Audit Proofing Your Employee Business Expenses

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Photo by Kelly on Flickr.com

I recently attended the national conference of the National Association of Tax Preparers. It was easy to get to as it was in St. Louis this year. As much as I enjoyed taking the classes and meeting new people, sometimes the best information you get at these things is not in the actual classes, but in the scuttlebutt that you hear about what’s going on across the country. One of the issues that people were talking about was that the IRS has really stepped up the audits on Employee Business Expenses (Form 2106).

Just because certain types of forms might be susceptible to an audit doesn’t mean you shouldn’t claim legitimate deductible expenses on your tax return. If you are entitled to a deduction, you should take it. (Let me tell you, Warren Buffet’s not skipping out on his legal deductions). Just make sure you can back up your claims.

If you plan on claiming Employee Business Expenses on your tax return this year, the one thing you’re going to want is a copy of your company’s policy on employee reimbursements. If you get audited for your Employee Business Expenses, the first thing the IRS will ask you for is your official company policy on official company letterhead. If your company has a full reimbursement policy—you will automatically lose the audit. You may not claim a deduction for expenses that could have been reimbursed by your company.

Major companies like GM or Citibank will definitely have a policy. Smaller companies often don’t. To be honest, on more than one occasion I’ve written the reimbursement policy for a small company so they could submit something to the IRS when an employee was being audited. (Now that I think about it, I guess I should write one for my own company).

If you are claiming business mileage, you want to have a mileage log. This is the big IRS “gotcha” because so many people just guess a number and it’s wrong. For some reason, people seem to think that they drive 20,000 miles a year for business. Some people actually do. Some drive even more. But if you say that you drive 20,000 miles for business, you had better be able to back it up with a mileage log. For one thing, “20,000” is like a guaranteed audit flag. If you keep a mileage log, all you have to do is just whip it out and show the IRS agent and you’re done, end of story.

People who claim 20,000 miles and don’t keep mileage logs have a tougher sell. You’ll need outside proof, like your oil change statements to show your overall mileage, plus some type of record to show where you’ve been. Like hotel receipts to prove you drove to various places on business. I charge $100 an hour to recreate those statements for you and it takes time to recreate 20,000 miles. You’ll save yourself a boatload of money and a big headache if you just keep the log.

Don’t make up mileage numbers. I’m serious about the 20,000 being an audit red flag. One audit I worked on the gentleman asked me why I thought he got pulled for an audit. It was obviously his miles. Everything about his tax return had looked pretty normal, except for his 20,000 business miles. Hint: round numbers in multiple thousands look suspicious. He had no mileage log so I had him get me his odometer readings from his oil change company. Well it turns out, not only did he not have 20,000 miles of business driving, he drove less than 5,000 miles during any given year for the past three years!

I’m good at what I do, but this guy wound up paying the IRS some money. I asked him, why did he claim so much in mileage when he only drove 5,000 miles altogether. He said that was what the other guys in his office claimed. Don’t do that! Use your own numbers.

The other thing that gets a lot of IRS attention is the meals and entertainment expense. This trick is so easy it’s ridiculous. Let’s say you take John Smith to lunch to talk about him buying your product. The waitress brings you the check and you get out your credit card. She brings the receipt back for you to sign and add the tip. You also write on the top copy: John Smith sales widgets. Or you may write Jane Doe, advertising; or Fred Bird IT consulting; or whatever. The bottom line is that this note tells you who you were with and what the meeting was about. The receipt itself gives the date, time and place. The waitress may wonder why you wrote about Jon Doe and the widgets on the receipt, but that’s fine, (she’s seen it before.) But by writing on the top copy of the sales receipt, you made the yellow copy a time recording stamp. As the yellow copy of your sales receipt ages it changes color. This shows that you wrote your note a long time ago – remember that an audit will be two or three years after the fact. This proves to the IRS that you were – time for the big word here—contemporaneously recording your business expenses. It gives you street cred with the IRS agent. You took care of business, back when you were supposed to instead of trying to make up stuff after it’s too late.

