Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Examples of Non-Taxable Income

Image source


   The Internal Revenue Service gets a share of the majority of your income before you even see the check in most cases. We have come to accept this inevitability for the privilege of living in the good old United States of America, and Uncle Sam wants you to pay rent! There are a few exceptions in the form of non-taxable income that you actually don't have to pay taxes on, which is a relief in itself! Below are a few examples of non-taxable income that you can take advantage of this tax season.


Education Expenses 
Your company can pay, and deduct, up to $5,250 per year in supplemental educational assistance for either undergraduate or graduate-level courses. This tax-free course doesn't have to be related specifically to your job, but courses that involve hobbies, games or sports activities aren't applicable. 
Profit From Selling Your Home
Since 1997, if your home was your primary residence for at least two recent years, you can exclude up to $250,000 or $500,000 if you're filing jointly when you sell said property.
This money doesn't have to be reinvested, and the exclusion can be claimed every two years if you sell your main property again. For those that don't make the two-year time constraint, you can get a partial exclusion based on time and residency.
This partial exclusion carries one other stipulation: the sale must be required because of a change in employment or some outside circumstance. The IRS is surprisingly flexible with said circumstances, such as a growing family or a hostile next door neighbor.


But wait, there's more:
  • Cash rebates (for example, you receive $500 after purchasing a new car)
  • Casualty insurance and other reimbursements for theft or casualty loss
  • Gifts, bequests, and inheritances
  • Military allowances
  • Supplemental Security Income (SSI) payments
  • Veterans' benefits
  • Welfare benefits
  • Disaster relief grants
  • Mortgage assistance programs
 We hope you get to take advantage of some of these benefits and you get a great refund this tax season!

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Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Tax Haikus!

Image courtesy of http://alexmageesons.com/Stamford-famous-haiku/


This article is about the Japanese poetic form. For haiku poetry written in English, see Haiku in English.
For other uses, see Haiku (disambiguation).
Haiku (俳句 haikai verse?) About this sound listen (help·info) (no separate plural form), is a very short form of Japanese poetry typically characterised by three qualities:
  • The essence of haiku is "cutting" (kiru).[1] This is often represented by the juxtaposition of two images or ideas[2] and a kireji ("cutting word") between them, a kind of verbal punctuation mark which signals the moment of separation and colours the manner in which the juxtaposed elements are related.[3]
  • Traditional haiku consist of 17 on (also known as morae), in three phrases of 5, 7 and 5 on respectively.[4] Any one of the three phrases may end with the kireji.[5] Although haiku are often stated to have 17 syllables,[6] this is incorrect as syllables and on are not the same.
  • A kigo (seasonal reference), usually drawn from a saijiki, an extensive but defined list of such words. The majority of kigo, but not all, are drawn from the natural world. This, combined with the origins of haiku in pre-industrial Japan, has led to the inaccurate impression that haiku are necessarily nature poems.
Modern Japanese gendai (現代) haiku are increasingly unlikely to follow the tradition of 17 on or to take nature as their subject, but the use of juxtaposition continues to be honoured in both traditional haiku and gendai.[1] There is a common, although relatively recent, perception that the images juxtaposed must be directly observed everyday objects or occurrences.[7]
In Japanese, haiku are traditionally printed in a single vertical line while haiku in English often appear in three lines to parallel the three phrases of Japanese haiku.[8]
Previously called hokku, haiku was given its current name by the Japanese writer Masaoka Shiki at the end of the 19th century.

Today, Kelly Phillips Erb(http://blogs.forbes.com/kellyphillipserb/) Issued a contest for writing a tax haiku. I've always enjoyed poetry and haikus are a fun and interesting challenge to create. Here are the ones I could come up with, and try it out, you may be a poet and didn't...I'm gonna save myself the embarrassment. Her post about the contest is http://www.forbes.com/sites/kellyphillipserb/2012/02/22/fun-with-taxes-tax-haiku/

Taxes must be paid
Living in America
Pay them until you die

Give me liberty
Uncle Sam will give you it
Must pay taxes though

The IRS loves
Seeing you pay your taxes
when not, audit time!

