WEBS Tax Preparation & Bookkeeping Services

WEBS Tax Preparation & Bookkeeping Services

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Tax Tip: What if the IRS incorrectly records you as deceased? - TAS 03/09/2023

Tax Tip: What if the IRS incorrectly records you as deceased? - TAS

In the news... In the news... TAS Tax Tip: The IRS incorrectly recorded me as deceased – what should I do?: If your IRS tax account is locked in error because the IRS’s records incorrectly indicate that you or your spouse are deceased, the instructions below can help you resolve the issue. When your account is locked, it prevents the IRS from processing your tax return until the issue is resolved.

Accounts may mistakenly show a living taxpayer as deceased due to one or more of the following circumstances:

* Inaccurate information from the Social Security Administration (SSA)

* IRS processing errors

* Taxpayer tax return entry errors

The IRS issues notice CP01H, Tax Return submitted with Locked Social Security Number (SSN), when they receive a tax return that contains an SSN for an account that was locked because the IRS’s records indicate the SSN belongs to an individual who died prior to the tax year of the return submitted for processing.

If you receive this notice in error, follow these steps:

* Verify you entered your SSNs) correctly on your tax return.

* Contact SSA to have them correct their records.

* Once SSA corrects the information, send the documentation shown to the address of the IRS campus where you filed your tax return:

* A copy of the CP01H notice you received

* A written request to unlock the account

* A photocopy of at least one of the following:

* Passport

* Driver’s license

* Social security card

* Other valid U.S. federal or state government issued identification

* A copy of your tax return but re-sign it, so it has original signatures. (The IRS can’t process a tax return without original signatures.)

If you still find that you cannot fix the issue after following the above steps, go to the Can TAS help me with my tax issue? tool to see if the Taxpayer Advocate Service can assist you.

The post TAS Tax Tip: The IRS incorrectly recorded me as deceased – what should I do? appeared first on Taxpayer Advocate Service. Thoughts?

Tax Tip: What if the IRS incorrectly records you as deceased? - TAS If IRS records incorrectly indicate that you or your spouse are deceased, this tax tip has instructions that can help you resolve the issue.

03/08/2023

Don't make this mistake with your taxes!

You may have the best of intentions, but the IRS doesn't care about those at all. They care about their rules and you follow them!

⚠️ Avoid making costly mistakes like this by scheduling a 30 min Tax Advisory Call with one of our tax professionals to ensure you are compliant with the laws for your business setup.

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NTA Blog: Standard Mileage Deduction Rates Should Be Consistent for All Taxpayers - TAS 03/07/2023

NTA Blog: Standard Mileage Deduction Rates Should Be Consistent for All Taxpayers - TAS

In the news... In the news... NTA Blog: Standard Mileage Deduction Rates Should Be Consistent for All Taxpayers: February 28, 2023 – I and others have written tomes about the complexity of the tax code and the burdens that tax law complexity imposes on taxpayers and the IRS alike. Taxpayers (and tax professionals) are often left wanting to pull out their hair, and comedians often mine the tax code for fresh material, especially during tax season.

In my recent report to Congress, I identified one issue that’s a poster child for tax law complexity.

To illustrate the absurdity of the issue, let’s start with an analogy. Have you ever gone into a supermarket to buy a gallon of milk and seen the following sign?

Price of a Gallon of Milk

Customer

Price

Men

$4.00

Women

$3.00

College Students

$2.00



I have never seen a sign like that, and I’m guessing you haven’t either.

Yet this is a close analog to the rules governing the deduction for automobile expenses. One would think the cost of operating an automobile (i.e., gas plus wear and tear) would be the same regardless of the circumstance. Yet the current standard mileage rates used to calculate the deductible costs of operating an automobile for business, charitable, medical transport, or military relocation purposes are as follows:

Tax Deduction for Automobile Usage

Taxpayer/Purpose

Deduction Per Mile

Business Use

65.5¢

Charitable Use

14¢

Medical Transport/Military Relocation

22¢



There are times when tax professionals analyze the intricacies of seemingly absurd legal distinctions and almost see them as logical – until they have to explain them in plain language to a client.

