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IRS

Article 01.19.2017 Dean Dorton

The break allowing taxpayers to take an itemized deduction for state and local sales taxes in lieu of state and local income taxes was made “permanent” a little over a year ago. This break can be valuable to those residing in states with no or low income taxes or who purchase major items, such as a car or boat.

Your 2016 tax return

How do you determine whether you can save more by deducting sales tax on your 2016 return? Compare your potential deduction for state and local income tax to your potential deduction for state and local sales tax.

Don’t worry — you don’t have to have receipts documenting all of the sales tax you actually paid during the year to take full advantage of the deduction. Your deduction can be determined by using an IRS sales tax calculator that will base the deduction on your income and the sales tax rates in your locale plus the tax you actually paid on certain major purchases (for which you will need substantiation).

2017 and beyond

If you’re considering making a large purchase in 2017, you shouldn’t necessarily count on the sales tax deduction being available on your 2017 return. When the PATH Act made the break “permanent” in late 2015, that just meant that there’s no scheduled expiration date for it. Congress could pass legislation to eliminate the break (or reduce its benefit) at any time.

Recent Republican proposals have included elimination of many itemized deductions, and the new President has proposed putting a cap on itemized deductions. Which proposals will make it into tax legislation in 2017 and when various provisions will be signed into law and go into effect is still uncertain.

Questions about the sales tax deduction or other breaks that might help you save taxes on your 2016 tax return? Or about the impact of possible tax law changes on your 2017 tax planning? Contact us — we can help you maximize your 2016 savings and effectively plan for 2017.

Filed Under: Accounting & Tax, Services, Tax Tagged With: 2016, income tax, IRS, local, Return, sales tax, SALT, state, state and local, Tax

Article 01.12.2017 Dean Dorton

If you’re like many Americans, you might not start thinking about filing your tax return until close to this year’s April 18 deadline. You might even want to file for an extension so you don’t have to send your return to the IRS until October 16.

But there’s another date you should keep in mind: January 23. That’s the date the IRS will begin accepting 2016 returns, and filing as close to that date as possible could protect you from tax identity theft.

Why early filing helps

In an increasingly common scam, thieves use victims’ personal information to file fraudulent tax returns electronically and claim bogus refunds. This is usually done early in the tax filing season. When the real taxpayers file, they’re notified that they’re attempting to file duplicate returns.

A victim typically discovers the fraud after he or she files a tax return and is informed by the IRS that the return has been rejected because one with the same Social Security number has already been filed for the same tax year. The IRS then must determine who the legitimate taxpayer is.

Tax identity theft can cause major headaches to straighten out and significantly delay legitimate refunds. But if you file first, it will be the tax return filed by a potential thief that will be rejected — not yours.

Another important date

Of course, in order to file your tax return, you’ll need to have your W-2s and 1099s. So another key date to be aware of is January 31 — the deadline for employers to issue 2016 W-2s to employees and, generally, for businesses to issue 1099s to recipients of any 2016 interest, dividend or reportable miscellaneous income payments.

Delays for some refunds

The IRS reminded taxpayers claiming the earned income tax credit or the additional child tax credit to expect a longer wait for their refunds. A law passed in 2015 requires the IRS to hold refunds on tax returns claiming these credits until at least February 15.

An additional benefit

Let us know if you have questions about tax identity theft or would like help filing your 2016 return early. If you’ll be getting a refund, an added bonus of filing early is that you’ll be able to enjoy your refund sooner.

Filed Under: Cybersecurity, Services, Tax Tagged With: 4/18, April 18, File, Identify, IRS, Return, Tax, theft

Article 01.10.2017 Dean Dorton

Third party relationships have become more important as companies look to leverage outside expertise. As relationships evolve, management needs to keep a close eye to determine if the third party contractor has become an employee through the eyes of the IRS. The IRS provides guidance through Topic 762 (see below).

As discussed below, criteria exists to evaluate the contractor relationships; this area has drawn a lot of attention from the IRS. Companies should use caution in drafting service agreements — how much control a company has will go a long way in supporting the conclusion. The more autonomy a contractor can demonstrate in how he/she works will help support the contractor conclusion.