Don't know how to file?
Want to file wrong on purpose?
Deduct ALL THE THINGS!

Deductions are great
Only in moderation
Too late, audit's HEEYA!

The Audit Fairy
May be checking your taxes
Better have receipts!

New technology
Tax refunds on debit cards
Never again please!

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Friday, February 17, 2012

Where's your tax refund? The IRS can't say...

Image courtesy of http://www.flickr.com/photos/heatsink/110859301/sizes/m/in/photostream/


The refund-tracking tool on the agency's website is not reflecting the status of returns that have been filed. The problem is with the website tool, and refunds have not been delayed.


Last week we wrote about an IRS tool that allows taxpayers to check on the status of their refunds.

Except that now it isn't working.

Do not panic if you go to check on your refund and the IRS appears to have no record of your return. Those who file are still receiving their refunds within 10 to 21 days.

The problem is not with your refund, but merely with the IRS computer setup that gives you the status of your refund.

The IRS emphasizes that if you filed electronically and you received an acknowledgement of your filing, the agency has NOT lost your refund and you should not call to check on it.

We are aware that some taxpayers who have filed electronically and received an acknowledgement from the IRS are concerned when they visit "Where's My Refund" and are told that we have no information regarding their return. This is a temporary situation, and we expect to resolve the matter in a few days. At that time, taxpayers will be able to get an expected refund date when they visit "Where's My Refund."

If a taxpayer received an acknowledgment message that their e-filed tax return has been received, they can be assured that the IRS has the tax return even though "Where's My Refund" does not reflect that. Taxpayers should not call the IRS unless specifically directed by "Where's My Refund," as there is no new information to give them.

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Thursday, February 9, 2012

Checklist Before You E-file Or Mail Your Tax Return

To start off here is a bit of information you should know about what has changed for your 2011 taxes!
Taken from http://www.irs.gov/newsroom/article/0,,id=254023,00.html
on The I.R.S. Website

IRS Tax Tip 2012-27, February 9, 2012

Before you file your 2011 federal income tax return in 2012, you should be aware of a few important tax changes that took effect in 2011. Check www.IRS.gov before you file for updates on any new legislation that may affect your tax return.

Due date of return. File your federal tax return by April 17, 2012. The due date is April 17, instead of April 15, because April 15 is a Sunday and April 16 is the Emancipation Day holiday in the District of Columbia.

New forms. In most cases, you must report your capital gains and losses on the new Form 8949, Sales and Other Dispositions of Capital Assets. Then, you report certain totals from that form on Schedule D (Form 1040). If you had foreign financial assets in 2011, you may have to file the new Form 8938, Statement of Foreign Financial Assets, with your return.

Standard mileage rates. The 2011 rates for mileage are different for January 1 through June 30 than for July 1 through December 31. For business use of your car, you can deduct 51 cents a mile for miles driven the first half of the year and 55 ½ cents for the second half. Medical and moving mileage are both 19 cents per mile for the early half of the year and 23 ½ cents in the latter half.

Standard deduction and exemptions increased.
  • The standard deduction increased for some taxpayers who do not itemize deductions on IRS Schedule A (Form 1040). The amount depends on your filing status.
  • The amount you can deduct for each exemption has increased $50 to $3,700 for 2011.
Self-employed health insurance deduction. This deduction is no longer allowed on Schedule SE (Form 1040), but you can still take it on Form 1040, line 29.
Alternative minimum tax (AMT) exemption amount increased.
The AMT exemption amount has increased to $48,450 ($74,450 if married filing jointly or a qualifying widow(er); $37,225 if married filing separately).

Health savings accounts (HSAs) and Archer MSAs.
The additional tax on distributions from HSAs and Archer MSAs not used for qualified medical expenses increased to 20 percent. Beginning in 2011, only prescribed drugs or insulin are qualified medical expenses.

Roth IRAs. If you converted or rolled over an amount from a traditional IRA to a Roth IRA or designated Roth in 2010 and did not elect to report the taxable amount on your 2010 return, you generally must report half of it on your 2011 return and the rest on your 2012 return.