For the benefit of tax professionals and historians, here are the intricacies that explain how these three rates came to be set. Congress codified the 14-cent standard mileage rate for charitable miles for tax years beginning in 1998, and it did not index the rate for inflation. By contrast, the IRS has the authority to set the standard mileage rate for business purposes annually by adding the fixed and variable costs of operating an automobile. The IRS also has the authority to set the standard mileage rate for medical transportation and military relocation purposes annually based solely on the variable costs of operating an automobile. Alternatively, taxpayers have the option to calculate the actual costs of operating an automobile in lieu of claiming the standard mileage allowance, but that requires a lot of additional recordkeeping.

Now try explaining to a client why one rate reflects only variable costs, a second rate reflects both variable and fixed costs, and a third rate was established 25 years ago by statute and doesn’t reflect current costs at all.

The use of different rates makes little sense and may cause confusion for taxpayers, tax professionals, and IRS employees. For example, someone may know the deduction rate for one purpose and, not realizing there are different rates, erroneously apply that rate for another purpose. Indeed, some civic-minded self-employed individuals may claim mileage deductions for both business and charitable purposes on the same tax return. Apart from the obvious confusion that may cause, an incentive will arise to allocate more miles for business purposes (65.5 cents per mile) and fewer miles for charitable purposes (14 cents per mile).

Not only do multiple rates cause confusion, but if a taxpayer uses the wrong rate, even inadvertently, he may be subject to a tax adjustment, penalties, and interest charges. This undermines public confidence in the fairness of the tax system. When a motor vehicle is determined to cost a given amount to operate on a per-mile basis, the standard mileage deduction rate should reflect that cost for all purposes. The existence of three automobile mileage deduction rates reflects the complex and evolving nature of the tax code and the competing interests of different groups and policies. Is that the right result?

Conclusion

Although the mileage deduction rate presents a discrete issue, there are many discrete issues like it that make the Internal Revenue Code complex and difficult to understand and apply. While each type of tax deduction serves a unique purpose, a consistent and simplified system would benefit taxpayers, the IRS, and society. By promoting fairness, efficiency, and clarity, a simplified tax code would help ensure that taxpayers are able to make informed decisions about their finances and contribute to a more stable and prosperous economy.

In the National Taxpayer Advocate’s 2023 Purple Book, I recommended that Congress implement consistent standard mileage rates for business, charitable, medical transportation, and military relocation purposes by harmonizing Internal Revenue Code §§ 162, 170(i), 213, and 217 – and by indexing the rates for inflation in future years.

I encourage the tax-writing committees and Members of Congress to act on this recommendation. I also encourage Congress to review the other 64 non-partisan, generally non-controversial legislative recommendations I have proposed in the Purple Book to strengthen taxpayer rights and improve tax administration.

The post NTA Blog: Standard Mileage Deduction Rates Should Be Consistent for All Taxpayers appeared first on Taxpayer Advocate Service. Thoughts?

NTA Blog: Standard Mileage Deduction Rates Should Be Consistent for All Taxpayers - TAS Current standard mileage rates used to calculate the deductible costs of operating an automobile are not consistent.

NTA Blog: Disaster Relief: What to Know if You've Been Affected By a Federally-Declared Disaster and the Recent Additional Time Provided For Parts of Alabama, California and Georgia - TAS 02/28/2023

NTA Blog: Disaster Relief: What to Know if You've Been Affected By a Federally-Declared Disaster and the Recent Additional Time Provided For Parts of Alabama, California and Georgia - TAS

In the news... In the news... NTA Blog: Disaster Relief: What to Know if You’ve Been Affected By a Federally-Declared Disaster and the Recent Additional Time Provided For Parts of Alabama, California and Georgia: February 28, 2023 – All too often we turn on the news and hear of yet another disaster affecting hundreds of thousands of people and businesses. These disasters can upend every aspect of an affected individual’s life, including damage or destruction to their home, business, and critical documents. To assist taxpayers, the President may declare the event a federal disaster, which allows the federal government to help affected taxpayers under the Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act. Once this declaration has been made, the IRS will often provide these taxpayers with certain relief, most commonly by exercising its authority under IRC § 7508A to postpone certain tax deadlines, including filing and payment deadlines.

Taxpayers Who Were Originally Given More Time to File a Return Because of the Impact of a Disaster Were Surprised to Learn They May Be Unable to File For an Extension Electronically

When taxpayers need more time beyond the postponed filing deadline, they can of course file for an extension, but might be surprised to learn that they cannot file for this extension electronically, in certain circumstances. For example, taxpayers will only be able to file an extension electronically on or before the statutory date on which the return is due because limitations of the IRS’s current systems don’t allow for the electronic filing of extensions beyond the statutory filing deadline. In other words, if taxpayers file for an extension during the period of postponement, they will have to file the request for an extension of time to file on paper rather than electronically.

