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Posts Tagged ‘income tax’
Wednesday, September 8th, 2010
IRS Releases Form to Help Small Businesses Claim New Health Care Tax Credit
IR-2010-96 Sept. 7, 2010
WASHINGTON –– The Internal Revenue Service today released a draft version of the form that small businesses and tax-exempt organizations will use to calculate the small business health care tax credit when they file income tax returns next year. The IRS also announced how eligible tax-exempt organizations –– which do not generally file income tax returns –– will claim the credit during the 2011 filing season.
The IRS has posted a draft of Form 8941 to this website. Both small businesses and tax-exempt organizations will use the form to calculate the credit. A small business will then include the amount of the credit as part of the general business credit on its income tax return.
Tax-exempt organizations will instead claim the small business health care tax credit on a revised Form 990-T. The Form 990-T is currently used by tax-exempt organizations to report and pay the tax on unrelated business income. Form 990-T will be revised for the 2011 filing season to enable eligible tax-exempt organizations –– even those that owe no tax on unrelated business income –– also to claim the small business health care tax credit.
The final version of Form 8941 and its instructions will be available later this year.
The small business health care tax credit was included in the Affordable Care Act signed by the President in March and is effective this year. The credit is designed to encourage small employers to offer health insurance coverage for the first time or maintain coverage they already have.
In 2010, the credit is generally available to small employers that contribute an amount equivalent to at least half the cost of single coverage towards buying health insurance for their employees. The credit is specifically targeted to help small businesses and tax-exempt organizations that primarily employ moderate- and lower-income workers.
For tax years 2010 to 2013, the maximum credit is 35 percent of premiums paid by eligible small business employers and 25 percent of premiums paid by eligible employers that are tax-exempt organizations. Beginning in 2014, the maximum tax credit will go up to 50 percent of premiums paid by eligible small business employers and 35 percent of premiums paid by eligible, tax-exempt organizations for two years.
The maximum credit goes to smaller employers –– those with 10 or fewer full-time equivalent (FTE) employees –– paying annual average wages of $25,000 or less.
The credit is completely phased out for employers that have 25 FTEs or more or that pay average wages of $50,000 per year or more. Because the eligibility rules are based in part on the number of FTEs, and not simply the number of employees, businesses that use part-time help may qualify even if they employ more than 25 individuals.
IRS Releases Form to Help Small Businesses Claim New Health Care Tax Credit
IR-2010-96 Sept. 7, 2010
WASHINGTON –– The Internal Revenue Service today released a draft version of the form that small businesses and tax-exempt organizations will use to calculate the small business health care tax credit when they file income tax returns next year. The IRS also announced how eligible tax-exempt organizations –– which do not generally file income tax returns –– will claim the credit during the 2011 filing season.
The IRS has posted a draft of Form 8941 to this website. Both small businesses and tax-exempt organizations will use the form to calculate the credit. A small business will then include the amount of the credit as part of the general business credit on its income tax return.
Tax-exempt organizations will instead claim the small business health care tax credit on a revised Form 990-T. The Form 990-T is currently used by tax-exempt organizations to report and pay the tax on unrelated business income. Form 990-T will be revised for the 2011 filing season to enable eligible tax-exempt organizations –– even those that owe no tax on unrelated business income –– also to claim the small business health care tax credit.
The final version of Form 8941 and its instructions will be available later this year.
The small business health care tax credit was included in the Affordable Care Act signed by the President in March and is effective this year. The credit is designed to encourage small employers to offer health insurance coverage for the first time or maintain coverage they already have.
In 2010, the credit is generally available to small employers that contribute an amount equivalent to at least half the cost of single coverage towards buying health insurance for their employees. The credit is specifically targeted to help small businesses and tax-exempt organizations that primarily employ moderate- and lower-income workers.
For tax years 2010 to 2013, the maximum credit is 35 percent of premiums paid by eligible small business employers and 25 percent of premiums paid by eligible employers that are tax-exempt organizations. Beginning in 2014, the maximum tax credit will go up to 50 percent of premiums paid by eligible small business employers and 35 percent of premiums paid by eligible, tax-exempt organizations for two years.
The maximum credit goes to smaller employers –– those with 10 or fewer full-time equivalent (FTE) employees –– paying annual average wages of $25,000 or less.
The credit is completely phased out for employers that have 25 FTEs or more or that pay average wages of $50,000 per year or more. Because the eligibility rules are based in part on the number of FTEs, and not simply the number of employees, businesses that use part-time help may qualify even if they employ more than 25 individuals.
Tags: Affordable Care Act, business health care tax credit, file income tax returns, Form 8941, Form 990-T, general business credit, Health Care Tax Credit, income tax, income tax returns, internal revenue service, IRS Releases Form to Help Small Businesses Claim New Health Care Tax Credit, maximum tax credit, pay the tax, tax credit, tax exempt organizations, tax returns, tax year, tax years Posted in Uncategorized | 3 Comments »
Tuesday, September 7th, 2010
IRS Issues Guidance Explaining 2011 Changes to Flexible Spending Arrangements
IR-2010-95, Sept. 3, 2010
WASHINGTON — The Internal Revenue Service today issued guidance reflecting statutory changes regarding the use of certain tax-favored arrangements, such as flexible spending arrangements (FSAs), to pay for over-the-counter medicines and drugs.
The Affordable Care Act, enacted in March, established a new uniform standard that, effective Jan. 1, 2011, applies to FSAs and health reimbursement arrangements (HRAs). Under the new standard, the cost of an over-the-counter medicine or drug cannot be reimbursed from the account unless a prescription is obtained. The change does not affect insulin, even if purchased without a prescription, or other health care expenses such as medical devices, eye glasses, contact lenses, co-pays and deductibles. The new standard applies only to purchases made on or after Jan. 1, 2011, so claims for medicines or drugs purchased without a prescription in 2010 can still be reimbursed in 2011, if allowed by the employer’s plan.
A similar rule goes into effect on Jan. 1, 2011 for Health Savings Accounts (HSAs), and Archer Medical Savings Accounts (Archer MSAs).
Employers and employees should take these changes into account as they make health benefit decisions for 2011.
For details on current rules, see Publication 969 , Health Savings Accounts and Other Tax-Favored Health Plans.
IRS Issues Guidance Explaining 2011 Changes to Flexible Spending Arrangements
IR-2010-95, Sept. 3, 2010
WASHINGTON — The Internal Revenue Service today issued guidance reflecting statutory changes regarding the use of certain tax-favored arrangements, such as flexible spending arrangements (FSAs), to pay for over-the-counter medicines and drugs.
The Affordable Care Act, enacted in March, established a new uniform standard that, effective Jan. 1, 2011, applies to FSAs and health reimbursement arrangements (HRAs). Under the new standard, the cost of an over-the-counter medicine or drug cannot be reimbursed from the account unless a prescription is obtained. The change does not affect insulin, even if purchased without a prescription, or other health care expenses such as medical devices, eye glasses, contact lenses, co-pays and deductibles. The new standard applies only to purchases made on or after Jan. 1, 2011, so claims for medicines or drugs purchased without a prescription in 2010 can still be reimbursed in 2011, if allowed by the employer’s plan.
A similar rule goes into effect on Jan. 1, 2011 for Health Savings Accounts (HSAs), and Archer Medical Savings Accounts (Archer MSAs).
Employers and employees should take these changes into account as they make health benefit decisions for 2011.
For details on current rules, see Publication 969 , Health Savings Accounts and Other Tax-Favored Health Plans.
Tags: Affordable Care Act, Archer Medical Savings Accounts, Archer MSAs, Flexible Spending Arrangements, FSAs, health reimbursement arrangements, Health Savings Accounts, HRAs, income tax, income taxes, internal revenue service, irs, IRS Issues Guidance Explaining 2011 Changes to Flexible Spending Arrangements, Tax, tax-favored, tax-favored arrangements, taxes Posted in Uncategorized | 5 Comments »
Wednesday, September 1st, 2010
What are the Tax Requirements for Barter Exchanges?
Barter exchanges, whether Internet based or with a physical location, are required to file Form 1099-B for all transactions unless certain exceptions are met. Barter exchanges are not required to file Form 1099-B for:
Exchanges through a barter exchange having fewer than 100 transactions during the year
Exempt foreign persons as defined in Regulations section 1.6045-1(g)(1)
Exchanges involving property or services with a fair market value of less than $1.00
For calendar year 2008, Copy B of Form 1099-B is due to barter exchange participants by February 2, 2009. Copy A of the form is required to be filed with the IRS by March 2, 2009. If filing electronically, the due date is March 31, 2009. Software that generates a file according to the specifications in Publication 1220, Specifications for Filing Forms 1098, 1099, 5498, and W-2G Electronically (PDF) must be used by barter exchanges. The IRS does not provide a fill-in form option.
Caution: Paper forms are scanned during processing by the IRS. Forms 1096, 1098, 1099, or 5498 that are printed from IRS.gov will not be accepted.