Bottom line, if you want to audit proof your employee business expenses, you want a copy of your company’s expense reimbursement plan, a solid mileage log, and notations made on the top copy of your meal receipts.

Excerpts from the Facebook feed during the President’s LinkedIn Discussion about the Jobs Act

barak-obama

Photo on Flicker by Jose' Lui's Agapito

I recently watched President Obama’s LinkedIn townhall meeting on Facebook.  Talk about a double dose of social networking media! 

 I haven’t really blogged about the tax proposals because quite frankly, I prefer to wait until something is actually the law before I  post about it.  But I found the comments that people were making about the economy and their concerns were pretty relevant and important.  If you’d like to read the comprehensive fact sheet, here’s a link to that right here:  http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2011/09/08/fact-sheet-and-overview

This certainly isn’t every Facebook post from the meeting, I couldn’t keep up with all of them and I did omit items that were off topic.  But I found that these posts reflected issues that are certainly facing people today.  And I felt they were worth sharing.

• Charles B
I agree that best way to keep Social Security is raise the salary cap. I would recommend a tax rebate, and reinstating the consumer loan interest tax deduction. This would be more effective than deducting the amount going into Social Security using the payroll tax cut.

• Morrie E
How about coming up with an export program that supports already successful small to medium US manufacturers ship their products to the international markets? This takes companies that are already having success and expands their market so they will have to hire more people to meet the increased demand.

• Daisy H
When we have 14 – 26 million Americans unemployed and only 3.5 million jobs available; as Jeff of LinkedIn previous stated, it is obvious, that we need to put lots and lots of resources into helping Americans to create small businesses and hire each other.

• Wendy D
Mr. President: I have been looking for a permanent job fo 15 months. I have found that employers are reluctant to hire the long term unemployed. Can an incentive be given to employers for hiring someone who has been searching for a long time as opposed to hiring someone who alreayd has a job? Thank you.

• Morrie E
Why can’t growing small businesses like mine access the SBA for small working capital loans. Without a good FICO score, the banks will not underwrite the loan. Of course, many small businesses are just recovering from 2008 and now the business owners personal FICO score is now being used instead of the D&B for just the business even if your business is a C corp.

• W Reynolds W
It is a known fact that employers discriminate the unemployed. Even if legislation is passed trying to ban discrimination, the legislation won’t be worth the paper it is written just as it has been ineffective to control discrimination based on race. We need a universal employment policy that is based on economic reality.

• Norman Wade P
When the times are tough, you take care of home first. America is our home, take care of schools, manufacturing, construction, medical invsestment, transportation, environment.

• W Reynolds W
The President has been pushing infrastructure repair as part of his American Jobs Act bill. He would be wise to focus on repairing employment legislative infrastructure to stimulate true jobs growth.

• Shashank M
The guy who has obviously made tons of money in Silicon Valley business stands up and wants his taxes to be raised. Fine – do that. Why wrap the rest of us in it. Not all of us have minted money so we can afford to be “unemployed out of choice”! And no – you did not invest in my education. I paid every dollar out of my earnings.

• Susan S
What is the point of all this discussion when we all know the rep are never going to allow your reforms. I have been out of work for 2 yrs due to medical issues and am still waiting for a hearing with SSD I will lose my home before I even get to Hearing after owning my home for 25+ yrs. whats fair about that after paying into SS all these years They are dragging their heels long enough to lose it after all these years

• Vickie T
Mr. President, I have been laid off for almost two years. Working in the IT world. I need the immediate training and now!!! Not next week! Now!

• Ben K
In the current economy, a lot of people, myself included are working as contract workers, and not employees and receive limited or in some cases no benefits, and are part of what has come to be called the Permanent Temporary Workforce and have been for a year or longer, as I have been. What is your plan to help companies hire contractors and other temporary workers as employees?

• Wendy D
Retraining will work for most. But there are many like me, 60 yrs +, who don’t have time to retrain. We need jobs now, in our areas of expertise, or we are domed to living in poverty as we age.