Three recent examples: Earlier in the year, the IRS postponed deadlines for filing tax returns and making tax payments for taxpayers affected by severe weather in parts of Alabama, California, and Georgia. (Postponements for these affected areas began the day of the weather event and run through May 15, 2023.) However, if these taxpayers wanted to submit a filing extension after the original due date (March 15, 2023 for corporate returns and April 18, 2023 for individual returns), they would have to submit a paper Form 7004, Application for Automatic Extension of Time To File Certain Business Income Tax, Information, and Other Returns, or a paper Form 4868, Application for Automatic Extension of Time to File U.S. Individual Income Tax Return. The last three years have taught us that the inability to file forms electronically is both inconvenient for taxpayers and burdensome for the IRS.

Good news: The IRS issued updated disaster declarations for parts of Alabama, California, and Georgia, eliminating the requirement for the affected taxpayers to file extension requests or pay estimated taxes on or before October 16, 2023. This is favorable to taxpayers and eliminates the need to file for an extension.

On February 23 & 24, 2023, the IRS updated three prior declarations (AL-2023-01, CA-2023-02, and GA-2023-01). The updated declarations provide the affected taxpayers additional time to file returns due on March 15, 2023 and April 18, 2023, until October 16, 2023, without having to file for an extension, and avoid the need to file for a possible extension on paper. The IRS also postponed the deadline for these affected taxpayers to make estimated tax payments until October 16, 2023. I appreciate the IRS’s willingness to create a favorable solution to a software programming challenge and eliminate unnecessary paper filings. As the IRS moves to modernize and update its technology, I’m hoping it will develop a permanent solution to its system limitations or consider providing a postponement consistent with the extension period for future filing season disasters thus improving the taxpayer’s filing experience and eliminating foreseeable challenges.

Words of Caution: Because the October 16, 2023 date is a postponed filing deadline and not an extension, it may result in the denial of a taxpayer’s claim for credit or refund three years down the road. I raised this issue in the 2023 National Taxpayer Advocate Purple Book where I recommended that Congress amend the Internal Revenue Code to make the tax system simpler and fairer for taxpayers. When taxpayers take advantage of this postponed period, there will be a mismatch between the three-year lookback rule of IRC § 6511(b)(2)(A) and the date payments were made (or deemed made), because the October 16, 2023 date is not an extension, but rather a postponement. Thus, the postponed time period (April 18-October 16, 2023) will not be considered when calculating the lookback period. (The three-year lookback period limits the amount of credit or refund that can be claimed to amounts paid in the three years preceding the filing of the claim, including any period of extension.) For more details, see my 2021 blog, Claims for Refunds: 2019 and 2020 Tax Year Trap for the Unwary, and the legislative recommendation in the 2023 Purple Book, Amend the “Lookback Period” to Allow Tax Refunds for Certain Taxpayers Who Took Advantage of the Postponed Filing Deadlines Due to COVID-19.

As I mentioned in yesterday’s blog, I am pleased that the IRS addressed this mismatch problem for claims for credit or refund for taxpayers who filed timely returns for 2019 or 2020 during the periods of postponement granted by the IRS. See Notice 2023-21. However, this relief only extends to the postponement of filing deadlines for 2019 and 2020 but does not address the problem going forward for future disaster declaration postponements of filing deadlines – such is the case here. Considering how often the IRS exercises its authority under IRC § 7508A to postpone filing deadlines, it is crucial that the IRS consider granting a postponement of the lookback rule simultaneous with the filing postponement or issue guidance to permanently solve this mismatch between the date payments are made (or deemed made) and the three-year lookback period.

What to do When a Disaster Damages or Destroys Your Property

When a taxpayer has suffered damage to their property attributable to a federally declared disaster, one type of relief that is available is being able to deduct a casualty loss on their tax return. For example, a casualty loss occurs when an individual’s home is damaged in a hurricane or mudslide, allowing them to claim a casualty loss deduction for the cost of repairing or replacing their property. This can provide much needed relief for individuals or businesses who may struggle financially as a result of the disaster, and can help taxpayers with the financial burden of having to repair or replace damaged property. This deduction is also beneficial to both the uninsured and those taxpayers whose insurance does not cover the sustained damage to property. Note for more information on the deductibility of casualty losses, see Publication 4512-C, and for information on the different types of casualty losses, and the requirements for deducting each one, see IRS Publication 547, Casualties, Disasters, and Thefts.

