Thursday, November 18, 2010

5 Things To Do Before Year End To Reduce Taxes

1. Purchase equipment for your business- You can take a deduction of 50% of the cost of furniture, fixtures & equipment purchased & placed in service in your business before 12/31/10. This provision may disappear next year!

2. Start a Business- If you don’t have a business- start one! Even if you have a W-2 job, you can have a business on the side. It must be a valid business that you spend time on. Then you can deduct expenses related to that activity to offset wage income. See article below for more information.

3. Charitable Donations- Yes, the age old idea of cleaning out your closets and donating to Goodwill before the end of the year. But now you must be able to prove the items were in “good” condition. Take pictures, keep detailed lists and get receipts.

4. Incorporate Your Business- If you are going to receive a lot of income before the end of the year think of incorporating and transferring the income to either a C corporation or an S corporation. Both have ways to save you taxes. Call us for help.

5. Pay Both Installments of Your Property Taxes In December- Remember the only way this will help is if your income is going to be lower next year than this year. If you have high income this year due to bonuses or commissions, pay all of the property tax and take the deduction on 2010.

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

I Paid My Taxes But The IRS Says I Didn't!

Sometimes people pay their taxes on time but the IRS says they didn’t. This is a result of the IRS not “posting” the payments correctly on their computer. You should always write on your checks your name(s) as they appear on your tax return, Social Security number(s), form you are paying for, i.e. “1040” if paying with your return or “1040ES” if making estimated tax payments, and the year you are paying for, i.e. “2009” if paying with your 2009 return or “2010” if making estimated tax payments with the 2010 voucher. That’s probably the biggest error in posting that occurs- the payment is applied to the wrong year.
So if you receive a notice from the IRS saying you owe taxes that you think you paid here’s what you do:

Call the IRS right away and tell them. Get the cancelled checks showing all of your payments. Make copies of the front and back of each check. Then send them to the IRS with a letter explaining what happened.

Friday, October 15, 2010

What Is Incapacity? And What To Do If Your Parent Has It?

As our loved ones get older they may start to lose some of their mental capacity. When is forgetfulness just "senior moments" and when does it become dementia? How do you know if your parents are suffering from a dangerous debilitating disease like Alzheimer's? You may not know for sure unless you have them tested. However, doctors, in general, do minimal cursory tests that may not give you enough information to make important decisions for the care and safety of your parent. These are hard questions.
One way to protect your parent is to make sure they have a durable power of attorney for asset management and an advance health care directive signed and notarized before they become incapacitated. When you use documents like these the definition of incapacity can be written in to the document. Like many legal provisions you can alter the standard legal definition by writing your own definition in your document.

The legal definition of incapacity provided by the California Probate Code provides:
A person is of unsound mind or lacks the capacity to make a decision or do a certain act when there is a deficit in at least one of the following mental functions and the deficit significantly impairs the person's ability to understand and appreciate the consequences of his or her actions with regard to the act or decision in question:

(1) Alertness and attention:
(A) Level of arousal or consciousness.
(B) Orientation to time, place, person, and situation.
(C) Ability to attend and concentrate.

(2) Information processing:
(A) Short- and long-term memory, immediate recall.
(B) Ability to understand or communicate with others, either verbally or otherwise.
(C) Recognition of familiar objects and familiar persons.
(D) Ability to understand and appreciate quantities.
(E) Ability to reason using abstract concepts.
(F) Ability to plan, organize, and carry out actions in one's own rational self-interest.
(G) Ability to reason logically.

(3) Thought processes:
(A) Severely disorganized thinking.
(B) Hallucinations.
(C) Delusions.
(D) Uncontrollable, repetitive, or intrusive thoughts.

(4) Ability to modulate mood and affect: a pervasive and persistent or recurrent state of euphoria, anger, anxiety, fear, panic, depression, hopelessness or despair, helplessness, apathy or indifference, that is inappropriate in degree to the individual's circumstances.

These are the areas of cognizance that are tested to determine if a person is legally incapacitated, such as when a conservatorship is in question. You can write in your parent's power of attorney that they are considered incapacitated if you get a letter from 2 doctors saying so. This makes it much easier to take control of your parent's financial affairs when it becomes necessary. For more information please contact us Law Offices of Patricia Rowe (925) 256-1000.

Monday, October 4, 2010

6 Things To Do If You Get Audited By The IRS

1. Don't panic- if you get a letter from the IRS or California Franchise Tax Board- it may not be an audit- it may be something specific they're asking for that can easily be provided to settle the issue quickly. Call us, send us the letter and we'll let you know.

2. Figure out what they want- Sometimes it's just some of your tax payments that have been misposted on their computer- if you didn't write your Social Security number, the year and the form number, i.e. "1040" on your check then your payments may have been recorded incorrectly. (See next page for solutions)

3. Get help- Sometimes the issues can be resolved with a letter. Sometimes it calls for a field audit (at your place of business) or an office audit (the IRS office). In any case you don't have to talk to the IRS by yourself. Actually you don't have to talk to them at all. You can get someone to represent you. Then the IRS must talk to your representative. Our clients never talk to the IRS. As with any adverse legal proceeding- you might say something that can be used against you. For a client who admitted to the IRS, before coming to us, that he shouldn't have deducted travel expense to his job, we presented evidence that he was on a temporary assignment and therefore, could deduct it.

4. Gather your records- Look at the notice and see what year it's for. Then get your records that you used to prepare that year's tax returns. Work with us or another tax professional to determine exactly what information you will give the IRS and how it will be presented. Start early in case you have to request copies of bank or investment account statements.

5. Don't Ignore the IRS- It is never a good idea to ignore the IRS or other taxing authority. You or your representative should contact them as soon as possible and notify them that you are gathering your information. Usually you will be able to get a "hold on collection efforts" while you obtain your records and prepare your response. Again- it's better to have a tax professional contact them for you.

6. Present As Much Information As You Can- Even if you're missing some of your records present what you have to the auditor. Oftentimes he or she will let it slide that you are missing some of your documentation, especially if it appears that you have the majority of your records to support your deductions.