Non-corporate client or member bartering is reported on a transactional basis on Form 1099-B, but additional information is to be added to the form by the barter exchange. Under Regulation 1.6045-1(f)(i), barter exchanges are required to make a return of information reporting the name, address, and taxpayer identification number of each member or client providing property or services in the exchange, the property or services provided, the amount received by the member or client for such property or services, the date on which the exchange occurred and other information required on Form 1099-B. This means that multiple Forms 1099-B may be required for member clients with multiple bartering transactions during the year. To learn more about 1.6045-a(f)(i), Returns of Information of Broker and Barter Exchanges, visit the Electronic Code of Federal Regulations site, click on “Simple Search” and enter 26 in the Title and “Returns of information of brokers and barter exchanges.” in the “Search for” field.
Corporate client or member bartering is reported on the aggregate for the year, rather than on a transactional basis. Under Regulation 1.6045-1(f)(ii), barter exchanges are required to file annual Forms 1099-B including the aggregate or total amount received by a corporate client or member during the year for property or services provided by the corporate client or member in all barter transactions through the barter exchange. Form 1099-B additionally requires the name, address, and taxpayer identification number of the corporate client or member.
Penalty for Not Filing or Filing Incorrect Forms 1099-B
Failure to file Forms 1099-B can result in significant penalties under Internal Revenue Code Section 6721. The penalty is based on when correct information returns are filed. The penalties are:
$15 per information return if filed correctly within 30 days of the specified due date with a maximum penalty of $75,000 per year ($25,000 for small businesses, defined below).
$30 per information return if filed correctly more than 30 days after the due date, but by August 1 with a maximum penalty of $150,000 per year ($50,000 for small businesses).
$50 per information return if filed after August 1, or not filed, with a maximum penalty of $250,000 per year ($100,000 for small businesses).
A minimum of $100 for each unfiled information return for intentional disregard.
How to Determine if Your Business Qualifies as a Small Business for the Lower Maximum Penalties
If your average annual gross receipts were $5 million or less for the three most recent tax years, or for the period you were in business if shorter, before the calendar year in which the information returns were due, then you are a small business qualified for the lower maximum penalties.
Back-up Withholding and the “B” Process
Back-up withholding can apply to most kinds of payments that are reported on Form 1099, including payments by broker/barter exchanges. Barter exchanges are required to issue “B” notices and are subject to performing back-up withholding if barter participants fail to furnish a valid Taxpayer Identification Number (TIN). For more information please refer to the Back-up Withholding “B” Processes page.
How to Get More Help
If you have questions about reporting on Form 1099-B, call the IRS information reporting customer service site toll free at 1-866-455-7438 or 304-263-8700 (not toll free). For TTY/TDD equipment, call 304-267-3367 (not toll free). The hours of operation are Monday through Friday from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Eastern Time.
What are the Tax Requirements for Barter Exchanges?
Barter exchanges, whether Internet based or with a physical location, are required to file Form 1099-B for all transactions unless certain exceptions are met. Barter exchanges are not required to file Form 1099-B for:
- Exchanges through a barter exchange having fewer than 100 transactions during the year
- Exempt foreign persons as defined in Regulations section 1.6045-1(g)(1)
- Exchanges involving property or services with a fair market value of less than $1.00
For calendar year 2008, Copy B of Form 1099-B is due to barter exchange participants by February 2, 2009. Copy A of the form is required to be filed with the IRS by March 2, 2009. If filing electronically, the due date is March 31, 2009. Software that generates a file according to the specifications in Publication 1220, Specifications for Filing Forms 1098, 1099, 5498, and W-2G Electronically (PDF) must be used by barter exchanges. The IRS does not provide a fill-in form option.
Caution: Paper forms are scanned during processing by the IRS. Forms 1096, 1098, 1099, or 5498 that are printed from IRS.gov will not be accepted.
Non-corporate client or member bartering is reported on a transactional basis on Form 1099-B, but additional information is to be added to the form by the barter exchange. Under Regulation 1.6045-1(f)(i), barter exchanges are required to make a return of information reporting the name, address, and taxpayer identification number of each member or client providing property or services in the exchange, the property or services provided, the amount received by the member or client for such property or services, the date on which the exchange occurred and other information required on Form 1099-B. This means that multiple Forms 1099-B may be required for member clients with multiple bartering transactions during the year. To learn more about 1.6045-a(f)(i), Returns of Information of Broker and Barter Exchanges, visit the Electronic Code of Federal Regulations site, click on “Simple Search” and enter 26 in the Title and “Returns of information of brokers and barter exchanges.” in the “Search for” field.
Corporate client or member bartering is reported on the aggregate for the year, rather than on a transactional basis. Under Regulation 1.6045-1(f)(ii), barter exchanges are required to file annual Forms 1099-B including the aggregate or total amount received by a corporate client or member during the year for property or services provided by the corporate client or member in all barter transactions through the barter exchange. Form 1099-B additionally requires the name, address, and taxpayer identification number of the corporate client or member.
Penalty for Not Filing or Filing Incorrect Forms 1099-B
Failure to file Forms 1099-B can result in significant penalties under Internal Revenue Code Section 6721. The penalty is based on when correct information returns are filed. The penalties are:
- $15 per information return if filed correctly within 30 days of the specified due date with a maximum penalty of $75,000 per year ($25,000 for small businesses, defined below).
- $30 per information return if filed correctly more than 30 days after the due date, but by August 1 with a maximum penalty of $150,000 per year ($50,000 for small businesses).
- $50 per information return if filed after August 1, or not filed, with a maximum penalty of $250,000 per year ($100,000 for small businesses).
- A minimum of $100 for each unfiled information return for intentional disregard.
How to Determine if Your Business Qualifies as a Small Business for the Lower Maximum Penalties
If your average annual gross receipts were $5 million or less for the three most recent tax years, or for the period you were in business if shorter, before the calendar year in which the information returns were due, then you are a small business qualified for the lower maximum penalties.
Back-up Withholding and the “B” Process
Back-up withholding can apply to most kinds of payments that are reported on Form 1099, including payments by broker/barter exchanges. Barter exchanges are required to issue “B” notices and are subject to performing back-up withholding if barter participants fail to furnish a valid Taxpayer Identification Number (TIN). For more information please refer to the Back-up Withholding “B” Processes page.
How to Get More Help
If you have questions about reporting on Form 1099-B, call the IRS information reporting customer service site toll free at 1-866-455-7438 or 304-263-8700 (not toll free). For TTY/TDD equipment, call 304-267-3367 (not toll free). The hours of operation are Monday through Friday from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Eastern Time.
Tags: Barter Exchanges, business tax, business taxes, Exempt foreign persons, Form 1099-B, Form 1099B, income tax, income taxes, Internal Revenue Code, irs, irs gov, Returns of information of brokers and barter exchanges, Tax, Tax Requirements, Tax Requirements for Barter Exchanges, tax years, taxes, Taxpayer Identification Number, What are the Tax Requirements for Barter Exchanges?, www irs gov Posted in Uncategorized | 5 Comments »
Tuesday, August 31st, 2010
What are the Tax Responsibilities of Bartering Participants?
If you engage in barter transactions you may have tax responsibilities. You may be subject to liabilities for income tax, self-employment tax, employment tax, or excise tax. Your barter activities may result in ordinary business income, capital gains or capital losses, or you may have a nondeductible personal loss.
Barter dollars or trade dollars are identical to real dollars for tax reporting. If you conduct any direct barter – barter for another’s products or services – you will have to report the fair market value of the products or services you received on your tax return.
Reporting Bartering Proceeds
If you barter your products or services through a barter exchange, you should receive a Form 1099-B, Proceeds from Broker and Barter Exchange Transactions. The amount shown in 1099-B Box 3 Bartering is your barter transactions proceeds and is generally reportable as income and must be included on your tax return. Barter exchanges have an annual obligation to report your bartering proceeds to the IRS.
If a business makes payments of bartered services to another business (except a corporation) of $600 or more in the course of the year, these payments are reported on Form 1099-MISC.
For example, an attorney represents a painter for nonpayment of business debts in exchange for painting the attorney’s law offices. The amount reportable by each on Form 1099-MISC is the fair market value of his or her own services performed. However, if the attorney represents the painter in a divorce proceeding, then there are two types of expenses involved in this transaction, painting the office is a business expense for the attorney but the divorce expenses are personal expenses for the painter.The requirement to report barter payments only applies to payments made in the course of a trade or business, Therefore, the attorney must report on Form 1099-MISC the value of the painting services because painting the law office is an activity that is related to the attorney’s trade or business. But the painter need not send a Form 1099-MISC to the attorney reporting the value of painting the law offices, because the work is in exchange for divorce legal services that are personal expenses and separate from the painter’s business. See Form 1099-MISC Instructions for more information. Generally, you report this type of business income on Form 1040, Schedule C Profit or Loss from Business (PDF), or other business returns such as Form 1065 for Partnerships (PDF), Form 1120 for Corporations (PDF), or Form 1120-S for Small Business Corporations (PDF).