If a taxpayer sustained a loss between 2018 and 2025 that is attributable to a federally declared disaster, they may deduct the loss in either the year the loss occurred or the prior year. (Generally, a casualty loss not attributable to a disaster is allowed as a deduction only for the tax year in which the loss was sustained.) This allows taxpayers ultimate flexibility, as it may take some time for them to assess the damage and determine the total amount of the loss, but allows them to obtain the tax benefits as soon as the amount can be determined by allowing them to claim the deduction in the year prior to the disaster.

When taxpayers want to claim the loss in the year prior to the disaster, but they have already filed a return, they will need to file an amended return for that year (IRS Form 1040-X, Amended U.S. Individual Income Tax Return) claiming the loss. This election must be made within six months from the due date of the tax return for the year in which the federally declared disaster occurred. (This does not include any extension of time to file. See Treas. Reg. § 1.165-11T(g).) To make this election, they must complete and attach Form 4684, Casualties and Thefts, to the amended return. If taxpayers later want to revoke this election to claim the loss in the year of the disaster, they must file an amended return revoking the casualty loss election, and recalculate the tax liability as a result of the revocation. Additionally, the amended return must contain a “revocation statement”, which includes:

* a statement clearly showing that the election is being revoked;

* the name or a description of the disaster, and date or dates of the disaster for which the election was originally claimed; and

* the address, including the city, town, county, parish, State, and zip code where the damaged or destroyed property was located at the time of the federally declared disaster, and for which the taxpayer originally claimed the election.

This revocation must be sent in no later than 90 days from the due date for taking the election for the casualty loss in the prior year. (For more details, see Rev. Proc. 2016-53.) You must pay (or make arrangements to pay) any tax and interest due as a result of the revocation.

The rules for claiming casualty losses attributable to federally declared disasters offer taxpayers more flexibility when compared to the rules for non-disaster related casualty losses. Yet there are critical actions and time periods which taxpayers must follow, and it’s important that taxpayers are aware of these rules so they can consider the options and choose the one which may be most advantageous for their circumstances.

Conclusion

Disasters can be a difficult and emotional experience for individuals, families and business owners. By understanding the options for relief through IRS disaster declarations, individuals and business owners can make informed decisions about their filing and payment obligations, finances, and tax liabilities. The updated declarations give taxpayers in affected areas more time to comply with their tax obligations without having to file Form 4868 or Form 7004, more time to make their estimated tax payments, and also prevents the IRS from having to use its resources to process paper extension forms. In addition, the casualty loss deduction gives taxpayers flexibility they need to claim the deduction when it is most advantageous to them. Assisting taxpayers in a difficult time is a welcome relief but I am concerned that three years from now taxpayers and practitioners will be surprised to learn that refund claims filed later in 2026 may be disallowed under the lookback period required by the Internal Revenue Code. However, this is an area that Congress can fix to prevent the unintended consequences for potential tens of millions of taxpayers for all disaster relief. The IRS should also consider issuing regulations. Otherwise, it will have to fix the lookback issue one disaster at a time.



The post NTA Blog: Disaster Relief: What to Know if You’ve Been Affected By a Federally-Declared Disaster and the Recent Additional Time Provided For Parts of Alabama, California and Georgia appeared first on Taxpayer Advocate Service. Thoughts?

NTA Blog: Disaster Relief: What to Know if You've Been Affected By a Federally-Declared Disaster and the Recent Additional Time Provided For Parts of Alabama, California and Georgia - TAS If a declaration has been made, the IRS will often provide affected taxpayers with certain relief exercising its authority under IRC § 7508A.

Tax News: The IRS Extends Disaster Relief to Victims of January and February Storms - Taxpayer Advocate Service 02/28/2023

Tax News: The IRS Extends Disaster Relief to Victims of January and February Storms - Taxpayer Advocate Service

In the news... In the news... Tax News: The IRS Extends Disaster Relief to Victims of January and February Storms: February 27, 2023 – If you were a victim of the severe winter storms, flooding, landslides, and mudslides in California, or the severe storms, straight-line winds, and tornadoes in Alabama or Georgia, you now have additional time to file various individual and business tax returns and make certain tax payments. Details about these recent tax relief provisions can be found here.