Please let us know if you want to discuss this situation with one of our subject matter experts.

Topic 762: Independent Contractor vs. Employee

For federal employment tax purposes, the usual common law rules are applicable to determine if a worker is an independent contractor or an employee. Under the common law, you must examine the relationship between the worker and the business. You should consider all evidence of the degree of control and independence in this relationship. The facts that provide this evidence fall into three categories: behavioral control, financial control, and the relationship of the parties.

Behavioral control covers facts that show if the business has a right to direct and control what work is accomplished and how the work is done, through instructions, training, or other means.

Financial control covers facts that show if the business has a right to direct or control the financial and business aspects of the worker’s job. This includes:

  • The extent to which the worker has unreimbursed business expenses
  • The extent of the worker’s investment in the facilities or tools used in performing services
  • The extent to which the worker makes his or her services available to the relevant market
  • How the business pays the worker
  • The extent to which the worker can realize a profit or incur a loss

Relationship of the parties covers facts that show the type of relationship the parties had. This includes:

  • Written contracts describing the relationship the parties intended to create
  • Whether the business provides the worker with employee-type benefits, such as insurance, a pension plan, vacation pay, or sick pay
  • The permanency of the relationship
  • The extent to which services performed by the worker are a key aspect of the regular business of the company

Source: https://www.irs.gov/taxtopics/tc762.html

Contact your Dean Dorton advisor or Gina Whitis at gwhitis@deandortonstg.wpenginepowered.com to learn more.

Filed Under: Accounting & Tax, Construction, Energy & Natural Resources, Equine, Forensic Accounting, Healthcare, Higher Education, Industries, Manufacturing & Distribution, Nonprofit & Government, Real Estate, Risk Management, Services, Tax, Technology, Wealth & Estate Planning Tagged With: behavioral, Company, contractor, employee, ESA, Financial, gina, IRS, relationship, whitis

Article 12.27.2016 Dean Dorton

In November, the IRS extended the deadline for employers to furnish Forms 1095-C and/or 1095-B to employees and covered individuals. The forms, which are required under the Affordable Care Act’s employer reporting mandate, are now due March 2, 2017 ― giving employers an additional 30 days to prepare and distribute 2016 forms. The extension is for 2016 tax year only, and no extension was provided to the due date for employers to submit data to the IRS.

1095-C
Applicable large employers (ALEs – generally employers with 50 or more full-time and full-time equivalent employees, measured in calendar year 2015) are required to report 2016 information about health coverage offered, or not offered, to certain employees. The ALE completes this requirement by furnishing Form 1095-C to the employee or former employee.

Access Form 1095-C

1095-B
Employers, regardless of size, who sponsor a self-insured health plan providing minimum essential coverage, are required to report information about enrollees’ coverage. To meet this requirement, Form 1095-B is generated and distributed to the primary enrollee, which also includes information on other participants enrolled in the primary enrollee’s health plan. Form 1095-B may also be generated directly from health plan providers (health insurance companies) for fully-insured plans.

Access Form 1095-B

Previous IRS Due Date New IRS Due Date
Deadline to distribute ACA reporting forms to employees and covered individuals (Forms 1095-C and 1095-B) January 31, 2017 March 2, 2017
Deadline to file ACA reporting forms with the IRS February 28, 2017 (paper)
March 31, 2017 (electronic)
No change

Even with the extension, the IRS still recommends that employers distribute and file appropriate documents as soon as possible.

Read IRS Notice 2016-70

For additional questions on this ruling, please contact your Dean Dorton advisor or Jeff Ricketts at jricketts@deandortonstg.wpenginepowered.com.

Filed Under: Accounting & Tax, Construction, Energy & Natural Resources, Equine, Forensic Accounting, Healthcare, Higher Education, Industries, Manufacturing & Distribution, Nonprofit & Government, Real Estate, Risk Management, Services, Tax, Technology, Wealth & Estate Planning Tagged With: 1095, ACA, Affordable, ALE, employee, employers, IRS

Article 12.15.2016 Dean Dorton

You may be aware of the rule that allows businesses to deduct bonuses employees have earned during a tax year if the bonuses are paid within 2½ months after the end of that year (by March 15 for a calendar-year company). But this favorable tax treatment isn’t always available.

