can still exist if payments came in unevenly during the year.
The IRS outlines common ways to avoid the underpayment penalty: owing less than $1,000 at filing, paying at least 90% of current-year tax, or paying 100% of prior-year tax, with a 110% prior-year safe harbor for higher AGI households.
High earners run into this when income arrives in chunks: bonuses, equity vesting, business distributions, concentrated stock sales. The total tax can be right, yet the timing can trigger the penalty.
Action: Ask one question: did payments keep pace throughout the year relative to when income arrived? If timing looks lopsided, evaluate safe harbor coverage before filing.
Withholding works beautifully for steady W-2 wages. It gets less reliable when income becomes layered.
Common high-earner friction points:
There is also the Additional Medicare Tax. IRS guidance explains that an employer must begin withholding Additional Medicare Tax when wages paid to an employee exceed $200,000 in a calendar year, without regard to filing status.
That rule can create odd results for dual earners: household liability depends on filing status and total wages, while employer withholding begins at the same $200,000 wage trigger per employee.
Action: Treat withholding like a system check. Compare total withholding to total tax. Then compare the timing of withholding to the timing of income.
High earners tend to focus on the obvious tax: federal bracket rates. The expensive surprises often come from stacking effects that ride on top.
Two recurring examples:
A third example belongs on your planning radar even if it stays quiet this year: Medicare premium brackets can move because of income levels with a lookback period, which can turn one high-income year into higher premiums later. (That is a “future bill” problem.)
Action: If your income sits near major thresholds, run a threshold scan: NIIT, Additional Medicare Tax, credits and deductions with phaseouts, and future Medicare premium tiers.
These two are classic “how did this happen” line items for high earners.
NIIT thresholds and covered income types are laid out directly on the IRS NIIT page. Additional Medicare Tax employer withholding rules are spelled out on IRS Topic 560 and the IRS Q&A page.
They matter because they can apply even when your base bracket stays the same. That is why your effective total tax cost can climb without an obvious bracket headline.
Action: Ask your preparer or your software to show the calculation lines for NIIT and Additional Medicare Tax. Confirm the inputs match your income types.
Business owner returns can look clean while hiding missed opportunities.
Two areas deserve a final check:
The IRS warns that penalties can apply if estimated tax payments are late, even if a refund arrives at filing.
Even a well-run business can create a tax surprise when distributions rise late in the year or when a big client payment lands at the wrong time.
Action: Confirm your retirement contribution approach matches your entity structure and payroll approach. Then confirm estimated tax payments match the year’s profit pattern.
Every high-income household has “weird stuff.” It can be ordinary life, yet it still needs clean documentation.
Examples:
The risk here is memory drift. In six months, the details blur. In two years, it becomes archaeology.
Action: Create a simple “tax file memo” and save it with your return. One page. Bullet points. Dates. Supporting documents.
The point of this checklist is control. You want a return that reflects your life, reduces avoidable leakage, and sets up next year with fewer surprises.
If your income arrives in layers, treat tax season like a recurring system review. Confirm inputs. Pull the levers that still exist in April. Stress-test payment timing. Capture the weird stuff while it is still clear.
A practical next step: schedule a post-filing debrief. Review what created the tax bill, what created the refund, and what single change will matter most next year. That meeting often pays for itself by preventing one repeat mistake.