The IRS automatically identifies taxpayers who reside or have a business in the covered disaster areas and applies filing and payment relief. This means if you qualify for this relief, you don’t need to request an extension of time to file or an extension of time to pay. Affected individuals will have until October 16, 2023, to file their 2022 individual income tax returns and pay any taxes that are normally due on April 18, 2023. Business taxpayers will also have until October 16, 2023, to file certain business tax returns that are normally due on March 15 and April 18, 2023. The postponement will be granted automatically. However, please note this relief doesn’t apply to all of California, Alabama, and Georgia. Please visit the IRS.gov disaster page to see if you qualify for this automatic postponement and for more details about this disaster relief, including the types of returns and payments that are included.

If you reside or have a business located outside the covered disaster area but you were nonetheless affected by these storms, you should call the IRS disaster hotline toll-free at 866-562-5227 to see if you are eligible for this tax relief. You should also call the IRS disaster hotline if you have questions about whether you qualify for this disaster assistance.

If you are an affected taxpayer and you receive a late filing or late payment penalty notice from the IRS that has an original or extended filing, payment or deposit due date that falls within the postponement period, you should call the telephone number on the notice to request that the IRS abate the penalty.

More information

For more details about disaster relief due to these winter storms, refer to:

* IR-2023-33, IRS: May 15 tax deadline extended to Oct. 16 for disaster area taxpayers in California, Alabama and Georgia

* CA-2023-02, IRS announces tax relief for victims of severe winter storms, flooding, landslides, and mudslides in California

* AL-2023-01, IRS announces tax relief for victims of January 12 severe storms, straight-line winds, and tornadoes in Alabama

* GA-2023-01, IRS announces tax relief for victims of severe storms, straight-line winds, and tornadoes in Georgia

* IR-2023-09, IRS: Georgia, Alabama storm victims qualify for tax relief; April 18 deadline, other dates extended to May 15

* IR-2023-03, IRS: California storm victims qualify for tax relief; April 18 deadline, other dates extended to May 15

* CA-2023-01, IRS announces tax relief for victims of severe winter storms, flooding, and mudslides in California

* Tax Relief in Disaster Situations

* Disaster Assistance and Emergency Relief for Individuals and Businesses

* Disasterassistance.gov

* Disaster Relief – Taxpayer Advocate Service (irs.gov)

The post Tax News: The IRS Extends Disaster Relief to Victims of January and February Storms appeared first on Taxpayer Advocate Service. Thoughts?

Tax News: The IRS Extends Disaster Relief to Victims of January and February Storms - Taxpayer Advocate Service If you were a victim of the severe winter storms, flooding, landslides, and mudslides in California, or the severe storms, straight-line winds, and tornadoes in Alabama or Georgia, you now have additional time to file various individual and business tax returns.

NTA Blog: Lookback Rule: The IRS Fixes the Refund Trap for the Unwary - TAS 02/28/2023

NTA Blog: Lookback Rule: The IRS Fixes the Refund Trap for the Unwary - TAS

In the news... In the news... NTA Blog: Lookback Rule: The IRS Fixes the Refund Trap for the Unwary: January 23, 2023 – For tax year (TY) 2019, there were nearly 34 million returns filed between the postponed period of April 16, 2020, and July 15, 2020, and for TY 2020, there were nearly 29 million returns filed between the postponed period of April 16, 2021, and May 17, 2021.

For tax year (TY) 2019, there were nearly 34 million returns filed between the postponed period of April 16, 2020, and July 15, 2020, and for TY 2020, there were nearly 29 million returns filed between the postponed period of April 16, 2021, and May 17, 2021. Without IRS intervention, any claims for credit or refund filed during the postponed period three years later that included withholding or estimated taxes would have been denied because the withheld amount(s) would have been credited to the taxpayer’s account as of April 15, outside the three-year lookback period.

Good news: The IRS issued Notice XX addressing the mismatch between the time for filing a claim for credit or refund and the three-year lookback period caused by postponing certain filing deadlines for filing seasons 2020 and 2021, which would result in the denial of timely claims for credit or refund for those taxpayers who took advantage of the postponed deadlines and who had withholding or estimated payments. Taxpayers will never know this was a potential problem as the IRS did the right thing and proactively fixed the lookback period to eliminate challenges and refund denials for taxpayers.

