Alliance Financial & Income Tax is a veteran-owned and operated income tax and financial services business in Blue Springs, Missouri. We have been helping families and small businesses in the Kansas City area with their taxes and finances since 2002.
Wednesday, May 17, 2023
PAY YOURSELF FIRST!!
Wednesday, May 3, 2023
What To Do if You Missed the Tax Deadline
Tuesday, April 18, 2023, was the deadline for most taxpayers to file their tax returns. If you haven't filed a 2022 tax return yet, it's not too late.
First, gather any information related to income and deductions for the tax years for which a return is required to be filed, then call the office. If you are owed money, the sooner you file, the sooner you will get your refund. If you owe taxes, file and pay as soon as you can, which will stop the interest and penalties you owe.
Some taxpayers filing after the deadline may qualify for penalty relief. Those charged a penalty may contact the IRS by calling the number on their notice and explaining why they couldn't file and pay on time.
For 2022 tax returns due April 18, 2023, some taxpayers automatically qualify for extra time to file and pay taxes due without penalties and interest, including:
- Some disaster victims. Individuals living or working in a federally declared disaster area have more time to file and pay what they owe.
- Taxpayers outside the United States. U.S. citizens and resident aliens who live and work outside the U.S. and Puerto Rico, including military members on duty who don't qualify for the combat zone extension, may qualify for a two-month filing and payment extension.
- Members of the military who served or are currently serving in a combat zone may qualify for an additional extension of at least 180 days to file and pay taxes.
- Support personnel in combat zones or a contingency operation in support of the Armed Forces may also qualify for a filing and payment extension of at least 180 days.
The military community can also file their taxes using MilTax, a free tax resource offered through the Department of Defense. Eligible taxpayers can use MilTax to file a federal tax return electronically and up to three state returns for free.
If You Don't File, You May Miss Out on a Refund
Every year, more than 1 million taxpayers choose not to file a return and miss out on receiving a refund due to potential refundable tax credits. The most common examples of these refundable credits are the Earned Income Tax Credit and Child Tax Credit. For example, the IRS estimates nearly 1.5 million people did not file a tax return for 2019 and missed out on an estimated average median refund of $893 (i.e., half of the refunds are more than $893, and half are less).
Taxpayers usually have three years to file and claim their tax refunds. If they don't file within three years, the money becomes the property of the U.S. Treasury. However, the three-year window for 2019 unfiled returns was postponed to July 17, 2023, due to the COVID-19 pandemic emergency.
How To Make a Payment
If you owe money but cannot pay the IRS in full, pay as much as possible when you file your tax return to minimize penalties and interest. The IRS will work with taxpayers suffering financial hardship. Taxpayers with a history of filing and paying on time often qualify for administrative penalty relief. A taxpayer usually qualifies if they have filed and paid promptly for the past three years and meet other requirements. However, if you continue to ignore your tax bill, the IRS may take collection action.
There are several ways to make a payment on your taxes: credit card, electronic funds transfer, check, money order, cashier's check, or cash. If you pay your federal taxes using a major credit card or debit card, there is no IRS fee for credit or debit card payments, but processing companies may charge a convenience or flat fee. It is important to review all your options. The interest rates on a loan or credit card could be lower than the combination of penalties and interest imposed by the Internal Revenue Code.
What To Do if You Can't Pay in Full
Taxpayers who cannot pay the full amount owed on a tax bill are encouraged to pay as much as possible. By paying as much as possible now, the interest and penalties owed will be less than if you pay nothing. Based on individual circumstances, a taxpayer could qualify for an extension of time to pay, an installment agreement, a temporary delay, or an offer in compromise. Don't hesitate to call if you have questions about these options.
Direct Pay. For individuals, IRS Direct Pay is a fast and free way to pay directly from your checking or savings account. Taxpayers who need more time to pay can set up either a short-term payment extension or a monthly payment plan.
