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irs audit   Why should I care about IRS and their Audit Process now, at this time of year? Historically, the IRS begins to hire their new employees at the beginning of their fiscal year which begins in the fall. I just can’t remember if it begins in September or ends in September. They will have completed their prospective new employee interviewing, offering positions to successful applicants and then start training those who have accepted their new assignments. Can you hear the Mission Impossible theme song playing here? There have been stories that the IRS IS hiring rebutted other stories saying the IRS is NOT hiring. Has there been a hiring freeze? Are new agents and auditors in training as you read this? Whether of not they are hiring new employees, IRS training is ongoing year in and year out. The whole point is, it doesn’t matter what percentage of the over 235 MILLION tax returns expected to be filed in 2011 are audited. If, I really mean WHEN, YOUR return is chosen, that is what is most important to you. It’s 100% for you!   My Experience When I took my first job as an Income Tax Auditor with the IRS, I had NO, absolutely NO, experience in taxes other than from preparing my own personal tax return. I had someone else prepare my return after I purchased my first house. That was new for me and I didn’t want to miss anything that would help me. After that one year, I returned to preparing my own return. Today, I feel I know the tax laws, but if I didn’t have my professional tax software to help crunch the numbers, I wouldn’t do my own. I am very pleased that my clients feel the same way and trust me to do my best for them. What experience did I bring to my new job as Tax Auditor? The IRS believed, based on my scores of an exam that was used in those years for Civil Service employment applicants, that I used good judgment in making decisions. That is the whole job of the tax auditor. They examine the facts, properly apply the tax laws and determine if the correct tax has been paid or not. The IRS taught me how to read a tax return. The IRS taught me what the tax laws were. The IRS taught me that ALL income is taxable except that which is excludable by the tax laws. The IRS taught me that NOTHING is deductible unless specifically allowed by the tax laws. The IRS taught me how to research the tax court cases. I learned which cases were in the favor of the IRS and which cases were not in favor of the IRS. Guess which ones the IRS uses. But they have to know all of those cases because guess which ones I want to use now that I am on “the outside.”   Now is the Time… So what? Why am I talking about this now? Because NOW is when IRS notices are being sent out. NOW is when new audits, NEW examinations will begin soon. This is November 1st, 2012. The only reason I date this is to show you the time line you need to know. Any 2011 return not already filed is just plain late. And chances are, unless you made a mistake that will be revealed in processing your tax return you will not hear from the IRS quite yet. Processing your return is not examining your return. Processing your return is simply receiving your return and issuing your refund or invoicing you for any balance due. IRS is quick to issue refunds first because they don’t want to pay your interest for waiting too long to give you back our own money. The statute of limitations is KEY. The IRS has only three years from the time you file your return (or April 15th if you file before the due date) to examine that return. That means the clock is ticking for them and for you, too. They don’t want to run out of time to assess any additional tax due. And if they don’t ASSESS (not collect) any additional tax due before April 15th, 2015 (2011 timely filed 4/15/12 plus 3 years) then heads will roll at the IRS. The IRS does have additional time to COLLECT taxes due, but that is a totally different discussion.   You Have Been Chosen… What you need to understand is that when the IRS chooses YOUR tax return, they believe there is an error for them to discover. It’s like a treasure hunt for them. Your return has been selected for potential of error. They just don’t know if there is an error or not. And if there is an error they don’t know for sure where it is. But they have a pretty good idea where it might be. They are going to ask you to PROVE that you were right in claiming those deductions or credits. They are going to ask you to PROVE that you claimed the correct amount. They will want to see your receipts. Do you still have them? Did you ever have them? Will every audit cost you money? Not necessarily. The job of the IRS Tax Auditor or Revenue Agent is to determine that the CORRECT amount of tax was paid. If you paid too much, the examination results in a refund due you. They get to write YOU a check. If you paid too little, the examination results in a balance due the IRS. You get to write the IRS a check. Third, the examination may result in no change. That would be best for you. 🙂 Will every audit cause you inconvenience? Yes, guaranteed. Don’t you have better things to do than dredge up old tax records 12-30 months after you filed your tax return? Will every audit cause you anxiety? Maybe Yes. Maybe No. Not necessarily so. That all depends on how well you kept your records, how closely your tax return relates to your tax records and how well you easily you can locate and provide those records (receipts) to the IRS to prove the items reported on your return. They should be the same. And you shouldn’t have to scramble to find them. It’s all about PROOF. And YOU are the one who must PROVE that your put the right numbers on the tax return you gave the IRS. You do sign that return under penalty of perjury, you know. I know I raised some questions here. I hope I also answered some questions. If you still have questions, please comment and add to the discussion.   To your lowest legal tax,   Nellie T Williams, EA  