Alternative motor vehicle credit. You can claim the alternative motor vehicle credit for a 2011 purchase only if the vehicle is a new fuel cell motor vehicle.

First-time homebuyer credit. The credit expired for most taxpayers for 2011. Some military personnel and members of the intelligence community can still claim the credit in 2011 for qualified purchases.

Health coverage tax credit. Recent legislation changed the amount of this credit, which pays qualified health insurance premiums for eligible individuals and their families. Participants who received the 65 percent tax credit in any month from March to December 2011 may claim an additional 7.5 percent retroactive credit when they file their 2011 tax return.

Mailing a return. The IRS changed the filing location for several areas. If you're mailing a paper return, see the Form 1040 instructions for the correct address.

Detailed information on these changes can be found on the IRS website – www.irs.gov.

Links:

Intro & Ways To Keep Track Of Your Refund

With all that said lets talk about what you should check before you file your taxes! The easiest thing would be for me to say EVERYTHING, but I want you guys to get some useful information out of this thing!

Over 99,123 taxpaying Americans have filed their returns but didn't follow up when the refund didn't come. I don't know what kind of happy-go-lucky life they have where they don't need that money! If you're one of those individuals and you want to enlighten me on your secret to financial freedom, by all means I'll ignore my tax return as well! In case you were wondering, all those lost tax returns equals over 153 MILLION dollars!

Now, if there isn't some big conspiracy that involves vast wealth from turning down other wealth, and you're one of those unlucky individuals that actually wants their return, the money is there, and you can visit the Internal Revenue Service's online refund tracker Where's My Refund? This nifty tool will post the status of your refund and sometimes it can give you the reason the delivery failed.

Some not-so-tech-savvy people can still reach The IRS through their automated refund tracking toll-free number(bet you're itching to hear that machine voice tell you to press buttons for selections already!) The number is (800)-829-1954.

For the uber-tech-savvy people who are glued to their smart phones, the IRS has an app for that! IRS2Go is the premiere app that allows you to check the status of your refund in real time!

As with any of these methods for retrieving your refund you'll need your Social Security Number, filing status and expected refund amount to use this app.

The app has several other features as well, such as signing up for IRS tax updates and for following the IRS on the popular social network Twitter. The final fold-out option of this smart phone Swiss army knife is the IRS2Go's “contacts” sections, which has numbers and hours of operation for all the IRS's tax assistance lines.

The IRS2Go app is free and availiable at both the Apple App Store and the Android Market.




Image from http://www.storypeeps.com/public/49-lessons-learned/233-biggest-mistake-ever

Common Mistakes People Have Made
First off, always make sure you double-check all of your return before you send it. Make a mental checklist in your head of these following things:

Is my address correct?
  • Are my line entries on my 1040 correct?
  • Is my Social Security Number correct?
  • Is my handwriting legible?
  • Are all my entries filled out to the best of my ability?
  • Did I sign everywhere I should?
  • Is the address on the envelope correct?
  • Do I have proper decimal positions and correct punctuation?
  • Is this the address I will be at by the time my refund arrives?
  • Do I have the proper filing status?(Married if married, single if single)
  • Do I have all the correct dependents listed? 

Remember to Double Check These Things Before Sending In Your Return
  • Both spouses must sign a joint return
  • All proper forms are together
  • If you owe money, make your checks payable to the U.S. Treasury, not the IRS.
  • Make a hard copy for your records
  • Use plenty of postage! 
 
