February
is National Archive Your Files Month. Yes, another one of those organizing “holidays.”
No, I don’t know who comes up with them. It is a good time to archive your
files, however, as you should have received paperwork that supports your taxes from
your banks, employers and other entities.
I
recommend that clients hold on to tax-related paperwork for seven years and
destroy it after that. There is no need to keep the paperwork in your
frequent-access filing, though; put it in a remote location. Creating an
archive area for older files that you rarely (or never) look at gets them out
of the way of your day-to-day paperwork activities.
You
can keep archives in a box in a closet or a separate drawer of a file cabinet
instead of devoting “prime real estate” to files you don’t use regularly. My
archives are in a closet in the basement, where the oldest tax file is shredded
to make room for the most current one.
Where
can you keep archives so that they don’t compete for space with your active
files?Organized by Marcie TM: Save time and money by letting go of what you don't need and finding room for what you value
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