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  Do you have a business? Or do you have a hobby?  What is the difference?   It is perfectly okay to like what you do. When you love what you do it is not really work.   A hobby, according to the Merriam-Webster Dictionary, is “a pursuit or interest engaged in for relaxation.” Think about what you do in your after-work hours? Do you have a favorite hobby?   A business, according to the Internal Revenue Service, is defined as “an activity engaged in for profit.” What is profit? Profit is the money you have left over after your business income pays for it’s business expenses. I like profit. Don’t you?   There are many ways to earn a living. And there are many ways to file your business income. The key is to report ALL your taxable income. What is taxable? ALL of your income is taxable, except that which is specifically excluded by the tax laws.   Whether you have income from a hobby or or income from a business, all of that income is taxable and must be reported on your tax return.   Did you know you could choose your business entity? When you begin a business you may start as a sole-proprietor and file Form 1040 Schedule C, Profit or Loss from Business. If you have a spouse and you both share and work in the business together, you may choose to “split” your Schedule C profits so both of you pay self-employment taxes on your respective halves of the business profits.   With the help of your tax advisor and your tax attorney, you can decide to form a business entity. Whether your are considering forming a Partnership or a Corporation or a Limited Liability Company, you will want to consult with a professional to benefit from their broader picture knowledge and experience. An attorney is needed to draft, file and publish your required legal documents. While there may be many do-it-yourself ways to take care of these details, they are just tools. And if you don’t have the knowledge and experience yourself, you don’t know what you don’t know. Invest wisely in yourself and your business.   A Partnership has two or more partners, at least one general partner who makes decisions for the partnership. A Partnership Agreement should be written to outline the respective partners’ duties. And when you are all friends starting out in this partnership business, I highly recommend you decide right then exactly how the partnership will treat a partner when the time comes when you part ways. Just like in a marriage between two people, there will be good days and not so good days in the lives of a business. We all want the high days, but begin with the end on mind to keep that future end a more pleasant one.   A Limited Liability Company, commonly called an LLC, is not a form of taxation, but is a method defined by the individual states in forming a business. Your LLC can choose to be treated as a corporation or a disregarded entity. What is an entity? What is a disregarded entity?   An individual is issued a Social Security Number. Originally intended to identify a person who would draw Social Security Benefits, it has evolved into our national identification number. One spouse of a married couple decides who will be the “primary” or first name and social security number on the 1040 tax return. If you do not choose to file your business income and expenses on your 1040 Schedule C, and if you have formed an LLC, then you are choosing to be treated as a “disregarded entity”. That means you are not filing as a Partnership or Corporation. You are not choosing your business to be a separate entity with a its own separate income tax return.   There are two kinds of corporations, one is the “C” Corp, or regular corporation, and the other is the “S”, or Small, Corporation. Not every corporation can be or wants to be an “S: Corp. But if you make that election, and special IRS paperwork is required, then you have made a decision on how your business will be taxed.   A “C” Corporation does pay tax. And the dividends that the C Corp pays to its shareholders are also taxed to the shareholder. This is called double taxation. And this is one of the reasons some people choose the “S” Corp. The “S” Corp, like the Partnership, does not pay tax. Both “S” Corp and Partnership calculate their net taxable profits and pass those profits (or losses) through to their shareholders or their partners on a Form K-1. That K-1 reporting is used in completing the shareholder’s or partner’s 1040 Individual Income Tax Return.   So how do you get paid? How do you take money out of your business to pay your personal expenses? It depends on which business structure, or entity, you have chosen.   You MUST take a wage from your corporation. You DO NOT take a wage from your partnership or from your schedule C, but you DO take a “draw”. When you take a wage you have income taxes withheld from your paycheck. When you take a draw, there is no withholding, but you do make estimated tax payments. Now that is a great topic for another blog, don’t you agree?   To your lowest tax,   Nellie T Williams, EA    