Nevertheless, even if no Forms 1099-B or 1099-MISC are filed, bartering is generally taxable to the extent of the fair market value of the products or services bartered under Internal Revenue Code Section 61. In the case of the example above, the painter would still have a taxable transaction in the bartering of painting for legal work by the attorney on the divorce proceedings even though no Form 1099-MISC is required to be filed by the attorney. Please refer to Publication 525, Taxable and Nontaxable Income, and Internal Revenue Code Section 61 for more information.
Staying in Compliance
Treat barter income as you would any other business activity. Keep good records, work with a reputable barter exchange and consult the IRS or a tax professional if you have questions.
If you have failed to report this income, correct your return by filing an amended return such as Form 1040X (PDF). Refer to Topic 308 for Amended Return information. If you receive income from bartering, you may be required to make estimated tax payments.
What are the Tax Responsibilities of Bartering Participants?
If you engage in barter transactions you may have tax responsibilities. You may be subject to liabilities for income tax, self-employment tax, employment tax, or excise tax. Your barter activities may result in ordinary business income, capital gains or capital losses, or you may have a nondeductible personal loss.
Barter dollars or trade dollars are identical to real dollars for tax reporting. If you conduct any direct barter – barter for another’s products or services – you will have to report the fair market value of the products or services you received on your tax return.
Reporting Bartering Proceeds
If you barter your products or services through a barter exchange, you should receive a Form 1099-B, Proceeds from Broker and Barter Exchange Transactions. The amount shown in 1099-B Box 3 Bartering is your barter transactions proceeds and is generally reportable as income and must be included on your tax return. Barter exchanges have an annual obligation to report your bartering proceeds to the IRS.
If a business makes payments of bartered services to another business (except a corporation) of $600 or more in the course of the year, these payments are reported on Form 1099-MISC.
For example, an attorney represents a painter for nonpayment of business debts in exchange for painting the attorney’s law offices. The amount reportable by each on Form 1099-MISC is the fair market value of his or her own services performed. However, if the attorney represents the painter in a divorce proceeding, then there are two types of expenses involved in this transaction, painting the office is a business expense for the attorney but the divorce expenses are personal expenses for the painter.The requirement to report barter payments only applies to payments made in the course of a trade or business, Therefore, the attorney must report on Form 1099-MISC the value of the painting services because painting the law office is an activity that is related to the attorney’s trade or business. But the painter need not send a Form 1099-MISC to the attorney reporting the value of painting the law offices, because the work is in exchange for divorce legal services that are personal expenses and separate from the painter’s business. See Form 1099-MISC Instructions for more information. Generally, you report this type of business income on Form 1040, Schedule C Profit or Loss from Business (PDF), or other business returns such as Form 1065 for Partnerships (PDF), Form 1120 for Corporations (PDF), or Form 1120-S for Small Business Corporations (PDF).
Nevertheless, even if no Forms 1099-B or 1099-MISC are filed, bartering is generally taxable to the extent of the fair market value of the products or services bartered under Internal Revenue Code Section 61. In the case of the example above, the painter would still have a taxable transaction in the bartering of painting for legal work by the attorney on the divorce proceedings even though no Form 1099-MISC is required to be filed by the attorney. Please refer to Publication 525, Taxable and Nontaxable Income, and Internal Revenue Code Section 61 for more information.
Staying in Compliance
Treat barter income as you would any other business activity. Keep good records, work with a reputable barter exchange and consult the IRS or a tax professional if you have questions.
If you have failed to report this income, correct your return by filing an amended return such as Form 1040X (PDF). Refer to Topic 308 for Amended Return information. If you receive income from bartering, you may be required to make estimated tax payments.
Tags: barter dollars, Barter dollars or trade dollars, barter income, business income, capital gains, capital gains or capital losses, capital losses, employment tax, estimated tax payments, excise tax, form 1040, Form 1040X, Form 1065, Form 1099-B, Form 1099-B Proceeds from Broker and Barter Exchange Transactions, Form 1099-MISC, Form 1120, Form 1120-S, income tax, Internal Revenue Code, irs, liabilities for income tax, nondeductible personal loss, ordinary business income, Proceeds from Broker and Barter Exchange Transactions, reporting bartering proceeds, Schedule C Profit or Loss from Business, self-employment tax, tax professional, tax reporting, Tax Responsibilities, Tax Responsibilities of Bartering Participants, tax return, Taxable and Nontaxable Income, Trade Dollars, What are the Tax Responsibilities of Bartering Participants? Posted in Uncategorized | 6 Comments »
Monday, August 30th, 2010
What are Barter Exchanges?
Bartering is the trading of one product or service for another. Usually there is no exchange of cash. Barter may take place on an informal one-on-one basis between individuals and businesses, or it can take place on a third party basis through a barter exchange company. A barter exchange is any person or organization with members or clients that contract with each other (or with the barter exchange) to jointly trade or barter property or services. The term does not include arrangements that provide solely for the informal exchange of similar services on a noncommercial basis.
Unlike one-on-one bartering, members of exchanges are not obligated to barter or purchase directly from a seller. Instead, when a barter exchange member sells a product or a service to another member, their barter account is credited for the fair market value of the sale. When a barter exchange member buys, the account is debited for the fair market value of the purchase.
Internet-based Barter
The Internet provides a new medium for the barter exchange industry. Pure Internet-based barter companies differ from traditional, organized trade exchanges in that they do not have a physical office. In modern Internet barter exchanges, there is an agreement or process in place to value goods and services exchanged, which is facilitated by the barter exchange for a fee. A barter exchange functions primarily as the organizer of a marketplace where members buy and sell products and services among themselves.
Trade Dollars
Barter exchanges have their own unit of exchange, usually known as barter or trade dollars. Trade dollars or barter dollars are valued in U.S. currency for the purposes of information returns. Trade dollars allow barter to take place between parties when one party may not have a simultaneous need or desire for the goods or services of the other members. Barter exchanges act as the bookkeeper for keeping track of trade dollars that participants accumulate. Earning trade or barter dollars through a barter exchange is considered taxable income, just as if your product or service was sold for cash.
Requirement for Barter Exchanges to File Information Returns
Barter exchanges are required to issue Form 1099-B Proceeds from Broker and Barter Exchange Transactions, annually to their clients or members and to the Internal Revenue Service. Learn more about information return filing requirements for barter exchanges.
What are Barter Exchanges?
Bartering is the trading of one product or service for another. Usually there is no exchange of cash. Barter may take place on an informal one-on-one basis between individuals and businesses, or it can take place on a third party basis through a barter exchange company. A barter exchange is any person or organization with members or clients that contract with each other (or with the barter exchange) to jointly trade or barter property or services. The term does not include arrangements that provide solely for the informal exchange of similar services on a noncommercial basis.
Unlike one-on-one bartering, members of exchanges are not obligated to barter or purchase directly from a seller. Instead, when a barter exchange member sells a product or a service to another member, their barter account is credited for the fair market value of the sale. When a barter exchange member buys, the account is debited for the fair market value of the purchase.
Internet-based Barter
The Internet provides a new medium for the barter exchange industry. Pure Internet-based barter companies differ from traditional, organized trade exchanges in that they do not have a physical office. In modern Internet barter exchanges, there is an agreement or process in place to value goods and services exchanged, which is facilitated by the barter exchange for a fee. A barter exchange functions primarily as the organizer of a marketplace where members buy and sell products and services among themselves.
Trade Dollars
Barter exchanges have their own unit of exchange, usually known as barter or trade dollars. Trade dollars or barter dollars are valued in U.S. currency for the purposes of information returns. Trade dollars allow barter to take place between parties when one party may not have a simultaneous need or desire for the goods or services of the other members. Barter exchanges act as the bookkeeper for keeping track of trade dollars that participants accumulate. Earning trade or barter dollars through a barter exchange is considered taxable income, just as if your product or service was sold for cash.
Requirement for Barter Exchanges to File Information Returns
Barter exchanges are required to issue Form 1099-B Proceeds from Broker and Barter Exchange Transactions, annually to their clients or members and to the Internal Revenue Service. Learn more about information return filing requirements for barter exchanges.
Tags: barter dollars, barter exchange industry, Barter Exchanges, Bartering, bookkeeper, File Information Returns, Form 1099-B, Form 1099-B Proceeds from Broker and Barter Exchange Transactions, income tax, income taxes, Information Returns, internal revenue service, Internet-based Barter, organized trade exchanges, Proceeds from Broker and Barter Exchange Transactions, Tax, taxable income, taxes, Trade Dollars, What are Barter Exchanges? Posted in Uncategorized | 4 Comments »
Saturday, August 28th, 2010
What is Bartering Income?
