I missed out in the past years on some of these.
Allowable, often overlooked, medical deductions:
•Travel expenses to and from medical treatments. The IRS evaluates the standard cents-per-mile allowance each year. For the first six months of 2008, you can deduct eligible medical travel at 19 cents per mile; for the last six months, it's 27 cents per mile. In 2009, the mileage rate deduction is 24 cents.
•Insurance payments from already taxed income. This includes the cost of long-term care insurance, up to certain limits based on your age.
•Uninsured medical treatments, such as an extra pair of eyeglasses or set of contact lenses, false teeth, hearing aids and artificial limbs.
•Costs of alcohol- or drug-abuse treatments can be counted on your Schedule A.
•Laser vision corrective surgery is a tax-allowable procedure.
•Medically necessary costs prescribed by a physician. That means if your doctor told you to add a humidifier to your home's heating and air conditioning system to relieve your chronic breathing problems, the device (and additional electricity costs to operate it) could be at least partially deductible.
•Some medical conference costs. You can count admission and transportation expenses to the conference if it concerns a chronic illness suffered by you, your spouse or a dependent. Meals and lodging costs while at the seminar, however, are not deductible.
Source:
http://www.bankrate.com/finance/money-guides/maximizing-your-medical-deductions-1.aspx
Allowable, often overlooked, medical deductions:
•Travel expenses to and from medical treatments. The IRS evaluates the standard cents-per-mile allowance each year. For the first six months of 2008, you can deduct eligible medical travel at 19 cents per mile; for the last six months, it's 27 cents per mile. In 2009, the mileage rate deduction is 24 cents.
•Insurance payments from already taxed income. This includes the cost of long-term care insurance, up to certain limits based on your age.
•Uninsured medical treatments, such as an extra pair of eyeglasses or set of contact lenses, false teeth, hearing aids and artificial limbs.
•Costs of alcohol- or drug-abuse treatments can be counted on your Schedule A.
•Laser vision corrective surgery is a tax-allowable procedure.
•Medically necessary costs prescribed by a physician. That means if your doctor told you to add a humidifier to your home's heating and air conditioning system to relieve your chronic breathing problems, the device (and additional electricity costs to operate it) could be at least partially deductible.
•Some medical conference costs. You can count admission and transportation expenses to the conference if it concerns a chronic illness suffered by you, your spouse or a dependent. Meals and lodging costs while at the seminar, however, are not deductible.
Source:
http://www.bankrate.com/finance/money-guides/maximizing-your-medical-deductions-1.aspx