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“…I gotta be me, I’ve gotta be me what else can I be but what I am. I gotta be me.”   What else CAN you be? WHO else can you be but YOU? Why is it so important to be yourself? Because people do business with people they know. People do business with people they like. People do business with people the trust. Know… Like.. Trust.. When you know yourself, it is much easier for other people to know who you are, to know what you stand for. When you are in business, your objective is to make a profit. If profit is not your objective then you have a hobby and that is an entirely different subject with entirely different tax rules. When you are in business to make a profit, you need to have the right market to target. That market is your niche. Niche is a French word pronounced “neesh”. Americans, often pronounce this word as “nitch.” And that rhymes with RICH. What is it that YOU do better than anything else? What do you do that sets you apart from others in your industry? What are you expert at or in? That is YOUR unique brilliance. When I worked for the Police Department I was proud be helping “to serve and to protect.” I learned as a child that the policeman was my friend and that if I was ever in trouble, I should look for a policeman. In those years women were not part of the uniformed patrol. But I grew up to proudly wear that uniform for a few years.. Then I went to work for the Internal Revenue Service. Who wants to be freinds with the IRS man or woman? I would tell people that I worked for the largest accounting firm in the country. I learned how to hide what I did. Even today, the three letters “I R S” do not invoke a warm and fuzzy feeling for many people. But my own experience is what makes me unique! It is that experience and specialized knowledge that allows me to do what I do so well. I help people pay their lowest legal tax. I help people understand the tax rules so they can play that annual high-stakes tax “game” to win. I help you Bullet Proof Your Taxes! So, who is going to be unhappy with that? The IRS is happy. When you file a correct return and pay your proper tax to begin with, the IRS has when you file your return, the money they are entitled to. They save money by not having to spend any more time or attention on your tax return. But their happiness is not what motivates me. YOU are happy because you are saving money by paying only your fair share and not a penny more. You are sleeping soundly at night. I have taken what could have been a nightmare and removed the giant fear of an IRS tax audit. I help you plan in advance so when (not if) that scary invitation from the Internal Revenue Service comes inviting you to “Come on down!”, you know you have everything you need. This former nightmare has become just an inconvenience. Who would be unhappy with what I do? People who want to cheat on their tax returns often don’t like my truthful answers to their carefully crafted questions. People who don’t plan well enough to be able to pay their fair share and want to take deductions they can’t substantiate or prove don’t like me because I follow the rules I am have promised to follow. But those people are not MY people. They are not my ideal market. They don’t want what I have to offer. What do you have to offer? Who is your ideal market? If you need help answering these questions, I’d love to be the one to help you with that. Watch my website for that new opportunity to work with me in developing YOUR Unique Brilliance. I gotta be me…. You gotta be you…. because You are the only YOU there is. I’m all about saving you money. To you lowest legal tax, Nellie Williams, EA  

Image courtesy of FreeDigitalPhotos.net

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irs audit employerAre you an EMPLOYER in the eyes of the INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE? Do you have people that work for you in your business? Are you treating them like employees? What does that mean, Nellie? (“Whatcha talkin’ ’bout Willis?” from the TV Show Different Strokes) When you are the employer and have employees in your business to help you get your work done, your product out, your sales made, whatever they do to help you, YOU are the boss. YOU have EMPLOYER responsibilities and EMPLOYER tax liabilities. Congratulations! You are in good company. So many entrepreneurs go into business because they know how to do what they do. I was lucky to work for some high-powered organizations that showed me about what management really meant. Chain of Command! Employee Services Division, Personnel Department, and now called Human Resources.   What I’ve Learned I am happy to share with you some of the things I took with me into my own business. I don’t have all the answers, but I have some very important tips for you that will save your bacon! BEFORE you ever write a worker a paycheck, you need to protect this very important deduction for yourself! It is so simple. Have your worker fill out a form W4. This will give you their name, their address, and their very important and confidential SOCIAL SECURITY NUMBER. It is vital that you protect your payroll information from identify theft. It is also vital that you have this information before you pay them! What is their motivation to help you protect yourself and your wages deduction after they already have their money? As the employer you will be withholding taxes from their check. You will also have your own taxes to pay for the privilege of having someone work for you. YOU, the employer, and your employee share in paying the Social Security taxes composed of FICA (Federal Insurance Contribution Act) currently at 10.4% and MEDICARE at 2.9%. A self-employed person pays both halves of this combined tax or 13.30% total this year.   