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Strategies After Filing Your Taxes

For many people, filing their tax return feels like the finish line of the financial year. Once the forms are submitted and the confirmation email arrives, it’s tempting to mentally move on and not think about taxes again until next spring. However, the weeks immediately after filing your return are actually one of the best times to evaluate your financial picture and make adjustments that can benefit you for the rest of the year.

With your tax information fresh and organized, you now have a clearer view of your income, deductions, and overall financial situation. That clarity creates an opportunity to make strategic decisions that may improve both your tax efficiency and long-term financial plan.

 

Review What Worked — and What Didn’t

Start by taking a quick look at the results of your return. Did you receive a large refund, owe additional taxes, or land somewhere close to even?

If you received a large refund, it may mean too much tax was withheld during the year. While refunds can feel rewarding, they essentially represent an interest-free loan to the government. Adjusting your withholdings could allow you to keep more of your money throughout the year instead.

If you owed taxes, it may be a sign that estimated payments or withholding adjustments should be considered. Making small corrections early in the year can help prevent surprises next April.

 

Maximize Retirement Contributions

After filing your taxes, many investors take time to review their retirement savings strategy. If you are still within the contribution window for certain retirement accounts, you may be able to make additional contributions that benefit both your current tax situation and your long-term retirement plan.

Even if the deadline has passed for prior-year contributions, this is an excellent time to review your ongoing contributions to accounts such as your 401(k) or IRA. Increasing contributions early in the year allows compounding to work longer and can potentially reduce taxable income depending on the type of account.

 

Evaluate Tax-Efficient Investment Strategies

Your completed return also provides a useful snapshot of how your investments are affecting your taxes. For example, you may notice how dividends, capital gains distributions, or interest income impacted your overall tax bill.

This insight can help guide future decisions around tax-efficient investing. Strategies such as asset location, tax-loss harvesting, or shifting certain investments into tax-advantaged accounts can potentially improve long-term outcomes while reducing unnecessary tax drag.

 

Update Your Financial Records

Tax season usually involves gathering a wide range of financial documents — income statements, investment reports, charitable giving records, and more. Once everything is finalized, it’s a good idea to organize these documents in a secure location.

Keeping digital copies of your return and supporting documentation can make future planning easier and reduce stress when the next tax season arrives. Most tax advisors recommend maintaining records for up to seven years in case questions arise later.

Revisit Your Financial Plan

Finally, the end of tax season is a natural time to take a step back and look at the bigger picture. Changes in income, family circumstances, investment performance, or tax laws may affect your overall financial strategy.

A periodic review of your financial plan can help ensure your investments, savings strategy, and long-term goals remain aligned. Small adjustments today can make a meaningful difference over time.

Taxes may only come once a year, but the financial decisions surrounding them happen all year long. Taking a few minutes to review and plan after filing can help turn tax season into an opportunity to strengthen your financial future.

Now that your taxes are filed, take advantage of the clarity that comes with it.

A quick conversation today can help keep your financial decisions aligned throughout the year. If you have questions about your results or want to explore strategies around retirement contributions, tax-efficient investing, or your overall plan, reach out to our team.


 

Golf Tip of the Week

Relax Your Grip

One of the most overlooked fundamentals in golf is grip pressure. Many golfers hold the club too tightly, especially under pressure. When your grip is tense, it restricts wrist movement, reduces clubhead speed, and often leads to slices, hooks, or inconsistent contact.

A helpful guideline is to grip the club at about a “5 out of 10” pressure level. Firm enough to maintain control, but relaxed enough to allow natural wrist hinge and fluid motion. If your forearms feel tight before you even start your swing, that’s usually a sign you’re squeezing too hard.

Before each shot, take a moment to relax your hands and shoulders. A lighter grip promotes better tempo, smoother transitions, and improved feel — particularly on short-game shots where touch matters most.

In golf, tension is the enemy of rhythm. Loosen your grip, and you may find your swing loosens up too.

 

Golf Tip adapted from Golf Monthly. Read the full article here: How Do You Grip A Golf Club?


 

Recipe Tip of the Week

Easy Pigs-in-a-Blanket

Ingredients

  • 1 package cocktail sausages (Lil’ Smokies)
  • 1 can refrigerated crescent roll dough
  • 1 egg (for egg wash, optional)
  • Everything bagel seasoning or sesame seeds (optional)
  • Mustard or dipping sauces for serving

 

Instructions

Preheat oven to 375°F. Unroll the crescent dough and cut each triangle into smaller strips (about 3 strips per triangle).

Wrap each cocktail sausage with a strip of dough, starting at one end and rolling to the other. Place seam-side down on a parchment-lined baking sheet.

Brush lightly with beaten egg for a golden finish. Sprinkle with sesame seeds or seasoning if desired.

Bake 12–15 minutes, until golden brown and puffed.

Serve warm with mustard, honey mustard, or a simple ketchup-mustard mix.

 

Tip of the Week

For an elevated version, brush with melted butter and a light sprinkle of flaky salt right after baking. Or add a thin slice of cheddar before rolling for a cheesy upgrade.

Quick, easy, and always a hit — sometimes the simplest recipes win the day.

 

Recipe adapted from Pillsbury. See full recipe here: Pigs in a Blanket


 

Travel Tip of the Week

Lexington, Kentucky: Bluegrass & Horse Country in Bloom

April is a beautiful time to visit Lexington. The rolling bluegrass hills are turning vibrant green, foals are out in the fields, and the temperatures typically sit comfortably in the 60s and low 70s — perfect for exploring without summer heat.

Spring also brings racing season at Keeneland Racecourse, one of the most scenic and historic tracks in the country. Even if you’re not a serious racing fan, the atmosphere feels classic and relaxed rather than overwhelming.

Beyond the track, visitors can tour horse farms, explore bourbon distilleries, or enjoy Lexington’s charming downtown filled with local restaurants and boutiques.

 

Why It Works So Well in April

  • Comfortable walking weather
  • Scenic countryside drives
  • Seasonal horse farm tours
  • Fewer crowds than Derby season

Lexington offers history, culture, and wide-open views — a refreshing, unhurried spring escape.

 

Travel tip adapted from Travel + Leisure. Read the full article here: Best Time to Visit Lexington, Kentucky


 

Copyright © 2026. BCA Private Wealth. All rights reserved.

 

Our mailing address is: 

BCA Private Wealth
15 Halton Green Way
Greenville, SC 29607

 

Sources:

IRS – Tax Withholding Estimator

IRS – Retirement Plan Contribution Limits

Investopedia – Tax-Efficient Investing

 

Disclosure:

BCA is a Securities and Exchange Commission registered investment advisor. The advisory services of BCA Private Wealth are not made available in any jurisdiction in which BCA Private Wealth is not registered or is otherwise exempt from registration.

Please review BCA Private Wealth Disclosure Brochure for a complete explanation of fees. Investing involves risks. Investments are not guaranteed and may lose value.

This material is prepared by BCA Private Wealth for informational purposes only. It is not intended to serve as a substitute for personalized investment advice or as a recommendation or solicitation or any particular security, strategy, or investment product.

No representation is being made that any account will or is likely to achieve future profits or losses similar to those shown. You should not assume that investment decisions we make in the future will be profitable or equal the investment performance of the past. Past performance does not indicate future results.

 

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