•Connie L
Mr. President , take the debt off the backs of the American not the big corporations and banks, have a good day!

•Joseph G Jr.
I don’t have problems finding work even though for the past 10 years it has come in the form of contract work but finding a permanent job or starting my own business is my motive though I can’t seem to make enough money to make my business grow and getting a small business loan is out of the question in this economy. I’m a contractor in the Information Technology field who badly wants to start my own business and I’m full of ideals and have a deep passion for technology and a desire to lead and help others, how can I get the funds I need to grow, hire employees and compete in today IT industry without going into financial ruins getting business loans? 

•Peggy H
Education is important but at this point and time it is secondary until we manage to keep jobs in the US. Also we can’t all be in management. We need the blue collar worker too.

Back to me again.   Here’s a link to the White House Press Release about the event.  http://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/2011/09/26/president-obamas-town-hall-linkedin-we-are-thing-together?utm_source=092711&utm_medium=blog&utm_campaign=daily   It has the video and the written transcript if you’re interested.  Thanks for reading.

Dirty Little Secrets about Your Tax-Free Municipal Bonds

Calculator and Money

Photo by TaxBrackets.org. You can check out their website by clicking on the photo.

I love tax-free income. The great thing about tax-free municipal bonds is the tax-free part. The downside is that they usually pay a lower interest rate than taxable bonds. For many people, tax-free trumps taxable every time—but you have to be careful because they’re not always the best deal for everybody. This is what you need to know:

1. While municipal bonds are tax-free on your federal return, they may be taxable on your state return. Usually, if the municipal bond is for your own state, then it’s not taxable. For example, here in Missouri, if I buy a bond from St. Louis County—that’s not taxable on my Missouri return. But if I bought a tax-free bond from New Jersey, then I’d pay tax on that interest. Buying at home gives you better bang for your buck.

2. Even though your municipal bond interest isn’t taxable, it could make your Social Security income taxable instead. Say what? That sounds a little crazy, doesn’t it? Let’s say you’re a senior citizen with moderate income. You’ve got your social security check, a small pension, a little interest from a CD and a bank account, and most of your other cash tied up in tax-free municipal bonds. With social security income, you’ve got that funky formula where you take half of the social security and add it to the other income and if it crosses the threshold, then part of your social security benefits become taxable. Are you rolling your eyes yet? The computer does this all for you right? But – and this is the important part—your tax-free municipal bond interest gets added into that equation. If you’re one of those borderline seniors, that tax-free bond isn’t saving you as much money as you thought. You might want to look at other, higher return investments.

3. The dreaded AMT. If you’re a high income earner, tax-free income sounds like a great investment doesn’t it? But you’ve got to be careful if you’re dealing with the Alternative Minimum Tax. If you’re in the AMT zone, you want to stay away from what’s known as a “private activity bond.” A private activity bond is when a company like GM wants to raise money, but instead of GM issuing a bond itself, it has the local government issue a bond for it (for example for building a plant in the area). It’s still a tax-free municipal bond, but it’s actually for a private business so it’s called a private activity bond. If you’re an investor that doesn’t have to pay AMT taxes, you’re fine, you get all the benefits of tax-free income. If you’re paying AMT, then you’ve lost all the benefit of the tax-free income. Private activity bond income is taxable under AMT rules.

With the stock market going crazy and many people turning to bonds, it’s important to know the real tax effects of “tax-free” on your tax return.

When Can I File My 2011 Tax Return?

stopwatch

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I’m posting this in September of 2011—that means we have over three months before the year is even over. If you’re asking this question now, it means you’re expecting a refund—which is good—but the bad news is you’re not going to see it for quite a while.

Hopefully, here are some answers you’re looking for.

Although the IRS hasn’t posted any official dates yet, generally, the first day that you can e-file a return will be the day after Martin Luther King, Jr. Day—basically the middle of January. Please don’t hold me to that, Congress can always come in and mess things up, but that’s usually the earliest you can e-file.