Payroll Holiday In 2012 Congress extended the “payroll tax holiday” they gave us in 2011 and the employees adjusted ‘half” right now is 4.2% FICA and 1.45% MEDICARE, totaling 5.65%. Your, the employer’s, half is 6.2% FICA and 1.45% MEDICARE. YOU pay to the INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE all that you withhold from your employees AND your “matching” share. We don’t know if this will be available after December 31, 2012. But Wait, There’s more! PLUS you, the employer will pay FUTA (Federal Unemployment Tax Act) to the INTERNAL REVUE SERVICE and your state unemployment tax where applicable.   W-4 Many times the employee doesn’t know how to figure their withholding amounts or allowances. So let me give you my easiest rule of thumb. If you have a person who is not married and has no children, they count themselves as ONE. If that person has a child, then ADD ONE MORE. If that person has a home and pays a mortgage, they can ADD AN ADDITIONAL ONE MORE. So this person might have as many as THREE allowances. .But is it the correct number for them? The HIGHER the number of withholding allowances, the LESS INCOME TAX is withheld from their paycheck. Too high a number of allowances, or exemptions, may result in not enough tax being withheld. That can be a real financial nightmare on April 15th 🙁 If your employee is married, they may want to claim an allowance for their spouse. But if that married employee claims TWO and their spouse also claims TWO then between the two of them they have claimed FOUR exemption allowances and that can be too many resulting in too little INCOME TAX being withheld. I know this can be confusing, but it will become clearer to you as you work with their paycheck numbers.   HOW CAN I DO THIS? Here is a very simple example. Let’s say you will pay Jack $500 (gross or before deductions) a week. Each paycheck his share of Social security (both FICA and Medicare) is 5.65% or $28.25. If Jack is single and chooses ONE allowance, his federal tax withholding is $49.47 per check. Without any state income tax withholding his net check is $422.28. If you multiply these dollar amounts by 52, his annual gross wages total $26,000 and his federal income tax withheld totals $2572.44 or 10% of his wages. Will it be enough? If Jack chooses to use ZERO allowances, his federal tax withholding increases to $60.43 per week and his total for the 52-payday year is $3142.36. If Jack has a dependent and chooses to claim TWO allowances, his federal income tax withholding drops to $38.51 per check. And if Jack is married, he can choose to withhold at the married rate or at the higher single rate. There are SO many variables. I always advise checking your withholding mid-year in case you need to make adjustments or change your number of allowances claimed. You can do the math. Will you pay them once a week (weekly), every other week (bi-weekly) or twice a month (semi-monthly) like on the first and fifteenth of the month? Just remember that YOU have kept, or withheld, the taxes to be paid on behalf of your employee. If you think you can “borrow” these taxes to run your business in lean times, you are sorely mistaken. The amounts add up surprisingly quickly. Your employee is TRUSTING you to pay these taxes on their behalf. That is why the Internal Revenue Service calls these TRUST FUND taxes. There are tremendous penalties that can be assessed if your do not pay these taxes on time. So, do you know what time it is? The end of September is the end of the 3rd Payroll Quarter of the calendar year. Depending on your Employer’s Tax Liability, you may be allowed to pay your taxes when your tax return is due. If you owe more than $2500 with your return, you must deposit your employer’s taxes monthly. And if you have a large payroll you may fall into the 3-day deposit rule. In another blog I’ll talk about other important management duties. In the meantime, it is always about saving YOU money! To your lowest legal tax, Nellie Williams, EA
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It is election time again and everybody has their hand out. They want your money. They want your contribution. That is natural. We are a nation of givers. Some are more generous than others. And the INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE knows that some of you also tell tall tales when it comes to your deduction for charitable contributions. A few bad apples have spoiled it for everyone. That means you need to be sure to document your deductions. Safeguard yourself with record keeping and keep it handy in case you need IRS audit help. That might sound boring now, but how glad will you be when your return is audited and you have EVERYTHING you need to keep form owing more tax.   So back to contributions. Not every contribution is deductible. But don’t let that stop you from giving to someone in need. If you want to keep it just between you and God, and don’t have the receipts to support your deduction, then keep this donation from the Internal Revenue Service, too, and leave it off your return.   