I first raised this issue internally after the IRS postponed the filing date for the 2020 filing season (TY 2019 returns). On May 11, 2021, I posted a blog, in which I publicly suggested the IRS publish guidance to remedy this problem and submitted a recommendation to include in the U.S. Department of the Treasury/Internal Revenue Service Priority Guidance Plan. I also provided a legislative recommendation as to how Congress could remedy this issue for these tax years and for all future instances when the filing deadline is postponed. This notice resolves the issue for the 2020 and 2021 COVID-19 disaster relief, yet it does not provide relief for other disaster filing postponements.

Quick Refresher of the Problem

To provide taxpayers with some relief and assistance during the COVID-19 pandemic, the IRS exercised its authority under IRC § 7508A and postponed certain filing deadlines for both TYs 2019 and 2020. See Notice 2020-23 and Notice 2021-21. This accommodation came with unanticipated consequences for taxpayers who took advantage of the postponed filing deadlines and may later seek a claim for credit or refund because the period for filing the claim for credit or refund and the three-year lookback period would not align.

Under IRC § 6511(a), when taxpayers believe they have overpaid their taxes, they must file a claim for credit or refund with the IRS by the later of:

* Three years from the date the return was filed, or

* Two years from the date the tax was paid.

Under IRC § 6511(b), there are also limits on the amount the IRS may credit or refund even when the taxpayer has filed a timely claim. These limitations are commonly known as the two- or three-year lookback period. (For this discussion, only the three-year lookback period is relevant.)

The three-year lookback period is as follows: Taxpayers who file claims for credit or refund within three years from the date the original return was filed will have their credits or refunds limited to the amounts paid within the three-year period before the filing of the claim plus the period of any extension of time for filing the original return.

Typically, the periods for filing a claim for credit or refund and the three-year lookback periods align, but the postponements of certain filing deadlines for TYs 2019 and 2020 disrupted this alignment. When taxpayers file Form 4868, Application for Automatic Extension of Time to File U.S. Individual Income Tax Return, the period of the extension is included in the three-year lookback period. Yet when the IRS exercises its authority under IRC § 7508A to postpone filing deadlines, such as the postponements provided during filing seasons 2020 and 2021, the period of the postponement is not included in the three-year lookback period. Thus, a postponement and an extension are not the same. Consequently, there is a mismatch between the period in which a claim for credit or refund can be filed and the three-year lookback period for those taxpayers who took advantage of the postponed filing deadlines for filing seasons 2020 and 2021.

(This is especially true for calendar year taxpayers because IRC § 6513(b) provides that any tax deducted and withheld on wages and any amounts paid as estimated tax are deemed to have been paid on April 15 in the year following the close of the tax year to which the tax is allowable as a credit.)

The following is an example of how a taxpayer may later be denied a credit or refund after taking advantage of the postponed filing deadlines for TYs 2019 or 2020.

Example: In 2019, a taxpayer had income tax withheld from his paycheck every two weeks. In 2020, the taxpayer timely filed his 2019 return on the postponed filing deadline of July 15. The taxpayer’s 2019 tax liability was paid through withholding, which was deemed paid on April 15, 2020, the original due date of the return. Based upon the filing deadline postponement to July 15, the taxpayer files a claim for refund on July 14, 2023. Under IRC § 6511(a), the claim for refund is timely, as it was filed within three years from the filing date of the original return. Under the three-year lookback period of IRC § 6511(b)(2)(A), however, the amount of the taxpayer’s refund is limited to payments made in the three years prior to filing the claim (i.e., payments made on or after July 15, 2020). The withholding deemed paid on April 15, 2020, falls outside that period (as would any estimated tax payments) so the refund amount will be limited to $0, effectively denying the taxpayer any refund. By contrast, if the taxpayer had requested an extension of time to file until October 15, 2020, the taxpayer would have had until October 16, 2023 (October 15, 2023, is a Sunday), to be eligible to receive a refund because the extension period is added to the three year lookback period.

This problem has been remedied by issuing Notice XX, in which the IRS exercises its authority under IRC § 7508A(a), to disregard the period of postponement for filing returns for TYs 2019 and 2020 to determine the beginning of the lookback period. Thus, under this notice, disregarding the postponed time period for all taxpayers who appropriately took advantage of it effectively deems these returns filed on April 15 of the affected years, restoring alignment between the claim for credit or refund period and the three-year lookback period.