Last year, because Congress had slowed up the e-filing for lots of people’s returns, folks asked, “Can I just mail my form in before the e-file date if I’ve got everything done?” The answer is “No, don’t.” The IRS will just toss your mailed return in a corner and not open it until they’re allowed to and your return will get processed slower than the e-filed returns so you really don’t want to do that.

What about those loans you can take against your refund? When do they start and who has them? That’s a really good question. Last year, the IRS changed its practice of providing something called a “debt indicator.” If you filed a tax return through a company that issued Refund Anticipation Loans, the IRS would send back information saying whether you had a federal tax levy against you or not. If there was no “debt indicator” then it was safe to assume that the bank issuing the Refund Anticipation Loan would get its money. If a taxpayer had a debt indicator flag, then they wouldn’t get the Refund Anticipation Loan.
The problem is that the IRS refuses to issue a debt indicator anymore so banks aren’t willing to take the risk. Refund Anticipation Loans have virtually dried up. Last year, only one tax business in my area offered a Refund Anticipation Loan but it was limited in scope.

The Advance Refund Anticipation Loans or Christmas Refund loans were pretty much based on the same principal. As of this writing, I know of no one who is issuing advanced money for the 2011 tax year. If anyone is, it’s doubtful they’ll offer that program anytime before Thanksgiving.

Is there anything I can do to get my hands on my tax money? In 2011, probably not: Congress repealed the advanced EITC law which used to allow you to claim your EITC in your paycheck. If you have federal income tax withholding taken from your pay (not Social Security and Medicare, but federal income tax) you can change your withholding so that you get more take home pay. There’s a calculator on the IRS website that can help you figure out how many exemptions to claim. http://www.irs.gov/individuals/article/0,,id=96196,00.html
You’ll want to have your most recent pay stubs and your last tax return handy as you fill in the answers. It’s a pretty good indicator of what your refund will look like come tax season and if changing your W4 could benefit you.

A word of caution: The IRS clamped down on Refund Anticipation Loans because it felt that those loans were harmful to consumers. They basically put the big tax companies out of the loan business because they have to follow the rules. Sometimes, shady guys slip through the cracks. So here’s the warning—if you find a tax business that does refund anticipation loans ask a lot of questions. How long have they been in business? What happens if there’s a problem with your return? How will you get your money? How long will you have to wait for your money? What are the charges for the loan, for the tax preparation, etc.? If you don’t feel safe, if your questions aren’t answered to your satisfaction, then walk away.

You can get free tax preparation from VITA or the IRS. If you have a bank account, you can have your refund direct deposited within two weeks of filing. You’re already going to have to wait for a few months anyway, if you can hold out for just a little bit longer you can save yourself hundreds of dollars—money that you can spend on you, your kids, your rent, etc. Good luck.

What You Need to Know About Hiring Contract Labor

Construction experts

Photo by Julien Harneis on Flickr.com

I’ve done a lot of blog posts about what to do if you’re the contract labor, but the other day I had a client ask me about hiring contract labor. Here’s what you need to know if you’re doing the hiring.

First, you don’t need a “contract” with them.  Contract labor is a term that’s used to mean they are working for you, but they are not on the payroll. For some things, it’s good to have a contract, but often it’s not necessary.

Second, never pay in cash—always pay by check.  A check shows where you paid the money to – it’s a paper trail of how your business spent it’s money.  That’s a good thing.  The number one mortal sin in business accounting is making cash payments.  Never take cash out of the ATM for your business; never pay bills in cash.  You can use a “petty cash” account for really minor things, but there should be receipts for everything and a check should be written for “petty cash”.  Cash gets you into trouble so you have to be doubly careful with it. If you remember nothing else, remember:real businesses do not pay bills with cash!

Third, although you don’t need a contract for the people who do work for you, you do need to have them fill out a form called a W-9.  Here’s a link to get the form: http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/fw9.pdf

Say for example that John Doe was doing some construction work for your business and over the course of the year you thought you might pay him over $600.  You would have him complete the W-9 form for your records.  (I even had my own kid do a W-9 and I didn’t expect her to make over $600.  It’s just a good business habit.) I recommend having your contract labor give you the completed W-9 before you make the first payment. This keeps your behind covered in case the IRS or one of the other taxing jurisdictions decides to audit your books.