Bartering is the trading of one product or service for another. Usually there is no exchange of cash. It is the most ancient form of commerce. Any business owner or professional who has a product or service to offer can barter.
While our ancestors may have exchanged eggs for corn, today you can barter computer services for auto repair. Another example of a one-on-one, non-barter exchange transaction is a plumber doing repair work for a dentist in exchange for dental services. The fair market value of the goods and services exchanged must be reported as income by both parties.
Barter may take place on an informal one-on-one basis between individuals and businesses, or it can take place on a third party basis through a modern barter exchange company.
Tax Responsibilities
Income from bartering is taxable in the year it is performed. The rules for reporting barter transactions may vary depending on which form of bartering takes place. Refer to Tax Responsibilities of Bartering Participants for more information about reporting income and staying in compliance.
Home-Based Online Barter Business
If online bartering turns into a business, or you have recurring barter transactions and are purchasing items to barter with the intention of making a profit, you may have started a barter business.
If Your Bartering is a Trade or Business
If you are operating a viable bartering business, you may be entitled to deduct business expenses. Do you have an established business and are augmenting your sales with barter transactions? If so, include the sales from bartering in your business income.
Bartering Depreciated Business Assets
If you barter business assets or close your business you may have capital gains, ordinary gains and depreciation recapture (explained in chapter 3 of Publication 544) to report.
Bartering Appreciated Assets
Examples of appreciated assets often include art, antiques and collectibles. If you have barter transactions of property where the fair market value is more than your cost or other basis, you usually will have a reportable gain. These gains may be business income or capital gains.
What is Bartering Income?
Bartering is the trading of one product or service for another. Usually there is no exchange of cash. It is the most ancient form of commerce. Any business owner or professional who has a product or service to offer can barter.
While our ancestors may have exchanged eggs for corn, today you can barter computer services for auto repair. Another example of a one-on-one, non-barter exchange transaction is a plumber doing repair work for a dentist in exchange for dental services. The fair market value of the goods and services exchanged must be reported as income by both parties.
Barter may take place on an informal one-on-one basis between individuals and businesses, or it can take place on a third party basis through a modern barter exchange company.
Tax Responsibilities
Income from bartering is taxable in the year it is performed. The rules for reporting barter transactions may vary depending on which form of bartering takes place. Refer to Tax Responsibilities of Bartering Participants for more information about reporting income and staying in compliance.
Home-Based Online Barter Business
If online bartering turns into a business, or you have recurring barter transactions and are purchasing items to barter with the intention of making a profit, you may have started a barter business.
If Your Bartering is a Trade or Business
If you are operating a viable bartering business, you may be entitled to deduct business expenses. Do you have an established business and are augmenting your sales with barter transactions? If so, include the sales from bartering in your business income.
Bartering Depreciated Business Assets
If you barter business assets or close your business you may have capital gains, ordinary gains and depreciation recapture (explained in chapter 3 of Publication 544) to report.
Bartering Appreciated Assets
Examples of appreciated assets often include art, antiques and collectibles. If you have barter transactions of property where the fair market value is more than your cost or other basis, you usually will have a reportable gain. These gains may be business income or capital gains.
Tags: Appreciated Assets, barter business, barter exchange company, Bartering Appreciated Assets, Bartering Depreciated Business Assets, Bartering Income, Bartering is a Trade, Business Assets, business expenses, business income, capital gains, Depreciated Business Assets, depreciation recapture, fair market value, Home-Based Online Barter Business, Home-Based Online Business, Income from bartering, income tax, income taxes, ordinary gains, reportable gain, Tax, Tax Responsibilities, Tax Responsibilities of Bartering Participants, taxable, taxes, What is Bartering Income? Posted in Uncategorized | 7 Comments »
Thursday, August 5th, 2010
Five Tax Scams to Avoid this Summer
IRS Summertime Tax Tip 2010-08
The Internal Revenue Service issues a list of the top 12 tax scams each year – known as the Dirty Dozen. The scams are illegal and can lead to problems for taxpayers including significant penalties, interest and possible criminal prosecution. These scams don’t just happen during the tax filing season, they can happen anytime during the year. Here are five scams from the 2010 Dirty Dozen list every taxpayer should be aware of this summer.
Phishing Phishing is a tactic used by scam artists to trick unsuspecting victims into revealing personal or financial information in an electronic communication. Scams can take the form of e-mails, tweets or phony websites and they try to mislead consumers by telling them they are entitled to a tax refund from the IRS and they must reveal personal information to claim it. Regardless of how official this e-mail may look and sound, the IRS never initiates unsolicited e-mail contact with taxpayers about their tax issues. Phishers use the personal information obtained to steal the victim’s identity, access bank accounts, run up credit card charges or apply for loans in the victim’s name. If you receive an e-mail that you suspect is a phishing attempt or directs you to an imitation IRS website, please forward it to the IRS at phishing@irs.gov. You can also visit IRS.gov and enter the keyword phishing for additional information.
Return Preparer Fraud Dishonest tax return preparers can cause trouble for taxpayers who fall victim to their ploys. Such preparers are skimming a portion of their clients’ refunds, charging inflated fees for tax preparation or are attracting new clients by promising refunds that are too good to be true. To increase confidence in the tax system, the IRS is requiring all paid return preparers to register with the IRS, pass competency tests and attend continuing education.
Hiding Income Offshore Taxpayers have tried to avoid or evade U.S. income tax by hiding income in offshore banks and brokerage accounts. IRS agents continue to develop their investigations of these offshore tax avoidance transactions using information gained from more than 14,700 voluntary disclosures received last year. Taxpayers also evade taxes by using offshore debit cards, credit cards, wire transfers, foreign trusts, employee-leasing schemes, private annuities or life insurance plans.
Abuse of Charitable Organizations and Deductions The IRS continues to observe the misuse of tax-exempt organizations. This includes arrangements to improperly shield income or assets from taxation and attempts by donors to maintain control over donated assets. The IRS also continues to investigate various schemes where donations are highly overvalued or the organization receiving the donation promises that the donor can purchase the items back at a later date at a price the donor sets.
Frivolous Arguments Promoters of frivolous schemes encourage people to make unreasonable and outlandish claims to avoid paying the taxes they owe. If a scheme seems too good to be true, it probably is. The IRS has a list of frivolous legal positions that taxpayers should avoid on IRS.gov. These arguments are false and have been thrown out of court.
Five Tax Scams to Avoid this Summer
IRS Summertime Tax Tip 2010-08
The Internal Revenue Service issues a list of the top 12 tax scams each year – known as the Dirty Dozen. The scams are illegal and can lead to problems for taxpayers including significant penalties, interest and possible criminal prosecution. These scams don’t just happen during the tax filing season, they can happen anytime during the year. Here are five scams from the 2010 Dirty Dozen list every taxpayer should be aware of this summer.
- Phishing Phishing is a tactic used by scam artists to trick unsuspecting victims into revealing personal or financial information in an electronic communication. Scams can take the form of e-mails, tweets or phony websites and they try to mislead consumers by telling them they are entitled to a tax refund from the IRS and they must reveal personal information to claim it. Regardless of how official this e-mail may look and sound, the IRS never initiates unsolicited e-mail contact with taxpayers about their tax issues. Phishers use the personal information obtained to steal the victim’s identity, access bank accounts, run up credit card charges or apply for loans in the victim’s name. If you receive an e-mail that you suspect is a phishing attempt or directs you to an imitation IRS website, please forward it to the IRS at phishing@irs.gov. You can also visit IRS.gov and enter the keyword phishing for additional information.
- Return Preparer Fraud Dishonest tax return preparers can cause trouble for taxpayers who fall victim to their ploys. Such preparers are skimming a portion of their clients’ refunds, charging inflated fees for tax preparation or are attracting new clients by promising refunds that are too good to be true. To increase confidence in the tax system, the IRS is requiring all paid return preparers to register with the IRS, pass competency tests and attend continuing education.
- Hiding Income Offshore Taxpayers have tried to avoid or evade U.S. income tax by hiding income in offshore banks and brokerage accounts. IRS agents continue to develop their investigations of these offshore tax avoidance transactions using information gained from more than 14,700 voluntary disclosures received last year. Taxpayers also evade taxes by using offshore debit cards, credit cards, wire transfers, foreign trusts, employee-leasing schemes, private annuities or life insurance plans.
- Abuse of Charitable Organizations and Deductions The IRS continues to observe the misuse of tax-exempt organizations. This includes arrangements to improperly shield income or assets from taxation and attempts by donors to maintain control over donated assets. The IRS also continues to investigate various schemes where donations are highly overvalued or the organization receiving the donation promises that the donor can purchase the items back at a later date at a price the donor sets.
- Frivolous Arguments Promoters of frivolous schemes encourage people to make unreasonable and outlandish claims to avoid paying the taxes they owe. If a scheme seems too good to be true, it probably is. The IRS has a list of frivolous legal positions that taxpayers should avoid on IRS.gov. These arguments are false and have been thrown out of court.