A Permanent Solution Is Still Needed for All Disaster Relief Postponements

I am pleased the IRS addressed this issue for TYs 2019 and 2020. However, the relief offered in this notice is limited to only the COVID-19-related postponements and doesn’t offer a permanent solution for other disaster relief. Say, for example, a natural disaster affects a certain area of the country, and the IRS exercises its authority under IRC § 7508A by postponing the filing deadline for the affected taxpayers from April 15 to some later date. The same problem will arise for all other relief – taxpayers may be denied claims for credit or refund if the lookback period falls outside of the postponement date. Therefore, I have made a legislative recommendation for the last couple of years that would fix this problem permanently and prevent taxpayers from being harmed and falling into a trap for the unwary.

Conclusion

Issuing Notice XX has remedied an unintended consequence of the IRS’s good deed of providing taxpayers with more time to file their 2019 and 2020 returns during the COVID-19 pandemic. This will prevent unwary taxpayers from being denied a credit or refund to which they otherwise would have been entitled. However, this relief needs to be made permanent by amending IRC § 6511(b)(2)(A) in anticipation of any future circumstances in which the IRS exercises its authority and postpones filing deadlines for all disaster relief. This will provide a permanent solution every time the IRS provides disaster relief by postponing the filing deadline and thus ensure that taxpayers’ future claims for credit or refund won’t be denied for having taken advantage of this relief.

The post NTA Blog: Lookback Rule: The IRS Fixes the Refund Trap for the Unwary appeared first on Taxpayer Advocate Service. Thoughts?

NTA Blog: Lookback Rule: The IRS Fixes the Refund Trap for the Unwary - TAS Without IRS intervention, any claims for credit or refund filed during the postponed period three years later that included withholding or estimated taxes would have been denied because the withheld amount(s) would have been credited to the taxpayer’s account as of April 15, outside the three-year...

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Location

Category

Telephone

Address


205 Van Buren Street
Herndon, VA
20170

Opening Hours

Monday 10am - 4pm
Tuesday 10am - 4pm
Wednesday 10am - 4pm
Thursday 10am - 4pm
Friday 10am - 4pm
Saturday 10am - 2pm
Sunday 10am - 2pm

Other Schools in Herndon (show all)
Middlebury Interactive Languages - Summer Academies Middlebury Interactive Languages - Summer Academies
2300 Corporate Park Drive
Herndon, 20171

Middlebury Interactive Languages™ Summer Academy offers immersive summer language programs for teens in Spanish, French, Chinese, and Arabic in the U.S. & abroad.

Northern Virginia Shuai-Chiao Club Northern Virginia Shuai-Chiao Club
360 Herndon Parkway #1200
Herndon, 20170

We're Northern Virginia's only club dedicated to teaching, training, and growing the traditional Chi

Coach2Reach-Coaching VUCA World Coach2Reach-Coaching VUCA World
2448 Leyland Ridge Road
Herndon, 20171

Coach2Reach will help you to build a shared vision & Enhance human potential through a transformatio

Touching Heart Touching Heart
Herndon, 20171

We believe in the importance of teaching children that they are part of a larger community. Touching

Oak Hill Christian School Oak Hill Christian School
13525 Dulles Technology Drive
Herndon, 20171

A Classical and Christian School for Pre-K Through Grade Twelve

Southview 412 Student Ministry Southview 412 Student Ministry
2620 Reston Parkway
Herndon, 20171

6th-12th Grade ministry at Southview Community Church.

Xuejuan Dance Ensemble Xuejuan Dance Ensemble
360 Herndon Pkwy, #900
Herndon, 20171

Xuejuan Dance Ensemble

MyTjPrep MyTjPrep
462 Herndon Pkwy
Herndon, 20170

MyTjPrep (Prepare2Excel) is an enrichment and test preparation center dedicated to working closely w

Metro Yearbooks Metro Yearbooks
Herndon, 20171

Kat Phillips and Whitney Moore Walsworth Yearbook Representatives

Little Angels Daycare Little Angels Daycare
1316 Shaker Woods Road
Herndon, 20170

Moore Music Studios Moore Music Studios
618 Worchester Street
Herndon, 20170

Moore Music Studios provides quality piano lessons for students of all ages and ability levels. Visi

Vecinos Unidos Neighbors United Vecinos Unidos Neighbors United
1086 Elden Street
Herndon, 20170

Staffed entirely by volunteers and funded solely by donations and grants, Vecinos Unidos helps stude