Anyway, on the form, John Doe would list his name under “name”.

For business name, he would leave it blank unless he had a business with a different name like “John’s Construction Business.”

Under the business type, he’d be an individual/sole proprietor (once again, unless he owned a regular business that was a corporation or something.)

He’d put down his address, zip code etc.  He probably wouldn’t have an account number for you, but if he did, he could put it in the box. It’s not necessary.

Requester’s name is “Your Business Name.”  You don’t really need to fill that out, you know who you are. If he’s completing the form right in your office, it’s okay to leave blank. If you’re mailing it to him, then you should put your business information in that box.

The TIN is John Doe’s social security number, unless he has a business EIN number.   A regular business will know the EIN number and use it. If the person doesn’t know what an EIN is, then he should put his social security number. This W-9 form gives you good records and will protect you in an audit.

Make sure your contract laborer understands that if he receives over $600 from you, then you will be reporting his pay to the IRS as non-employee compensation. You need to do this or else the IRS will not allow you a deduction for the money you paid him.

You will need to prepare 1099 MISC forms in January (they’re easy to do.) Your contract laborer will receive his form by January 31st. You’ll also be sending copies to the IRS which are due at the end of February.

Hiring contract labor is much easier than putting someone on the payroll, but you do have to remember the rules: pay by check, get a W-9, and issue a 1099 MISC. These three things will help audit-proof your contract labor.

The Truth About All Those People Who Don’t Pay Income Tax

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I’m sure you’ve heard it all before: 51% of Americans don’t pay any income tax! I got an earful of it just the other day from Granny’s boyfriend (who, by the way, also pays no federal income tax). A lot of people have been asking me about that lately; the two main questions are 1. Is it true? And 2. How come so many people aren’t paying? I did some research and here’s what I found.

1. According to the Tax Policy Institute, 46% of American households are not expected to pay federal income tax in 2011. It’s not 51%, but that’s still a pretty big number.

2. Of that 46% (that’s roughly 76 million American households), half of them pay no federal income tax due to standard deductions and basic exemptions. In English—it means they’re poor. Our tax system doesn’t tax subsistence level incomes. For example: a married couple making $18,700 a year or less would pay no federal income tax. It’s important to note that they still are subject to Social Security and Medicare taxes, either through their wage withholdings or through their self employment taxes on their federal return. There’s a big difference between “no federal income taxes” and “no taxes ”.

3. That leaves 38 million households that pay no income tax because of special provisions in the tax code.

So what are these special provisions and who is affected by them?

1. 44% of those 38 million households are covered under tax benefits for the elderly. That would include the extra standard deduction for senior citizens and the exclusion of some social security benefits from taxation. (The report also mentions the credit for the elderly, but in reality, I have never, ever prepared a return where someone actually qualified for that credit.)

2. Another 30% of those tax provisions are credits given for children and the working poor, namely the Child Tax Credit and the Earned Income Credit.

3. That leaves the remaining 26% (less than 10 million households) reducing their federal income tax liability to zero through tax breaks.

So what are these tax breaks and how do they break down? (By the way, in the Tax Policy Report, Tax breaks are called “Tax expenditure provisions” and households are called “tax units”. Forgive me for trying to make people sound human.)

1. Exclusion of cash transfers accounts for 6% or 2.28 million households. In English we’re talking about people who receive SSI or other non-taxable payments like that.

2. Education credits account for 5.6% or 2.128 million households.

3. Above the line deductions and tax exempt interest account for 5.1% or 1.938 million households. Above the line deductions are those things on the front of a 1040 tax return like the deductions for an IRA, alimony paid, student loan interest and the teacher deduction to name a few. Tax exempt interest is usually earned on state and local government bonds.

4. Itemized deductions account for 5% or 1.9 million households. The most commonly claimed deductions here are for mortgage interest, real estate taxes, state and local taxes, and charitable contributions.