Tags: Five Tax Scams to Avoid this Summer, income tax, internal revenue service, irs, irs gov, tax avoidance, tax exempt, tax exempt organizations, tax filing season, tax issues, tax preparation, tax refund, tax return, Tax Scams, tax system, Tax Tip, taxation, taxes Posted in Uncategorized | 6 Comments »
Wednesday, July 28th, 2010
Excess Social Security or Railroad Retirement Tax Withholding
Most employers must withhold social security tax from your wages. In some cases, however, the federal government and state and local governments do not have to withhold social security tax from their employees’ wages. If you work for a railroad employer, that employer must withhold tier 1 railroad retirement (RRTA) tax and tier 2 RRTA tax.
Two or more employers. If you worked for two or more employers in 2009, too much social security tax or tier 1 RRTA tax may have been withheld from your pay. You may be able to claim the excess as a credit against your income tax when you file your return. Table 3-2 shows the maximum amount that should have been withheld for any of these taxes for 2009. Figure the excess withholding on the appropriate worksheet on page 47.
Table 3-2.Maximum Social Security and RRTA Withholding for 2009
Type of tax Maximum wages subject
to tax Tax rate Maximum
tax to be
withheld
Social security . $106,800 6.2% $6,621.60
Tier 1 RRTA $106,800 6.2% $6,621.60
Tier 2 RRTA $79,200 3.9% $3,088.80
Joint returns. If you are filing a joint return, you cannot add any social security or tier 1 RRTA tax withheld from your spouse’s income to the amount withheld from your income. You must figure the excess separately for both you and your spouse to determine if either of you has excess withholding.
Note.
All wages are subject to Medicare tax withholding.
Employer’s error. If you had only one employer and he or she withheld too much social security or tier 1 RRTA tax, ask the employer to refund the excess amount to you. If the employer refuses to refund the overcollection, ask for a statement indicating the amount of the overcollection to support your claim. File a claim for refund using Form 843, Claim for Refund and Request for Abatement.
Worksheet for Nonrailroad Employees
If you did not work for a railroad during 2009, figure the excess social security withholding on Worksheet 3-1 on the next page.
Note.
If you worked for both a railroad employer and a nonrailroad employer, use Worksheet 3-2 on the next page to figure excess social security and tier 1 RRTA tax.
Where to claim credit for excess social security withholding. If you file Form 1040, enter the excess on line 69.
If you file Form 1040A, include the excess in the total on line 44. Write “Excess SST” and show the amount of the credit in the space to the left of the line.
You cannot claim excess social security tax withholding on Form 1040EZ.
Example.
In 2009, Tom Martin earned $62,000 working for Company A and $47,200 working for Company B. Company A withheld $3,844 for social security tax. Company B withheld $2,926.40 for social security tax. Because he worked for two employers and earned more than $106,800, he had too much social security tax withheld. Tom figures his credit of $148.80, as shown on the illustrated Worksheet 3-1 below.
Worksheets for Railroad Employees
If you worked for a railroad during 2009, figure your excess withholding on Worksheet 3-2 and 3-3, as appropriate, on the next page.
Where to claim credit for excess tier 1 RRTA withholding. If you file Form 1040, enter the excess on line 69.
If you file Form 1040A, include the excess in the total on line 44. Write “Excess SST” and show the amount of the credit in the space to the left of the line.
You cannot claim excess tier 1 RRTA withholding on Form 1040EZ.
How to claim refund of excess tier 2 RRTA. To claim a refund of tier 2 tax, use Form 843. Be sure to attach a copy of all of your Forms W-2.
See Worksheet 3-3 (on the next page) and the Instructions for Form 843, line 3, for more details.
Worksheet 3-1.Excess Social Security—Nonrailroad Employees —Illustrated (Tom Martin)
1. Add all social security tax withheld (but not more than $6,621.60 for each employer). This tax should be shown
in box 4 of your Forms W-2. Enter the total here 1. $6,770.40
2. Enter any uncollected social security tax on tips or group-term life insurance included in the total on Form 1040, line 60, identified by “UT” 2. -0-
3. Add lines 1 and 2. If $6,621.60 or less, stop here. You cannot claim the credit 3. 6,770.40
4. Social security limit 4. $6,621.60
5. Excess. Subtract line 4 from line 3 5. $148.80
Worksheet 3-1.Excess Social Security—Nonrailroad Employees
1. Add all social security tax withheld (but not more than
$6,621.60 for each employer). This tax should be shown
in box 4 of your Forms W-2. Enter the total here 1.
2. Enter any uncollected social security tax on tips or group-term life insurance included in the total on Form 1040, line 60, identified by “UT” 2.
3. Add lines 1 and 2. If $6,621,60 or less, stop here. You cannot claim the credit 3.
4. Social security limit 4. $6,621.60
5. Excess. Subtract line 4 from line 3 5.
Worksheet 3-2.Excess Social Security and Tier 1 RRTA—Railroad Employees
1. Add all social security and tier 1 RRTA tax withheld (but not more than $6,621.60 for each employer). Social security tax should be shown in box 4 and tier 1 RRTA should be shown
in box 14 of your Forms W-2. Enter the total here 1.
2. Enter any uncollected social security and tier 1 RRTA tax on tips or group-term life insurance included in the total on Form 1040, line 60, identified by “UT” 2.
3. Add lines 1 and 2. If $6,621.60 or less, stop here. You cannot claim the credit 3.
4. Social security and tier 1 RRTA tax limit 4. $6,621.60
5. Excess. Subtract line 4 from line 3 5.
Worksheet 3-3.Excess Tier 2 RRTA—Railroad Employees
1. Add all tier 2 RRTA tax withheld (but not more than $3,088.80 for each employer). Box 14 of your Forms W-2 should show
tier 2 RRTA tax. Enter the total here 1.
2. Enter any uncollected tier 2 RRTA tax on tips or group-term life insurance included in the total on Form 1040, line 60, identified by “UT” 2.
3. Add lines 1 and 2. If $3,088.80 or less, stop here. You cannot claim the credit. 3.
4. Tier 2 RRTA tax limit 4. $3,088.80
5. Excess. Subtract line 4 from line 3.
Excess Social Security or Railroad Retirement Tax Withholding
Most employers must withhold social security tax from your wages. In some cases, however, the federal government and state and local governments do not have to withhold social security tax from their employees’ wages. If you work for a railroad employer, that employer must withhold tier 1 railroad retirement (RRTA) tax and tier 2 RRTA tax.
Two or more employers. If you worked for two or more employers in 2009, too much social security tax or tier 1 RRTA tax may have been withheld from your pay. You may be able to claim the excess as a credit against your income tax when you file your return. Table 3-2 shows the maximum amount that should have been withheld for any of these taxes for 2009. Figure the excess withholding on the appropriate worksheet on page 47.
Table 3-2.Maximum Social Security and RRTA Withholding for 2009
Type of tax Maximum wages subject Tax rate Maximum tax to
to tax be withheld
Social security . $106,800 6.2% $6,621.60
Tier 1 RRTA $106,800 6.2% $6,621.60
Tier 2 RRTA $79,200 3.9% $3,088.80
Joint returns. If you are filing a joint return, you cannot add any social security or tier 1 RRTA tax withheld from your spouse’s income to the amount withheld from your income. You must figure the excess separately for both you and your spouse to determine if either of you has excess withholding.
Note.
All wages are subject to Medicare tax withholding.
Employer’s error. If you had only one employer and he or she withheld too much social security or tier 1 RRTA tax, ask the employer to refund the excess amount to you. If the employer refuses to refund the overcollection, ask for a statement indicating the amount of the overcollection to support your claim. File a claim for refund using Form 843, Claim for Refund and Request for Abatement.
Worksheet for Nonrailroad Employees
If you did not work for a railroad during 2009, figure the excess social security withholding on Worksheet 3-1 on the next page.
Note.
If you worked for both a railroad employer and a nonrailroad employer, use Worksheet 3-2 on the next page to figure excess social security and tier 1 RRTA tax.
Where to claim credit for excess social security withholding. If you file Form 1040, enter the excess on line 69.
If you file Form 1040A, include the excess in the total on line 44. Write “Excess SST” and show the amount of the credit in the space to the left of the line.
You cannot claim excess social security tax withholding on Form 1040EZ.
Example.
In 2009, Tom Martin earned $62,000 working for Company A and $47,200 working for Company B. Company A withheld $3,844 for social security tax. Company B withheld $2,926.40 for social security tax. Because he worked for two employers and earned more than $106,800, he had too much social security tax withheld. Tom figures his credit of $148.80, as shown on the illustrated Worksheet 3-1 below.
Worksheets for Railroad Employees
If you worked for a railroad during 2009, figure your excess withholding on Worksheet 3-2 and 3-3, as appropriate, on the next page.