Payment Plans. Most people can set up a monthly payment plan or installment agreement that gives taxpayers more time to pay. However, penalties and interest will continue to be charged on the unpaid portion of the debt throughout the duration of the installment agreement/payment plan. You should pay as much as possible before entering into an installment agreement.
Cash Payments. Individual taxpayers who do not have a bank account or credit card and need to pay their tax bill using cash can make a cash payment at participating PayNearMe Company payment locations (places like 7-Eleven). Individuals wishing to take advantage of this payment option should visit the IRS.gov payments page, select the cash option in the "Other Ways You Can Pay" section, and follow the instructions.
What Happens if You Don't File a Past Due Return
It's important to understand the ramifications of not filing a past-due return and the steps that the IRS will take. Taxpayers who continue not to file a required return and fail to respond to IRS requests for a return may be considered for various enforcement actions, including substantial penalties and fees.
Need Help Filing Your 2022 Tax Return?
If you haven't filed a tax return yet, don't delay. Call the office today to schedule an appointment as soon as possible.
Wednesday, April 12, 2023
Pay Off Your Debt...
Monday, April 10, 2023
A tax professionals observations from this tax season.
Some observations from this tax season.
When I started this experiment (the blog and hence any social media presence I have) it wasn't to fill in all that free time I wanted to fill. Instead, the goal was to show the world the view from my side of the desk.
Every tax season is different in its own way.
Last week a guy walks into the office and demands we take him on as a client. He was informed we are not taking new clients. He blows up saying, "You were taking new clients last week!"
Well. no. No we were not.
He persisted so I told him a short story before kicking him out. The story: You are filling the tank on your car. When it is full do you keep pumping more fuel, allowing it to spill on the ground, while saying, 'I was filling my tank 10 minutes ago so my tank is obligated to take more fuel now?' He got more angry so out the door he went.
Moral of the story? Even if I were starving I would not have taken him on as a new client. Not everyone is a potential client.
Of course that is the normal part of tax season every year. Some "no's" are easier than others.
Here is the new twist for this tax season. (Well, not exactly new, but from a new source.)
Several local tax firms have closed their doors the past few years without new ones opening to replace them. That adds stress to the remaining crowd.
I closed my door to new clients for some time now, but did allow a few to sneak through if they were local. Two or three came from a larger accounting firm. The story was their fee was doubling, or nearly so. The firm sent them a letter informing them of this.
My first thought was they were cutting the size of the firm over staffing problems. But then the initial requests dried up. Hmmm?
Two or three of these returns snuck into my book. Then I realized what really happened. The firm sent the letter informing of the fee increase to PITA clients only. This became obvious when completing the return was followed by 8-10 calls over the remainder of tax season.
(I am well aware several clients are in this group/on this page. I am doing my best to be polite about the situation.)
There is a massive shortage of tax professionals/accountants and the shortage is getting worse by the day. It no longer takes a lot to become a PITA client. Time is at such a constraint that anything that wastes that precious commodity needs to be eliminated or billed accordingly.
Mind you, the PITA client (only one sticks out) from the other firm did nothing egregious. It's just that the onslaught of follow-up questions were very basic. (Where do I send my balance due? It on the coupon we gave you. When is it due? It says on the coupon. Should I send it certified? Your call. Each question, and more, were from separate phone calls. They should have allowed electronic funds withdrawal.)
Lesson: Every tax pro I know works hard to be very nice. But every tax pro I know is sleep deprived this time of year. And they all have the same complaints. For example: missing documents are a scourge that saps precious personal time, time that could be used to sleep or pay attention to a significant other and the kids.
Don't accidently become a pain in the. . .
And it is easy to do. It isn't your fault. It isn't the tax pros fault either. And yes, respect needs to work both ways.
Rules:
1.) It will take work finding a competent tax pro. Be polite and accept a decline from a tax firm. They want to say yes, but you don't want a firm that says yes too much.
2.) Think before calling the tax office. Some questions answer themselves. Tax pros no longer have the luxury of keeping slots of time open to hand hold during tax season.