5. Other credits make up 2.5% or just under one million households. The foreign tax credit isn’t counted in this as it’s considered to be a tax paid. This category is more for things like the residential energy credit, items you’ll find on the back of the 1040.

6. The last category is reduced rates on capital gains which accounts for 1.3% or less than half a million households. Regular income is taxed at your regular tax rate, but long term capital gains are taxed at a lower rate (between 0 and 15%).

So what does all this mean and why should you care? That’s the question of the day, isn’t it? Let’s be real, it is kind of aggravating to think that 46% of the American public doesn’t pay any income tax, especially if you’re paying taxes. But where are we going to make the changes?

Do you want to eliminate the tax benefits for the elderly? I’m not recommending that; Granny’ll whop me upside the head. If Congress slashes the Social Security and Medicare budgets, you can’t attack seniors with increased taxes on the other side.

We could reduce the standard deduction and exemptions and push more people into the taxable income category—but that would raise everyone’s taxes, not just the poor.

We could eliminate the other tax breaks like the education credit and itemized deductions, etc. While doing so would take some people out of “pay no income tax” category, it would also greatly increase the taxes of many people who are already paying into the system.

If you’re looking for an easy answer here, there really isn’t one. If you would like to learn more about the Tax Policy study, here’s a link to their site: http://www.taxpolicycenter.org/publications/url.cfm?ID=1001547

Why Do I Have to Pay Taxes on Cancelled Debt?

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Photo by Alan Cleaver on Flickr.com

It’s that time of year again when the IRS audit letters are hitting people’s mailboxes. And one of the most popular letters is reminding folks that they forgot to include their cancelled debt on their income tax returns.
“But why should I have to pay tax on that?” That’s got to be the most common question I hear from folks. “It’s not like the credit card company gave me any money, they just cancelled my debt.”
Let me try to explain it the way the IRS looks at it: If you have a job and you make $30,000 you have to pay income tax on that $30,000 right? Because it’s income to you, you pay income tax. I think that makes sense to everyone (You probably don’t want to pay the tax, but you understand the concept).
When you take out a loan for $30,000, you don’t pay tax on it. The $30,000 is a loan and you are supposed to pay it back, so it doesn’t count as income. That makes sense too.
Now let’s say you take out a loan for $30,000 and you don’t pay it back. We’ll skip past the nasty phone calls from the creditors and go straight to the part where the debt is forgiven. The bank says, “Okay fine, we’re going to write off the debt, you don’t owe us anymore.” Well now that $30,000 isn’t a loan anymore, because you don’t have to pay it back. Once that loan is no longer considered a loan—the IRS counts it as income and you get taxed.
But what if I didn’t take out a loan, what if it was just a credit card? It still gets treated like a loan because essentially, that’s what your credit card does for you. It gives you little loans to buy shoes, or a TV, or groceries. If your credit card debt is forgiven, it gets taxed.
So if I get an IRS letter saying I owe taxes on cancelled debt, do I automatically owe the money? Not always. There are some situations where you might not have to pay the tax, or maybe get the amount reduced. The biggest exclusion is if your home is foreclosed on. If you lived in the house as your main home and you lost it to a bank foreclosure, you can have the principal part of the mortgage that was forgiven be excluded from your income (That can be a pretty hefty tax chunk right there).
Another exclusion is for debt that was discharged in a Chapter 11 bankruptcy. So if you’re in the middle of bankruptcy proceedings, you’re going to want to be sure to claim the bankruptcy exclusion.
The third common exclusion is for “insolvency.” Insolvency means that your liabilities (money you owe) just before the debt was discharged is more than your assets (things of value like cash, stocks, your house, your car, etc.)
There are other exclusions, but these are the three most common ones. If you think that you may qualify for one of these exclusions, then you’ll want to amend your tax return showing that you’ve claimed the exclusion. You’ll put that on a form 982: http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/f982.pdf This is one of those cases where I recommend that you have a professional work on the return. There are a lot of little details that go into the exclusion of debt that just won’t fit into a short blog like this. If you’re pretty handy with tax issues, the details can be found in IRS publication 4681: http://www.irs.gov/publications/p4681/index.html