We just had our primary elections to determine who will be on the ballot in November. One candidate for the Arizona State Senate spent multiple millions of dollars. And he lost! Everyone is asking for money. But you need to know this: contributions to political candidates and political campaigns are NOT deductible. Those $1000 a plate dinners are NOT deductible.   Don’t let the tax laws rule your life. Just let the tax laws rule your tax return. Don’t let the tax laws keep you from giving where you want to give. Just know when it can go on your income tax return and when it cannot.   You can check the box on the front of your 1040 to say “YES!” I want to give $3 to the Presidential Election Campaign Fund. Both taxpayer and spouse can each decide to check their box or not. One of you can check the box and the other can leave it blank. Checking these boxes does not increase your tax nor does it decrease your refund. It comes out of the tax you will have already paid on this particular tax return. It is also not deductible. It is not your money. You’ve already given it to the IRS and I tell my clients, “It is the only money you can tell the government how to spend.” 🙂   Just what is a contribution? It is a donation or a gift made voluntarily with no expectation of receiving anything in return. It is a donation or gift to a qualifying organization to be used by a qualifying organization. You must itemize your deductions on Schedule A of the Form 1040 Individual Income Tax Return in order to claim these deductions. But don’t let the requirement to itemize keep you from giving where you feel moved to give.   How do you know if yours is a qualifying organization? The IRS has a list of most of them in their Publication 78 found at www.irs.gov. You can search by the organization name, city and state. It is easiest to search if you know the EIN or Entity Identification Number of the organization. If they have a number, they were qualified once. If they are still on the IRS list, and you have your proof of giving, then you can safely claim that deduction.   So when you send an extra check to the IRS to help pay the Public Debt, or when we check the box on the Arizona State tax return to give to the “I didn’t pay enough” fund, those are deductible contributions!   You also need to document your donations. In our voluntary system of reporting our income and deductions, you must be able to prove you really did make that gift.  When you give cash, you will want to get a receipt to verify your cash contribution. Can you get a receipt from the Salvation Army Kettle Bell Ringer? Keep a log of your donations. Write a check, use a credit card, get that written verification.   For further information, you can click here to read my blogpost “Charitable Giving Can Give Rise to a Deduction”.   To you lowest legal tax, Nellie Williams, EA Bullet Proof Your Taxes   Image: FreeDigitalPhotos.net
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Did you know you are born with an income tax return filing status? We all start off life as Single. Even if you are a twin, you are a Single taxpayer. Can a baby be a taxpayer? Did you ever hear of the Gerber Baby? The answer is “Yes.” And as an American citizen, your taxable income includes your WORLDWIDE income. Your filing status is determined by your marital status on the last day of the calendar year. When you marry, and are married as of December 31st, you will generally choose Married Filing Jointly. Now your taxable income includes the worldwide income of both husband and wife. One of my clients asked, you mean if I get married on December 31st, I am treated as I was married ALL YEAR? And the answer to that question is YES. Maybe you want to marry on December 31st, but wait until after midnight to say “I DO!” and sign the license on January 1st. With planning you can choose the year you begin your joint return. One thing I want you all to know: “Marry the man (or the woman) and you marry their tax troubles, too.” So be sure you know all the facts and enter into this new partnership, this new joint venture, with your eyes open. Maybe you are part of an alternative lifestyle – part of a committed couple. Registered Domestic Partners of same-sex couples may have special choices for their state’s return, but not for the federal return. The Internal Revenue Service will still expect a separate income tax return for each of you. Some couples resist government intrusion into their personal lives and choose not to obtain the required state license to become married in the eyes of the law. They just share their love and share their lives. This is not a forum for the discussion of common law marriage (which is governed by your state), but the married filing status is reserved to the lawfully wedded couple. Sometimes there is trouble in paradise. Couples separate. When a married couple is still married, but living apart, they may choose Married Filing Jointly OR Married Filing Separately. If you are legally separated, have a court-issued order of separation, but are still talking to each other, you may be better off tax-wise to continue to share information and file a joint return. If you do choose Married Filing Separately, or are forced into Married Filing Separately because your spouse is not available to (or refuses to) sign a joint tax return, you will lose some of the tax benefits available on a joint return. Some of those many lost benefits include, among others, some tax credits and some education deductions. If one spouse itemizes, the other spouse MUST