3.) But, most tax pros are open to hand holding outside tax season. Consulting, too (for a fee (guy has to eat)).
4.) But! That doesn't mean the day after regular tax season closes. The sleep deprived are going to take a nap! For three days! And then check to see if they still have a family or if they left for fertile grounds elsewhere!
5.) More and more firms will downsize as the staffing shortage grows worse. Technology will not cover all the lost ground.
6.) The best time to look for a tax pro is outside tax season with the promise (and one you keep) to bring ALL your tax docs in early. Then expect a long wait for completion, even an extension. (From my side of the desk: This allows for triage, where we can finish the maximum amount of work in a day, but not necessarily in the order received.)
7.) Enough bullet points. You get the picture. Be nice to your tax pro. They only sleep 8 months of the year and that has a serious health cost for them. Show appreciation. Always understand, we care. There just is no way to deliver on all the demands made of us.
Thank you.
Thursday, March 30, 2023
What to do if you owe taxes
Tuesday, March 28, 2023
How Jackson County Filers Can Prepare for an IRS Audit
First off – congratulations to the Kansas City Chiefs. From all accounts, it was a pretty epic game. And, of course, there are those commercials. Many great ones, but one quick note about one of, well, “professional interest” for me.
The TurboTax campaign (“Don’t do your taxes”).
You might not have seen them, but they are, in fact, BEAUTIFUL commercials (Intuit seems to have upped their design chops – which, when you’re a multi-billion, multinational conglomerate, should be table stakes).
But let me ask you this: does it give you confidence to entrust your (increasingly complex) taxes to a nameless, faceless “CPA” cheaply employed by Intuit to work for them? It’s almost a worse pitch than entrusting it to a software program.
They’ve figured out that a “software” solution isn’t ideal for something so sensitive and delicate as your taxes … but their new answer seems to involve you trusting THEM to pick somebody for you. And it would be someone who isn’t competent enough to establish their own practice, and needs help from Intuit to do so.
It’s a bit of a scary proposition, yes?
And speaking of scary … for many, almost nothing is scarier than getting an audit notice from the big bad IRS.
Not scary for us here at Alliance Financial & Income Tax … but scary for normal Santa Cruz County folk. Truthfully, the total number of IRS audits has been on the low end of the spectrum the last ten years due to staffing and funding issues.
But… after Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act rolled out last summer, everyone’s been on high alert about increased enforcement measures (believe me, I heard from plenty of people worried about that) knowing that over half of the 80 billion dollar cash infusion to the IRS from said bill is allotted for that very thing.
So, is the newer cashed-up, staffed-up IRS going to come after your tax dollars with an army of enforcers? Well, sort of – but also, not exactly. Enforcement funds will go to many things like new technologies and increased legal support for IRS investigations and new staff hiring doesn’t mean just agents. But, yes, audits will increase.
Where those audits will focus has yet to be seen — Middle-class taxpayers? High-net worth individuals? Corporations? We’ll see…
But that’s why I’m talking today about preparing for an audit, to make sure you’re primed for whatever gets thrown your way and so you can be confident if that letter shows up in your mailbox.
Your first line of defense in the whole tax standing thing, is making sure things are done correctly the first time and getting it done on time. Though April is still a ways out, it’ll be here in a flash… which means you need to grab a time so we can get your tax filing signed, sealed, and submitted (and not by a randomly-selected drone). Let’s get something scheduled:
https://www.afitonline.com/appointments
Alright, finally, let’s take a look at how to prepare for an audit…
How Jackson County Filers Can Prepare for an IRS Audit
“The lucky man is he who knows how much to leave to chance.” – C.S. Forester
Some say IRS audits are on the rise for Jackson County residents; some say they’re rarer than ever. The Government Accountability Office, one of Uncle Sam’s agencies that keeps watch over the IRS, recently reported that audit rates dropped a lot in the past decade.