Reconstructing Tax Records: Getting Your Ducks in a Row

Trio of cheerful chicks

Photo by Ducklover Bonnie on Flickr.com

A few years back I represented a client who had lost all of his tax records in a flood.  He had excellent documentation of the flood, but the IRS didn’t care about that, they still wanted him to back up some items that he had deducted on his tax return from a few years back.  They wanted copies of receipts for expenses that he claimed on a tax return that was destroyed in the flood.  He filed the receipts with the return, everything was destroyed.

This year, with all the tornado damage across the Midwest, including my own neighborhood, it seems like reconstructing records is an important topic.

First the easy stuff:  You can get a copy of your tax return transcript for free from the IRS.  If you still live at the same address that was on your last tax return, you can do it online at:  https://sa2.www4.irs.gov/irfof-tra/start.do

If your address has changed, you will either need to fill out form 4506T, here’s a link to that:    http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/f4506t.pdf or call the IRS at 1 800 829-1040.   

Not only can you get information about your tax return, but you can also get information from your W2s, 1099s, and 1098 forms if you need it.  Note: the IRS W2 information does not include your state tax withholding, this is really a problem if you’re having a state tax issue, but at least you’ll have a list of your employers and you can contact them if you need that.

So that gets you the information that the IRS already has about you in the first place, but how can you reconstruct documentation when all of your files have been destroyed?  One thing in your favor, although the IRS requires actual receipts during an audit, if you’ve been the victim of a flood or tornado or some event where your documentation is lost, they will allow you to prove you expenses some other way.  But don’t just walk into an audit and say, “My files were destroyed you’ll just have to take my word for it.”  We’re talking about the IRS, they don’t take your word for nothing.  You’ll have to show them that you put some effort to recreating your expenses and it had better look plausible.  So what should we look at?

  1. Bank Statements:  this is really easy if you have a business account and you run all your business expenses through that one account.  Even if you’re running your business expenses through your personal account, it still provides you with proof of payment.  Most banks let you access your statements on-line for free.  Some banks still charge a fee for old statements but they should at least be able to access them for up to three years back. 
  2. Credit card statements:  Once again, you can often get these online for free. 

Bank statements and credit card statements are your two biggest and best sources of expense documentation, not just for business expenses, but also for proving your charitable donations which is another expense item that’s often looked at.

After you’ve proven your expenses, you may need to recreate your mileage log.  That can be tough, but once again, if you don’t try you’ll lose the entire deduction.

  1. If you still have your appointment calendar, start from day one and figure out where you’ve been and Mapquest everything.  (I’ve done this with folks who hadn’t really lost their data, they never had a mileage log in the first place.  Technically you’re supposed maintain it on a daily basis, or at least at the end of each week.)
  2. If you’ve lost everything though, you probably don’t have your appointment calendar to work with.  You can check with your oil change company.  They keep records of your mileage at each oil change.  This will at least give you a baseline to work with.  (Hint:  if your oil changes show you put 12,000 miles on the car don’t try to claim that you drove 20,000 miles for business.)
  3. Once, for a client that had lost her mileage log, I was able to show the IRS that she routinely went to a certain store once a week for her supplies.  She had driven on some business trips to various cities and we could prove that from her credit card statements as she had made charges in Nashville, Indianapolis, and some other cities.  I used those charges to vouch for her mileage there.  Although I didn’t have a “perfect” log book, by pulling together that information, the IRS auditor allowed the entire mileage claim because it was reasonable for what the taxpayer was doing.
  4. If you are in the same line of work, you can take a 90 day sample of your daily business mileage and use that as a sample of what you normally do throughout the year.  The problem here being that you might not have the luxury of 90 days to pull a sample together.  If you have nothing else to work with, I would at least do a sample log for as long as you can—something is better than nothing.