itemize and cannot claim the standard deduction. If you are receiving Social Security benefits, a larger percentage of those benefits may be income taxable. There are also adjustments to capital losses, passive losses, sale of residence exclusion, and others. IRA contributions and deductions can also be affected. I recommend you consult a tax professional so if you do have a choice, you can make an informed decision. If the formerly happy couple turns to divorce, the divorce decree will state in writing the agreements made by the divorcing couple. When I review a divorce decree I look to see if alimony or spousal support has been awarded. The spouse who pays alimony may deduct it. The spouse who receives alimony must include it in their taxable income. I will also look to see how any children of this marriage will be treated for tax purposes. You have to understand that the IRS is not a party to this divorce. Even though the divorce decree may specify who is to claim a particular child as a dependent, there is a specific form that MUST BE part of your tax return to protect your income tax return. Form 8332 is used by the custodial parent to release the exemption to the non-custodial parent. There are so many different rules that must be addressed here, that I will save them for another blog post. If you are a parent and there is at least one qualifying dependent residing in your home, you may qualify to file Head of Household. If you are still married, one spouse may be Married Filing Separately and the other spouse may be Head of Household IF they did not live together the last six months of the year. If you are divorced it may be easier to determine your filing status. The last filing status is Qualifying Widow or Widower. Qualifying means there are rules to follow. Of course! We are talking INCOME TAX CODE! If your spouse died within the past two years, you were entitled to file a joint return in the year of your spouse’s death, you did not remarry, and you have a dependent child or stepchild (not foster child) living with you the entire year, you may qualify as widow(er). Have you heard, “Things Change.”? How many times was Elizabeth Taylor married? Like Liz, you may find yourself returning to Single when the other filing status no longer apply to you. It’s all about saving you money!   To your lowest legal tax, Nellie Williams, EA Bullet Proof Your Taxes
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If you want to hear IRS say “Come on down!” like Bob Barker or Drew Carey on “The Price is Right,” then you’ll want to be sure to make one of these common mistakes on your return. Did you know IRS is the ONLY agency of our government that is empowered to collect the money that our government will spend? Their job is to determine if the correct amount of tax has been paid. Sometimes their examination, or audit, results in money due you, a refund. Rarely, but it can happen, the audit winds up a “no-change”. The IRS Agent or Auditor finds nothing to change and no money changes hands. But more often than not, their examination, their audit, results in money you owe the IRS. IRS doesn’t have time or resources to waste on an IRS tax audit that does not bring in money. They even have a special formula they use in selecting the returns they want to audit. This formula is called the DIF score, or discriminate information function score.

Avoiding an IRS Tax Audit

Hundreds of thousands of returns have been examined over the years and the results of these examinations have enabled the IRS to hone their selection process. Has yours been one of those returns? Do you want to volunteer for an audit? Heck no, that’s why you are reading this! Avoid the following to lessen your chance of being invited for an IRS tax audit interview:
  1. OMIT INCOME that should be reported. This can be “oops, I forgot.” “I lost this W2, this 1099.” It can mistakenly be, “How will they know?” What’s the difference? A W2 is what you get when you are an employee. A 1099 is what you get when you are an independent business owner. There are many kinds of 1099 forms. When you fail to report income that someone else has reported to the IRS because they want the deduction they are allowed when they pay you, you are omitting taxable income. This omission can be called unreported income. It can be called underreported income. It is often called “Audit”.
  1. Filing a BUSINESS LOSS when you also have W2 income. Without going into how a tax return is prepared, or “built”, IRS will almost always look at this kind of return. Are you really engaged in an activity for profit? Are you serious about your business? Are you trying to deduct expenses for a hobby? Hobbies do not belong on Schedule C. Are you exaggerating your expenses? This is an audit.
  1. How ROUND are your numbers? IRS does not want to see pennies on the tax return. They do want you to round your figures to the nearest dollar. But rounding to the nearest $5, $10, $20, $100 is not appropriate. If you have too many expenses with too round a number, IRS will wonder if you are accurately reporting your figures. They will want to ask you. That is an IRS tax audit.
I cannot overemphasize your need to keep records, your need to keep adequate and accurate records. Certainly, take the deductions you are entitled to, just keep your receipts, add you numbers carefully. Learn what you can do. And just as important, learn what you cannot do.

What steps have you taken in your business to avoid an IRS tax audit?