For one thing, only accrual-basis taxpayers can take advantage of the 2½ month rule — cash-basis taxpayers must deduct bonuses in the year they’re paid, regardless of when they’re earned. Even for accrual-basis taxpayers, however, the 2½ month rule isn’t automatic. The bonuses can be deducted in the year they’re earned only if the employer’s bonus liability is fixed by the end of the year.

The all-events test

For accrual-basis taxpayers, the IRS determines when a liability (such as a bonus) has been incurred — and, therefore, is deductible — by applying the “all-events test.” Under this test, a liability is deductible when:

  1. All events have occurred that establish the taxpayer’s liability,
  2. The amount of the liability can be determined with reasonable accuracy, and
  3. Economic performance has occurred.

Generally, the third requirement isn’t an issue; it’s satisfied when an employee performs the services required to earn a bonus. But the first two requirements can delay your tax deduction until the year of payment, depending on how your bonus plan is designed.

For example, many bonus plans require an employee to remain in the company’s employ on the payment date as a condition of receiving the bonus. Even if the amount of the bonus is fixed at the end of the tax year, and employees who leave the company before the payment date forfeit their bonuses, the all-events test isn’t satisfied until the payment date. Fortunately, it’s possible to accelerate deductions with a carefully designed bonus pool arrangement.

How a bonus pool works

In a 2011 ruling, the IRS said that employers may deduct bonuses in the year they’re earned — even if there’s a risk of forfeiture — as long as any forfeited bonuses are reallocated among the remaining employees in the bonus pool rather than retained by the employer. Under such a plan, an employer satisfies the all-events test because the aggregate bonus amount is fixed at the end of the year, even though amounts allocated to specific employees aren’t determined until the payment date.

Additional rules and limits apply to this strategy. To learn whether your current bonus plan allows you to take 2016 deductions for bonuses paid in early 2017, contact us. If you don’t qualify this year, we can also help you design a bonus plan for 2017 that will allow you to accelerate deductions next year.

Filed Under: Accounting & Tax, Services, Tax Tagged With: 2017, Bonus, deduct, Deduction, employee, event, IRS

Article 12.6.2016 Dean Dorton

Donations to qualified charities are generally fully deductible, and they may be the easiest deductible expense to time to your tax advantage. After all, you control exactly when and how much you give. To ensure your donations will be deductible on your 2016 return, you must make them by year end to qualified charities.

When’s the delivery date?

To be deductible on your 2016 return, a charitable donation must be made by Dec. 31, 2016. According to the IRS, a donation generally is “made” at the time of its “unconditional delivery.” But what does this mean? Is it the date you, for example, write a check or make an online gift via your credit card? Or is it the date the charity actually receives the funds — or perhaps the date of the charity’s acknowledgment of your gift?

The delivery date depends in part on what you donate and how you donate it. Here are a few examples for common donations:

Check. The date you mail it.

Credit card. The date you make the charge.

Pay-by-phone account. The date the financial institution pays the amount.

Stock certificate. The date you mail the properly endorsed stock certificate to the charity.

Is the organization “qualified”?

To be deductible, a donation also must be made to a “qualified charity” — one that’s eligible to receive tax-deductible contributions.

The IRS’s online search tool, Exempt Organizations (EO) Select Check, can help you more easily find out whether an organization is eligible to receive tax-deductible charitable contributions.

Access EO Select Check

Information about organizations eligible to receive deductible contributions is updated monthly.

Many additional rules apply to the charitable donation deduction, so please contact us if you have questions about the deductibility of a gift you’ve made or are considering making. But act soon — you don’t have much time left to make donations that will reduce your 2016 tax bill.

Filed Under: Accounting & Tax, Services, Tax Tagged With: charitable, charity, Deductible, Donate, donation, Gift, IRS, Tax, Year

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