Where to claim credit for excess tier 1 RRTA withholding. If you file Form 1040, enter the excess on line 69.
If you file Form 1040A, include the excess in the total on line 44. Write “Excess SST” and show the amount of the credit in the space to the left of the line.
You cannot claim excess tier 1 RRTA withholding on Form 1040EZ.
How to claim refund of excess tier 2 RRTA. To claim a refund of tier 2 tax, use Form 843. Be sure to attach a copy of all of your Forms W-2.
See Worksheet 3-3 and the Instructions for Form 843, line 3, for more details.
Worksheet 3-1.Excess Social Security—Nonrailroad Employees —Illustrated (Tom Martin)
1. Add all social security tax withheld (but not more than $6,621.60 for each employer). This tax should be shown
in box 4 of your Forms W-2. Enter the total here 1. $6,770.40
2. Enter any uncollected social security tax on tips or group-term life insurance included in the total on Form 1040, line 60, identified by “UT” 2. -0-
3. Add lines 1 and 2. If $6,621.60 or less, stop here. You cannot claim the credit 3. 6,770.40
4. Social security limit 4. $6,621.60
5. Excess. Subtract line 4 from line 3 5. $148.80
Worksheet 3-1.Excess Social Security—Nonrailroad Employees
1. Add all social security tax withheld (but not more than
$6,621.60 for each employer). This tax should be shown
in box 4 of your Forms W-2. Enter the total here 1.
2. Enter any uncollected social security tax on tips or group-term life insurance included in the total on Form 1040, line 60, identified by “UT” 2.
3. Add lines 1 and 2. If $6,621,60 or less, stop here. You cannot claim the credit 3.
4. Social security limit 4. $6,621.60
5. Excess. Subtract line 4 from line 3 5.
Worksheet 3-2.Excess Social Security and Tier 1 RRTA—Railroad Employees
1. Add all social security and tier 1 RRTA tax withheld (but not more than $6,621.60 for each employer). Social security tax should be shown in box 4 and tier 1 RRTA should be shown
in box 14 of your Forms W-2. Enter the total here 1.
2. Enter any uncollected social security and tier 1 RRTA tax on tips or group-term life insurance included in the total on Form 1040, line 60, identified by “UT” 2.
3. Add lines 1 and 2. If $6,621.60 or less, stop here. You cannot claim the credit 3.
4. Social security and tier 1 RRTA tax limit 4. $6,621.60
5. Excess. Subtract line 4 from line 3 5.
Worksheet 3-3.Excess Tier 2 RRTA—Railroad Employees
1. Add all tier 2 RRTA tax withheld (but not more than $3,088.80 for each employer). Box 14 of your Forms W-2 should show
tier 2 RRTA tax. Enter the total here 1.
2. Enter any uncollected tier 2 RRTA tax on tips or group-term life insurance included in the total on Form 1040, line 60, identified by “UT” 2.
3. Add lines 1 and 2. If $3,088.80 or less, stop here. You cannot claim the credit. 3.
4. Tier 2 RRTA tax limit 4. $3,088.80
5. Excess. Subtract line 4 from line 3.
Tags: Claim for Refund and Request for Abatement, Excess Social Security or Railroad Retirement Tax Withholding, Excess SST, federal government, form 1040, Form 1040EZ, Form 843, Form 843 Claim for Refund and Request for Abatement, income tax, Maximum Social Security and RRTA Withholding for 2009, Medicare, Medicare tax, Medicare tax withholding, overcollection, Railroad Retirement Tax, Railroad Retirement Tax Withholding, social security, social security tax, social security tax withholding, state and local governments, tier 1 railroad retirement (RRTA) tax, tier 2 RRTA tax Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment »
Tuesday, July 27th, 2010
Six Tax Tips for New Business Owners
IRS Summertime Tax Tip 2010-05
Are you opening a new business this summer? The IRS has many resources available for individuals that are opening a new business. Here are six tax tips the IRS wants new business owners to know.
First, you must decide what type of business entity you are going to establish. The type of business entity will determine which tax form you have to file. The most common types of business are the sole proprietorship, partnership, corporation and S corporation.
The type of business you operate determines what taxes you must pay and how you pay them. The four general types of business taxes are income tax, self-employment tax, employment tax and excise tax.
An Employer Identification Number is used to identify a business entity. Generally, businesses need an EIN. Visit IRS.gov for more information about whether you will need an EIN. You can also apply for an EIN online at IRS.gov.
Good records will help you ensure successful operation of your new business. You may choose any recordkeeping system suited to your business that clearly shows your income and expenses. Except in a few cases, the law does not require any special kind of records. However, the business you are in affects the type of records you need to keep for federal tax purposes.
Every business taxpayer must figure taxable income on an annual accounting period called a tax year. The calendar year and the fiscal year are the most common tax years used.
Each taxpayer must also use a consistent accounting method, which is a set of rules for determining when to report income and expenses. The most commonly used accounting methods are the cash method and an accrual method. Under the cash method, you generally report income in the tax year you receive it and deduct expenses in the tax year you pay them. Under an accrual method, you generally report income in the tax year you earn it and deduct expenses in the tax year you incur them.
Six Tax Tips for New Business Owners
IRS Summertime Tax Tip 2010-05
Are you opening a new business this summer? The IRS has many resources available for individuals that are opening a new business. Here are six tax tips the IRS wants new business owners to know.
- First, you must decide what type of business entity you are going to establish. The type of business entity will determine which tax form you have to file. The most common types of business are the sole proprietorship, partnership, corporation and S corporation.
- The type of business you operate determines what taxes you must pay and how you pay them. The four general types of business taxes are income tax, self-employment tax, employment tax and excise tax.
- An Employer Identification Number is used to identify a business entity. Generally, businesses need an EIN. Visit IRS.gov for more information about whether you will need an EIN. You can also apply for an EIN online at IRS.gov.
- Good records will help you ensure successful operation of your new business. You may choose any recordkeeping system suited to your business that clearly shows your income and expenses. Except in a few cases, the law does not require any special kind of records. However, the business you are in affects the type of records you need to keep for federal tax purposes.
- Every business taxpayer must figure taxable income on an annual accounting period called a tax year. The calendar year and the fiscal year are the most common tax years used.
- Each taxpayer must also use a consistent accounting method, which is a set of rules for determining when to report income and expenses. The most commonly used accounting methods are the cash method and an accrual method. Under the cash method, you generally report income in the tax year you receive it and deduct expenses in the tax year you pay them. Under an accrual method, you generally report income in the tax year you earn it and deduct expenses in the tax year you incur them.
Tags: accounting methods, accrual method, business entity, calendar year, cash method, corporation, EIN, Employer Identification Number, employment tax, excise tax, federal tax, fiscal year, income and expenses, income tax, irs, irs gov, New Business Owners, partnership, recordkeeping, recordkeeping system, S corporation, self-employment tax, Six Tax Tips for New Business Owners, sole proprietorship, tax tips, tax year, tax years, taxable, taxes, taxpayer Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment »
Tuesday, July 13th, 2010
National Taxpayer Advocate Submits Mid-Year Report to Congress; Identifies Priority Challenges and Issues for Upcoming Year
IR-2010-83, July 7, 2010
WASHINGTON — National Taxpayer Advocate Nina E. Olson today released a report to Congress that identifies the priority issues the Taxpayer Advocate Service (TAS) will address during the coming fiscal year. The report expresses concern about the adequacy of IRS taxpayer service, particularly as the IRS begins to implement health care reform, about new information reporting burdens facing small businesses and others, and about certain IRS collection practices.
Among the areas the report identifies for particular emphasis in FY 2011 are the following:
1. Taxpayer Services.
Spending for IRS taxpayer service programs has been declining in recent years. At the same time, more taxpayers have been contacting the IRS for assistance as the IRS has been tasked with administering an increasing number of social benefit programs, including Economic Stimulus Payments, Making Work Pay credits, and First-Time Homebuyer credits. The report says that as a result of the imbalance between taxpayer demand and IRS resources, the IRS has fallen short of providing adequate taxpayer service in important areas. Most notably, after answering a high of 87 percent of its calls from taxpayers seeking to reach a telephone assistor in FY 2004, the IRS answered only 53 percent of its calls in FY 2008 and has set of goal of answering only 71 percent in the current fiscal year.
The report attributes much of the problem to inadequate funding for taxpayer services. While funding for the IRS overall has been increasing in recent years, the additional funding has been earmarked for enforcement programs. An analysis of IRS budget trends conducted by TAS shows that since FY 2004, inflation-adjusted funding for IRS enforcement activities has risen by 17.9 percent while spending for taxpayer service programs has declined by 6.8 percent, as shown in the following chart:
Taxpayer Services vs. Enforcement Spending Since FY 2004, Adjusted to 2010 Dollars (May 2010)
Moreover, a substantial portion of the budget for taxpayer service includes the costs of processing tax returns, which is essentially an overhead function. Funding for core taxpayer service (known as “Pre-filing Taxpayer Assistance and Education”) now stands at only $685 million, or six percent of the IRS budget. The report notes further that the Administration’s FY 2011 budget proposal projects that funding for taxpayer services will decline by another 7.2 percent over the next two years (FY 2012 and FY 2013), while funding for enforcement will increase by an additional 13.7 percent.
