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What to Do With Your Tax Refund

What to Do With Your Tax Refund

Epoch Times02-05-2025

By Rachael Green
From Kiplinger's Personal Finance
If there's a tax refund check coming your way, it's a great opportunity to give your financial future a little boost.
Depending on your current situation, some uses of your tax refund might include paying down debt, filling in gaps in your insurance coverage (like buying flood insurance or getting life insurance), or paying for a much-needed home repair.
But if there's nothing you need to spend that extra money on right now, the best thing you can do with your tax refund is put it to work earning a healthy return for you.
From savings accounts that grow your money without cutting off your access to funds to creative ways to boost your retirement savings, these are the six best places you can put that tax refund this year.
1. Open a High-Yield Savings Account
Whether you're rebuilding your emergency fund or just want to save up for a short-term goal without committing to a fixed term, a high-yield savings account is a great place to put your tax refund.
While the interest rate isn't guaranteed, you can find savings accounts earning as much as 4.5 percent right now. And if those rates ever dip, you always have the option to move your money into another account or investment vehicle that better fits your goals.
2. Put It in a Money Market Account
Money market accounts (MMAs) are an even more flexible way to earn interest on your cash than a high-yield savings account.
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While both offer similarly high rates of return on your cash, an MMA acts more like a checking account. You'll get an ATM card and a checkbook so that you can spend money directly from that account.
Unlike a checking account, there are usually limits on the number of withdrawals you can make in a month (typically around six, but it varies from bank to bank). Often, in-person or ATM withdrawals don't count toward that limit.
This is a good option for paying certain recurring expenses, since you can earn some extra interest on the money before you spend it.
For example, you can use your MMA to pay annual insurance premiums, make estimated tax payments, or even pay your mortgage and other bills. Just make sure you don't exceed the monthly transaction limit.
3. Hold It in a Short-Term Certificates of Deposit (CD)
If you've got any big-ticket purchases planned in the next few months to a year, consider putting your tax refund into a short-term CD.
With options ranging from as little as one month up to one year, these are a great tool for maximizing your returns on money you know you'll need to spend in the near future.
If you know you're planning a big trip to the Italian wine country this fall, use your tax refund to open a 6-month CD now.
If you know you need a new car sometime next year, open a 1-year CD to start building up a good down payment for it.
This is also a good option for filers who got a refund this year but expect to owe the IRS next year. You can hang onto that refund in a short-term CD to let it earn some interest and then put it toward your 2025 tax bill.
4. Stash It in a Long-Term CD
If your emergency fund is looking healthy and you don't have any specific big-ticket purchases you want to save up for, park your extra cash in a longer-term CD.
Opening one with a 3-year or 5-year term is a good way to lock in today's higher interest rates ahead of the possible Fed rate cuts expected later this year.
While it means committing to not touching that money for the next few years, it offers risk-free growth on money you don't have a concrete plan for yet.
Plus, if you use your tax refund to open a long-term CD now, you can keep adding to it every tax season over the next few years to earn today's high rates on any future tax refunds.
In the meantime, you'll have three to five years (depending on the term you committed to) to figure out the best way to use that growing nest egg.
5. Boost Your Retirement Fund and Lower Next Year's Tax Bill
There are two ways you can put your tax refund toward retirement. The simplest is to open an IRA and put it in there.
With a traditional IRA, you may be able to claim at least part of that IRA contribution as a tax deduction next year, depending on your situation.
So your tax refund this year is not only boosting your retirement, but potentially lowering your tax obligation next year (meaning you might enjoy an even heftier refund to add to that IRA in 2026).
A Roth IRA won't lower your tax obligation now, but you won't have to pay taxes on your earnings when you start making withdrawals in retirement.
The second, more finicky option is to increase your total 401k plan contributions by the amount of your current tax refund. Then, throw the refund in a high-yield savings account or MMA and use it to cover the gap in your paychecks throughout the year.
While there are extra steps involved here, it's worthwhile if you aren't currently maxing out your employer's matching contributions.
It's also a good option if your contributions are below the $23,500 maximum limit the IRS set for 2025. Again, you'll not only be adding more to your retirement fund, but also lowering your taxable income for next year.
If you know you want to use this tax refund to pad your retirement, but you're not sure what route makes the most sense for you, consider finding a financial adviser.
6. Have Fun With Investing
Are you crypto-curious? Interested in REITs? If you've wanted to dabble in alternative investments like those or even just make a bet on some riskier stocks, toss some of your tax refund into an online brokerage account and have fun.
That way, you can try out new investments using your tax refund without exposing your retirement portfolio to the added risk.
This is a good option if your retirement savings are on track and you don't have any urgent things to spend that extra money on.
You can dip your toes into a new world of investing, without risking more than the extra cash you got back from the IRS this year.
Just note that the more alternative your alternative investments are, the harder it will be to find an online broker or trading platform that offers them.
©2025 The Kiplinger Washington Editors, Inc. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
The views and opinions expressed are those of the authors. They are meant for general informational purposes only and should not be construed or interpreted as a recommendation or solicitation. The Epoch Times does not provide investment, tax, legal, financial planning, estate planning, or any other personal finance advice. The Epoch Times holds no liability for the accuracy or timeliness of the information provided.

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