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irs auditThe tax industry is ever changing. Tax professionals are subject to various federal and state regulations. The Internal Revenue Service is now requiring all tax return preparers to prove their competence to properly apply their tax laws. Those preparers who are not already Enrolled Agents (EAs), Certified Public Accountants (CPAs), or Attorneys, are now required to take a test to allow them to become a Registered Tax Return Preparer (RTRP). No one can use this designation until they pass this test. EAs, CPAs and Attorneys have already demonstrated their competence by passing other comprehensive tests. These brief descriptions give you a glimpse of what these professionals can do.
  • An EA, Enrolled Agent, is licensed by the Department of Treasury to represent taxpayers nationwide at all levels of the Internal Revenue Service. Some EAs also offer bookkeeping services.
  • A CPA, Certified Public Accountant, is licensed by their State’s Board of Accountancy to perform accounting services in that state. Those same Boards of Accountancy limit the use of the word “accounting” to their recognized CPAs. Some CPAs also practice tax.
  • Attorneys are admitted to their State’s Bar. Attorneys who are admitted to the Tax Court can represent taxpayers at that level of IRS Appeal.
Here are 7 questions you can ask to help ensure you find an experienced, trustworthy tax advisor:
  1. How long have you been in the tax business?
  2. What licenses or designations do you have?
  3. What tax issues do you specialize in?
  4. Do you have the knowledge and experience to handle my tax situation?
  5. Do you outsource any of your work?
  6. What’s your privacy policy?
  7. How do you charge your fee; how much will it cost?
It is important that you establish a comfort level with your tax advisor. You want to feel safe (and you want to feel your information is safe) in sharing your important and confidential tax return information with your trusted advisor.
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irs audit mileage recordIf you use your car for business, the business use of your vehicle could be one of the biggest business deductions you take. But that deduction comes with the requirement that you keep a log of your business miles. More than that, you also need to be able to prove the total miles driven. So many of my clients believe this is more trouble than it is worth. The polite version of what they say is this auto log is a pain in the butt. And I tell them, it’s okay if you don’t want to keep that auto log. But the IRS says, “no log, no deduction.” You don’t have to keep the log, but if you don’t you can’t take the deduction. Does it really have to be such a difficult task? I say, no. It’s just a matter of making it easy and making it a habit. I’ll tell you how I keep my auto log. Now this might sound just like the green-eye-shaded accountant with no life, but you can make it fun. Begin your New Year with a New Mileage Log. Get yourself a little calendar you can keep in your car. Choose a pencil with a pencil clip so you can clip that pencil to your log. I keep both of these tools in the pocket of my driver’s side door. My log is easy to use because it is handy. I don’t have to look for it. It is not lost with all that other stuff in my car glove box. Depending on what part of the country you live in, you might call that the glove compartment. IRS tax audit trip odometerDoes your car have a “trip meter” in addition to the odometer? That trip meter makes it so easy to track the miles driven on any individual trip. But you also want to record the total miles driven each year. Knowing the total lets you determine the business percentage of your miles driven. Outside sales people can drive a LOT of miles for business. And without the log, many believe they drive 90%-95% for business. Only the ambulance and the garbage truck (and some other specific purpose vehicles) are driven 100% for business. Some people are surprised to find while they drive a lot for their work, their business percentage is much less because of the personal use of their car. Commuting (driving from home to work) is personal mileage and is not deductible. Commuting is discussion that deserves its own blog and I will post that later. You can choose to deduct the actual expenses of operating your vehicle or the standard mileage rate allowed. That standard rate changes every year. 2011 was a “split” year. The standard mileage rate for January 1 thru June 30 was 51 cents per business mile; the rate for July 1 thru December 31 was 55.5 cents per business mile. The rate for 2012 remains 55.5 cents per business mile. Actual expenses would include fuel, maintenance, repairs, depreciation of the purchase price, etc. If you choose the actual expense method, only the business percentage of those expenses are deductible. Regardless of the method you choose, you will want to keep your gasoline receipts and your repair bills. Both will be used by the IRS to verify your deduction and your mileage log. They don’t want to just take your word for it. They want to VERIFY your documentation. So join me on New Year’s Day in recording my odometer for the start of the year. That same odometer reading is the ending mileage for the year just closed. And if you are starting you log after the year has begun, don’t let that stop you from beginning. You need to start somewhere and you need that log to protect your deduction.
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