Just curious how other folks handle their documents.Do you keep hard copies? If so, what do you tend to keep? For how long?We have been keeping non-tax related documents for 3 years and tax related documents 7, but we recently got a document scanner and I've been trying to import everything electronically.For places like banks, or Verizon, who do e-statements. do you typically download and store each one?
6/22/2018 12:42:52 PM
6/22/2018 1:40:30 PM
Tax Documents - I have hard copies dating back to 2008-2009. I have electronic copies in a folder in my laptop (not the best place i'm sure).Bank and Credit Card statements - I don't keep these. I review them online and if i need one i usually just sign in and print it.Investment Statements - I download copies of these quarterly. But they're online too so i sometimes forget. Mortgage information - this is new territory for me, but i have hard copies from my closing and will probably do hard copies of payment receipts and that type of stuff until things get routine. That being said, i am probably not the most organized for this type of stuff.
6/22/2018 2:24:37 PM
Mine looks like this
6/22/2018 4:08:03 PM
Previously I barely had one. Now that I have a nice color laser printer that has a scanner with automatic duplexing I am now adding scanned document to my archive and tossing paper copies.
6/22/2018 8:06:27 PM
^^That's actually the final phase for mine. I scan -> shred -> burn. Mostly burn because shredded pieces use up too many trash bags.
6/22/2018 8:47:18 PM
Taxes - I have tax documents back to 2000. I keep hard copies of tax forms, supporting documents, and applicable pages from the various state tax instruction booklets. I also keep hard copy documentation of payments I've made.Banking & Investment - I don't keep bank, credit card, or investment statements unless there's a specific need (e.g., taxes, to show expenses, or canceled checks to show payment). I use gnucash to track financials and typically reconcile once or twice a week.Bills - I use twelve folders, January through December, to keep a years' worth of bills. When I pay a bill, I write payment information on the bill stub (date, amount, check number, eBill number, etc), file it based on the billing date, and shred the previous years' bill for that month.Mortgage - We move around a lot and haven't owned our own place in about ten years. I still have closing documents from buying and selling.Renting - I keep a copy of the lease and move-in/move-out inspections. When we move out, I keep copies of the final bills (water, electricity, trash, cable, etc.) and payment documentation to demonstrate we've closed our accounts and paid in full. I also keep copies of bills for anything we've paid for to fulfill terms of the lease (usually carpet cleaning and sometimes minor repairs).Things that I keep electronically are backed up off-site.
6/23/2018 7:57:44 PM
I keep damn near everything. (have a full basement) I hope to god I never need to produce a specific item that I did not think was important when it was put in a bin. My client files are required to be kept for 3 years which luckily there is a technology solution for now.
6/25/2018 9:59:40 AM
might not be what you're looking for but I keep an accordion binder with all of my product warranties, and then all of my tax documents and everything else on my computer / a flash drive.
6/25/2018 10:41:58 AM
boxes of random shit
7/17/2018 5:00:31 PM