The report asserts the cuts in taxpayer service spending are harmful both because they undermine tax compliance and because they undermine the IRS’s ability to successfully deliver social benefit programs. First, with respect to tax compliance, Ms. Olson states:
There appears to be an implicit assumption built into existing budget procedures and projections that raising tax compliance requires ramping up enforcement and that taxpayer service is less important – perhaps even unimportant – for compliance. We think this implicit assumption is wrong. . . . Consider an individual without a college degree who becomes a successful plumber or electrician with a growing customer base. If he hires employees, he will face a host of employment, immigration verification, and state and federal tax requirements, including the need to withhold and pay over payroll taxes and to file employment tax and income tax returns on behalf of his business. For most taxpayers, these requirements would seem daunting or even impenetrable, and some taxpayers inevitably do not comply simply because they have no idea where to begin.
The report states that many noncompliant taxpayers are baffled by complex rules and states that additional taxpayer service, particularly outreach and education, could improve tax compliance.
Second, with respect to the IRS’s ability to deliver social programs, the report expresses concern that the IRS currently is neither structured nor funded to do the job effectively. “I have no doubt the IRS is capable of administering social programs, including health care,” Ms. Olson said. “But Congress must provide sufficient funding and the IRS itself must recognize that the skills and training required to administer social benefit programs are very different from the skills and training that employees of an enforcement agency typically possess. While some enforcement measures are required to prevent inappropriate claims, the overriding objective of agencies that administer social benefit programs is to help as many eligible persons qualify for the benefits as possible. That requires outreach and working one-on-one with potentially eligible individuals. If the IRS continues to ramp up enforcement while reducing taxpayer service programs, I would be concerned about its ability to administer the new health care credits and penalty taxes in a fair and compassionate way.”
Ms. Olson suggests that the IRS mission statement be revised to explicitly acknowledge the agency’s dual role as part tax collector and part benefits administrator. Such a revision would require the IRS to develop a strategic plan that gives sufficient attention to both roles and would underscore that the IRS requires sufficient funding to perform both functions effectively.
During FY 2011, TAS will continue to advocate for improved taxpayer services and will continue to make the case that taxpayer service is important not only as a courtesy but as a driver of tax compliance as well.
2. New Business and Tax-Exempt Organization Reporting Requirements.
The report expresses concern that a new reporting requirement contained in the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act may impose significant compliance burdens on businesses, charities, and government agencies. Beginning in 2012, all businesses, tax-exempt organizations, and federal, state and local government entities will be required to issue Forms 1099 to vendors from whom they purchase goods totaling $600 or more during a calendar year. To meet this requirement, these businesses and entities will have to keep track of all purchases they make by vendor. For example, if a self-employed individual makes numerous small purchases from an office supply store during a calendar year that total at least $600, the individual must issue a Form 1099 to the vendor and the IRS showing the exact amount of total purchases. The provision will have broad reach. According to a TAS analysis of 2009 IRS data, about 40 million businesses and other entities will be subject to the new requirement, including roughly 26 million non-farm sole proprietorships, four million S corporations, two million C corporations, three million partnerships, two million farming businesses, one million charities and other tax-exempt organizations, and more than 100,000 government entities. All of these nearly 40 million businesses and other entities are subject to the new reporting requirement.
TAS has not yet reached any conclusions regarding the benefits and burdens of the requirement, but the report expresses concern that the burdens “may turn out to be disproportionate as compared with any resulting improvement in tax compliance.” During FY 2011, TAS will study the impact of the new reporting requirement more closely and, depending on what its study finds, may propose administrative or legislative recommendations to modify the provision or suggest that Congress consider less burdensome tax gap proposals, including a TAS proposal to require reporting of non-interest bearing bank accounts, to replace it.
3. IRS Collection Practices.
The report expresses continuing concern that IRS collection practices emphasize collection of past-due liabilities even where doing so inflicts unnecessary or disproportionate harm on taxpayers and jeopardizes future tax collection. “The conventional wisdom seems to be that more hard-core enforcement actions like liens and levies mean more revenue,” Ms. Olson said. “But the data don’t bear that out. Since FY 1999, the IRS has increased lien filings by about 475 percent and levies by about 600 percent, yet inflation-adjusted revenue raised by the IRS Collection function has actually declined by about seven percent over that period.”
Lien filings can badly damage a taxpayer’s financial viability because lien filings appear on credit reports, causing the taxpayer’s credit score to drop an average of about 100 points immediately and causing lasting harm because they typically remain on the taxpayer’s credit record for at least seven years. Many employers, mortgage companies, landlords, car dealerships, and credit card issuers check credit reports, so the filing of a tax lien can adversely affect the taxpayer’s ability to obtain and retain a job, purchase a home, rent an apartment, or obtain credit generally. Accordingly, a lien filing may reduce the taxpayer’s income or increase his expenses, thereby impairing his ability to pay tax in the future. Last year, the IRS filed nearly one million liens against taxpayers.
The report also notes that the IRS has issued at least four public statements over the past year-and-a-half pledging to assist financially struggling taxpayers who are having difficulty paying their tax bills. Yet the number of liens and levies has continued to rise, the number of offers-in-compromise the IRS is accepting is near an all-time low, and there is little evidence the IRS is changing its collection practices.
After publication of her 2009 Annual Report to Congress, Ms. Olson issued several Taxpayer Advocate Directives to the IRS on lien issues, including directives (i) to discontinue its policy of automatically filing tax liens in cases where the IRS has determined that the taxpayer’s account should be placed into “currently not collectible” status based on financial hardship and (ii) to require managerial approval for the filing of liens in cases where the taxpayer owns no assets. She has also urged the IRS to expand the availability of the offer-in-compromise program for financially struggling taxpayers who cannot reasonably pay their tax debts in full.
In response to these concerns, the IRS has convened a senior-level task force to conduct a comprehensive review of collection practices. Ms. Olson writes that she appreciates the IRS’s willingness to examine the issue. However, she remains concerned that it will take years to conduct the comprehensive review, and that in the interim, the IRS will continue both to damage taxpayers’ credit ratings and to undermine long-term tax compliance without any significant revenue gains to show for their actions. Accordingly, IRS collection practices will remain a key area of focus for TAS in FY 2011.
The National Taxpayer Advocate is required by statute to submit two annual reports to the House Committee on Ways and Means and the Senate Committee on Finance. The statute requires these reports to be submitted directly to the Committees without any prior review or comment from the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, the Secretary of the Treasury, the IRS Oversight Board, any other officer or employee of the Department of the Treasury, or the Office of Management and Budget. The first report is submitted mid-year and must identify the objectives of the Office of the Taxpayer Advocate for the fiscal year beginning in that calendar year. The second report, due on December 31 of each year, must identify at least 20 of the most serious problems encountered by taxpayers, discuss the ten tax issues most frequently litigated in the courts, and make administrative and legislative recommendations to resolve taxpayer problems.
About the Taxpayer Advocate Service
The Taxpayer Advocate Service (TAS) is an independent organization within the IRS whose employees assist taxpayers who are experiencing economic harm, who are seeking help in resolving tax problems that have not been resolved through normal channels, or who believe that an IRS system or procedure is not working as it should.
If you believe you are eligible for TAS assistance, you can reach TAS by calling the TAS toll-free number at 1–877–777–4778 or TTY/TDD 1-800-829-4059.
National Taxpayer Advocate Submits Mid-Year Report to Congress; Identifies Priority Challenges and Issues for Upcoming Year
IR-2010-83, July 7, 2010
WASHINGTON — National Taxpayer Advocate Nina E. Olson today released a report to Congress that identifies the priority issues the Taxpayer Advocate Service (TAS) will address during the coming fiscal year. The report expresses concern about the adequacy of IRS taxpayer service, particularly as the IRS begins to implement health care reform, about new information reporting burdens facing small businesses and others, and about certain IRS collection practices.
Among the areas the report identifies for particular emphasis in FY 2011 are the following:
1. Taxpayer Services.
Spending for IRS taxpayer service programs has been declining in recent years. At the same time, more taxpayers have been contacting the IRS for assistance as the IRS has been tasked with administering an increasing number of social benefit programs, including Economic Stimulus Payments, Making Work Pay credits, and First-Time Homebuyer credits. The report says that as a result of the imbalance between taxpayer demand and IRS resources, the IRS has fallen short of providing adequate taxpayer service in important areas. Most notably, after answering a high of 87 percent of its calls from taxpayers seeking to reach a telephone assistor in FY 2004, the IRS answered only 53 percent of its calls in FY 2008 and has set of goal of answering only 71 percent in the current fiscal year.