But you might have heard (correctly) that the IRS got a big transfusion of funding last summer from Capitol Hill, and they’ve promised to use part of that money to beef up compliance — and for some people, that’s going to mean more audits.
The potential of an IRS audit is never something to take lightly.
Why me?
Good question. Don’t panic.
An IRS audit can be random, picked by a computer. Other reasons include “significant inconsistencies” between your past tax returns and your most current one, miscalculated or weirdly high deductions, foreign accounts, or declaring a hobby as a business … to name a few.
The government generally has three years to pull your tax return for an IRS audit. Most — not all — are done completely by mail. Most are wrapped up inside a year.
Part of preparation is knowing as much as you can about what you’re getting into — and in this case, that starts with knowing how the IRS will and won’t contact you.
They generally use mail first (not social media or email, and not the phone). If somebody calls threatening you with an IRS audit and quick action if you don’t comply, hang up and call us, the police, or the IRS itself.
The IRS manages audits either by mail or through an in-person interview. In-person audits may be at an IRS office or at your home, place of business, or your tax preparer’s office. The IRS will give you contact info and instructions in the letter.
You’ll likely need your paystubs, W-2s, receipts and bills, credit card and bank statements, canceled checks, loan papers, medical and insurance records, plus your previous returns and all their records. This is a partial list, and some digital records might be okay. (Check with us if you have questions.) If you have too many books or records to mail, you can ask for a face-to-face audit.
Again, they’ll let you know what they want and give you time to assemble it.
First steps
Numero uno: Do not ignore the letter. The IRS isn’t going to evaporate, and your problem with them isn’t, either. Read the notice. Read it again. Make certain you know what they want of you.
Your best response depends on the type of audit. Mail-only audits, for instance, may mean you just need to collect the few items mentioned on the notice or pay/contest the amount owed. In-person audits may be tougher, requiring more documents and questions — an advocate experienced in tax (such as us) coming with you is also a great idea.
Don’t reply to the notice unless the IRS asks you to. If the notice mentions a change or correction on one of your previous returns, compare what the IRS claims with your copy of the right return. Call the phone number on the top of the notice if you have questions, and when you call have a copy of your tax return and the notice with you and take down the name and information of the IRS agent you speak with.
If you don’t agree with what the notice claims, mail a letter to the IRS. (We can help you write it.) The notice will have the address where to write. Use a tracking system such as USPS Priority or Certified Mail. Give the IRS a month to get back to you.
KEEP COPIES OF EVERYTHING.
If you have to meet the government face to face, bring these:
- a copy of your IRS audit letter;
- information and documents;
- a copy of the tax return in question and copies of your returns from two years before the return in question;
- a copy of the most recent year’s return (if it’s not the return being audited);
- a copy of any documentation you gave to your tax preparer;
- documents that show the results of any prior audits;
- and copies of any other IRS letters or notices you got for the tax year in question.
Face to face, they’ll probably want to know about funny deductions or unreported income, as well as ask broader questions about your job, family, and life in general for an entire tax year. You may also get an Information Document Request. Respond to it by the deadline.
If you don’t agree?
The IRS will eventually close the audit, sending you a written report of their findings and determination. You have 30 days to appeal. Don’t waste that time — as you’ve learned, take every interaction with the IRS very seriously.
We’re always here, happy to be your advocate through every step of the process.
Looking out for you,
Mike Mead, EA, CTC
Tuesday, March 21, 2023
The Tax-Filing Deadline Is Drawing Near
As a reminder to those who have not yet filed their 2022 tax returns, April 18, 2023, is the due date to either file a return (and pay the taxes owed) or file for an automatic extension (and pay an estimate of the taxes owed). The traditional April 15 filing date is moved to the 18th because of a holiday in the District of Columbia. Taxpayers in certain disaster areas have additional time to file.
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Tax time is upon us and that means gathering all of your documents needed and getting them in one place to make filing your taxes as easy ...
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Business may find they have questions about how 2017’s tax reform legislation affects their organization and their bottom line. IRS.gov...