The most far- fetched proof I ever provided to the IRS was for a client who was adamant that an expense that the IRS had disallowed was legitimate.  We couldn’t find a record of it in the bank statement, and it wasn’t something that would go on a credit card.  It was a very normal and logical expense for the business but I just couldn’t prove it.  (The company refused to provide my client with a new receipt because they were upset because she fired them.  Oopsie.)   Anyway, I pulled up the company’s web site and they advertised their prices on line.  I had printed out the website price list and the agent allowed the expense.  I don’t believe that would work under most situations, but once again, if you have nothing else to use it can’t hurt.

As you can see, reconstructing expenses for a tax audit is not fun.  (Okay, let’s be real, audits in general aren’t fun but they’re definitely easier if you have all your ducks in a row.)  Now might be a real good time to think about how you’re storing your important data.  Are you backing up to the “cloud”?  Maybe you copy your annual records to a jump drive and store that in your safe deposit box?  Or perhaps you have a fireproof box that you keep your records in?  It’s a good idea to plan ahead, just in case there is an emergency.

Summer Jobs for Teens Part 2: Babysitting and Lawn Mowing

Lawn Mower

Photo by miggslives at Flickr.com

I just received my IRS newsletter and they offered a tax guide about teens getting summer jobs.  I was going to blog about that anyway, so I thought I’d read their guide and use a lot of their points.  Here’s the link:   http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-utl/oc_-_may_-_summrjobtips_050211.pdf.  If you took a look, you’ll notice that they even set it up for folks like me to copy and paste.  Kinda sweet.

But here’s my problem with it, the page says that if you do odd jobs like babysitting or lawn mowing then you have to record that as self employment and pay self employment tax on it.  That means that if I hire Alex from across the street to mow my lawn once a week, and I pay him $25 a week for the entire  lawn season—that’s 28 weeks where I live, he’ll have earned $700 and, according to that IRS newsletter, he’ll have to pay self employment taxes on that.  Normally, a student earning only $700 would pay no taxes at all, but because Alex is self employed, he’d have to pay about $90.   Suddenly that lawn mowing job isn’t looking so good. 

Let’s call the IRS to the rescue!  You see, in IRS publication 926 (yes that sounds awfully dull but ya gotta fight fire with fire) the IRS lists jobs that are considered to be “household workers”.  One of those jobs is a yard worker, like Alex.  (Babysitter is another one.)   What makes a household worker an employee is if the homeowner controls not only what work is done, but how it’s done.  For example, I want Alex to mow my lawn on Thursdays.  I want the grass shorter in the spring and longer in the summer, and I want him to leave the clippings on my lawn unless it’s really overgrown.  Alex doesn’t have a lot of say in this so that makes him an employee. 

Why does any of this matter?  Because as a household employee, Alex doesn’t have to pay self employment taxes, that would be his employer’s job (that would be me.)  But it gets better, since I’m only paying him $700 this year, his wages from me are below the threshold for having to pay social security and medicare taxes so we’ve got a “win/win” situation.  As long as the employer pays a person less than $1,700 in a year, then there are no employment taxes.  Alex can work and keep his whole $700.

Now here’s the best part of all—Alex is only 16.  If you hire a household worker who is under age 18 at any time during 2011, you do not pay employment taxes at all.  I could give Alex a raise (please don’t let him read this, okay?)  I could also hire him to do some landscaping work in addition to mowing my lawn.  Let’s say that I paid Alex $3,000 for work he did in my yard.  If he filed a tax return as being self employed, he’d pay almost $400 in self employment taxes for 2011.  As my household employee, he pays $0.   (I live in Missouri, so if I paid Alex over $1000 per quarter, I would have to pay for unemployment insurance, but that would by my expense, the boss, not the employee.)

So, if you’re looking for summer work and you’re under 18, don’t overlook those old standbys of babysitting and lawn care.  And if somebody tries to make you pay self employment taxes, tell them to go read Publication 926.  It’s all there in writing.  http://www.irs.gov/publications/p926/ar02.html#en_US_publink100086722