The report attributes much of the problem to inadequate funding for taxpayer services. While funding for the IRS overall has been increasing in recent years, the additional funding has been earmarked for enforcement programs. An analysis of IRS budget trends conducted by TAS shows that since FY 2004, inflation-adjusted funding for IRS enforcement activities has risen by 17.9 percent while spending for taxpayer service programs has declined by 6.8 percent, as shown in the following chart:
Taxpayer Services vs. Enforcement Spending Since FY 2004, Adjusted to 2010 Dollars (May 2010)
Moreover, a substantial portion of the budget for taxpayer service includes the costs of processing tax returns, which is essentially an overhead function. Funding for core taxpayer service (known as “Pre-filing Taxpayer Assistance and Education”) now stands at only $685 million, or six percent of the IRS budget. The report notes further that the Administration’s FY 2011 budget proposal projects that funding for taxpayer services will decline by another 7.2 percent over the next two years (FY 2012 and FY 2013), while funding for enforcement will increase by an additional 13.7 percent.
The report asserts the cuts in taxpayer service spending are harmful both because they undermine tax compliance and because they undermine the IRS’s ability to successfully deliver social benefit programs. First, with respect to tax compliance, Ms. Olson states:
There appears to be an implicit assumption built into existing budget procedures and projections that raising tax compliance requires ramping up enforcement and that taxpayer service is less important – perhaps even unimportant – for compliance. We think this implicit assumption is wrong. . . . Consider an individual without a college degree who becomes a successful plumber or electrician with a growing customer base. If he hires employees, he will face a host of employment, immigration verification, and state and federal tax requirements, including the need to withhold and pay over payroll taxes and to file employment tax and income tax returns on behalf of his business. For most taxpayers, these requirements would seem daunting or even impenetrable, and some taxpayers inevitably do not comply simply because they have no idea where to begin.
The report states that many noncompliant taxpayers are baffled by complex rules and states that additional taxpayer service, particularly outreach and education, could improve tax compliance.
Second, with respect to the IRS’s ability to deliver social programs, the report expresses concern that the IRS currently is neither structured nor funded to do the job effectively. “I have no doubt the IRS is capable of administering social programs, including health care,” Ms. Olson said. “But Congress must provide sufficient funding and the IRS itself must recognize that the skills and training required to administer social benefit programs are very different from the skills and training that employees of an enforcement agency typically possess. While some enforcement measures are required to prevent inappropriate claims, the overriding objective of agencies that administer social benefit programs is to help as many eligible persons qualify for the benefits as possible. That requires outreach and working one-on-one with potentially eligible individuals. If the IRS continues to ramp up enforcement while reducing taxpayer service programs, I would be concerned about its ability to administer the new health care credits and penalty taxes in a fair and compassionate way.”
Ms. Olson suggests that the IRS mission statement be revised to explicitly acknowledge the agency’s dual role as part tax collector and part benefits administrator. Such a revision would require the IRS to develop a strategic plan that gives sufficient attention to both roles and would underscore that the IRS requires sufficient funding to perform both functions effectively.
During FY 2011, TAS will continue to advocate for improved taxpayer services and will continue to make the case that taxpayer service is important not only as a courtesy but as a driver of tax compliance as well.
2. New Business and Tax-Exempt Organization Reporting Requirements.
The report expresses concern that a new reporting requirement contained in the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act may impose significant compliance burdens on businesses, charities, and government agencies. Beginning in 2012, all businesses, tax-exempt organizations, and federal, state and local government entities will be required to issue Forms 1099 to vendors from whom they purchase goods totaling $600 or more during a calendar year. To meet this requirement, these businesses and entities will have to keep track of all purchases they make by vendor. For example, if a self-employed individual makes numerous small purchases from an office supply store during a calendar year that total at least $600, the individual must issue a Form 1099 to the vendor and the IRS showing the exact amount of total purchases. The provision will have broad reach. According to a TAS analysis of 2009 IRS data, about 40 million businesses and other entities will be subject to the new requirement, including roughly 26 million non-farm sole proprietorships, four million S corporations, two million C corporations, three million partnerships, two million farming businesses, one million charities and other tax-exempt organizations, and more than 100,000 government entities. All of these nearly 40 million businesses and other entities are subject to the new reporting requirement.
TAS has not yet reached any conclusions regarding the benefits and burdens of the requirement, but the report expresses concern that the burdens “may turn out to be disproportionate as compared with any resulting improvement in tax compliance.” During FY 2011, TAS will study the impact of the new reporting requirement more closely and, depending on what its study finds, may propose administrative or legislative recommendations to modify the provision or suggest that Congress consider less burdensome tax gap proposals, including a TAS proposal to require reporting of non-interest bearing bank accounts, to replace it.
3. IRS Collection Practices.
The report expresses continuing concern that IRS collection practices emphasize collection of past-due liabilities even where doing so inflicts unnecessary or disproportionate harm on taxpayers and jeopardizes future tax collection. “The conventional wisdom seems to be that more hard-core enforcement actions like liens and levies mean more revenue,” Ms. Olson said. “But the data don’t bear that out. Since FY 1999, the IRS has increased lien filings by about 475 percent and levies by about 600 percent, yet inflation-adjusted revenue raised by the IRS Collection function has actually declined by about seven percent over that period.”
Lien filings can badly damage a taxpayer’s financial viability because lien filings appear on credit reports, causing the taxpayer’s credit score to drop an average of about 100 points immediately and causing lasting harm because they typically remain on the taxpayer’s credit record for at least seven years. Many employers, mortgage companies, landlords, car dealerships, and credit card issuers check credit reports, so the filing of a tax lien can adversely affect the taxpayer’s ability to obtain and retain a job, purchase a home, rent an apartment, or obtain credit generally. Accordingly, a lien filing may reduce the taxpayer’s income or increase his expenses, thereby impairing his ability to pay tax in the future. Last year, the IRS filed nearly one million liens against taxpayers.
The report also notes that the IRS has issued at least four public statements over the past year-and-a-half pledging to assist financially struggling taxpayers who are having difficulty paying their tax bills. Yet the number of liens and levies has continued to rise, the number of offers-in-compromise the IRS is accepting is near an all-time low, and there is little evidence the IRS is changing its collection practices.
After publication of her 2009 Annual Report to Congress, Ms. Olson issued several Taxpayer Advocate Directives to the IRS on lien issues, including directives (i) to discontinue its policy of automatically filing tax liens in cases where the IRS has determined that the taxpayer’s account should be placed into “currently not collectible” status based on financial hardship and (ii) to require managerial approval for the filing of liens in cases where the taxpayer owns no assets. She has also urged the IRS to expand the availability of the offer-in-compromise program for financially struggling taxpayers who cannot reasonably pay their tax debts in full.
In response to these concerns, the IRS has convened a senior-level task force to conduct a comprehensive review of collection practices. Ms. Olson writes that she appreciates the IRS’s willingness to examine the issue. However, she remains concerned that it will take years to conduct the comprehensive review, and that in the interim, the IRS will continue both to damage taxpayers’ credit ratings and to undermine long-term tax compliance without any significant revenue gains to show for their actions. Accordingly, IRS collection practices will remain a key area of focus for TAS in FY 2011.
The National Taxpayer Advocate is required by statute to submit two annual reports to the House Committee on Ways and Means and the Senate Committee on Finance. The statute requires these reports to be submitted directly to the Committees without any prior review or comment from the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, the Secretary of the Treasury, the IRS Oversight Board, any other officer or employee of the Department of the Treasury, or the Office of Management and Budget. The first report is submitted mid-year and must identify the objectives of the Office of the Taxpayer Advocate for the fiscal year beginning in that calendar year. The second report, due on December 31 of each year, must identify at least 20 of the most serious problems encountered by taxpayers, discuss the ten tax issues most frequently litigated in the courts, and make administrative and legislative recommendations to resolve taxpayer problems.
About the Taxpayer Advocate Service
The Taxpayer Advocate Service (TAS) is an independent organization within the IRS whose employees assist taxpayers who are experiencing economic harm, who are seeking help in resolving tax problems that have not been resolved through normal channels, or who believe that an IRS system or procedure is not working as it should.
If you believe you are eligible for TAS assistance, you can reach TAS by calling the TAS toll-free number at 1–877–777–4778 or TTY/TDD 1-800-829-4059.
Tags: Economic Stimulus Payments, employment tax, First-Time Homebuyer credits, health care reform, income tax, income tax returns, IRS collection practices, IRS taxpayer service, Making Work Pay credits, National Taxpayer Advocate, National Taxpayer Advocate Submits Mid-Year Report to Congress, New Business, offers in compromise, Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, payroll taxes, Pre-filing Taxpayer Assistance and Education, social benefit programs, state and federal tax requirements, tax bill, tax collector, tax compliance, tax exempt, tax gap proposals, tax returns, Taxpayer Services Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment »
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