The IRS Wants You To E-file
These tips may only take a few minutes but can save you weeks of stress by making sure you are filed correctly the first time! This is in regards to both paper mail and electronic tax filing. E-filing your taxes can save you from many common problems because of software like Online Tax Pros which will double check for many errors automatically. Qualified tax preparers are standing by to answer your tax questions and they keep current on tax law changes. We can not only save you time, but money from your return by filing with us this tax season! We hope you have a stress-free tax season with a huge refund this year!
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Friday, February 3, 2012

Nava Lubelski: Art Made From Taxes

1999 Tax file - Close up Detail

Being an artist, I always love seeing people breathing new life into old or discarded things that would otherwise be cast aside or thrown away. This artist I'm posting about today is very innovative in that I've never heard of anyone using old tax returns for art! Her organic sculptures are very cellular and abstract, but powerful in their message of using old paper to create a new amalgamation of an almost living, growing entity. These images inspire a me to think of how we're all putting our money into taxes which builds this creation of otherwise wasted cellulose.

Read more about Nava Lubelski or just scroll down to the bottom to see what all the hub-bub is about, and if you like these you should check out her other works on her website, http://www.navalubelski.com/.

Background:
Nava Lubelski was born and grew up in the SoHo section of New York City. She graduated from Hunter College High School in Manhattan in 1986 and earned a BA in Russian Literature and History from Wesleyan University in Middletown, CT in 1990. She spent a year abroad as a student in Moscow, Russia.
Lubelski authored The Starving Artist's Way[2][3] and is a 2008 grantee of The Pollock Krasner Foundation.[4]

Nava Lubelski is an artist who was born in 1968 who creates these cellular sculptures using tightly rolled paper scrolls comprised of tax returns, rejection letters, and other collected waste paper.

ARTIST STATEMENT

My work explores the contradictions between the impulse to destroy and the compulsion to mend. I juxtapose rapid acts of destruction, such as spilling and cutting, with painstaking, restorative labor. Embroideries are hand-stitched over stains and rips, contrasting the accidental with the meticulous, constructing narrative from randomness and mistake. The initial marks are found on linens or are created by cutting and staining canvas. The work scrambles expressions of aggression with masochistic patience and sublimation and plays with the feminine through the graphic form of the "stain" and the adding of peek-a-boo, lace inlays to repair cut holes that expose the hidden space behind the canvas. Shadows on the wall add a sculptural dimension and some pieces are hung off the wall to reveal the secret and unintended marks of the verso.
Shredded paper sculptures, such as the Tax Files, reconfigure a mass of paper that has been grouped and saved due to written content, into slabs reminiscent of tree cross-sections where the climate of a given year, and the tree's overall age are visible in a single slice. Historical information is revealed in the colors of deposit slips, pay stubs, receipts and tax forms. The cellular coils spiral outward, mimicking biological growth, as they are glued together into flat rounds, which suggest lichen, doilies or disease. The re-use of paper, as well as the attempted "repair" of the long-lost original tree, is an examination of feelings of despair about waste and unsustainability while simultaneously responding to the shadow impulse to hoard and keep what is no longer needed. The exercise of translating numbers back into a comprehensible, physical manifestation is also an attempt to develop a tool for managing overwhelmingly large tallies, such as those we encounter regularly in reports on war or climate change.
Other sculptural works, such as [a cast of my left hand in the shape of a] Glove, use thread to cast the form of my left hand through the efforts of the free hand. The pieces play with the obstacle of sewing with literally, "one hand tied" and allow improvisational stitching and the results of awkwardness and inconvenience to cast the body part. The finished pieces are struggling and imperfect versions of traditionally hyper-perfect Victorian lace gloves. The pieces maintain the delicate, yet clumsy shapes of ghost hands, at once appearing as flawed and decaying relics, while in fact being molded from the physical hand, a method normally used to create a more substantial and permanent copy than the original flesh.

© 2004-2011 Nava Lubelski, All Rights Reserved.

1997 Tax File, 1/4" x 20" x 19", shredded paper and glue, 2007
1998 Tax File, 1/4" x 19" x 19", shredded paper and glue, 2007
1999 Tax File, 1/4" x 22" x 22", shredded paper and glue, 2007
Rejection Letters , 1" x 20" x 20", cut and shredded rejection letters, glue, 2008

© 2004-2011 Nava Lubelski, All Rights Reserved.

 Thank you guys for taking the time to look at this gifted artist's creations! We hope it inspires you to make something or do something no one else has before! You never know what you're capable of doing until you do it!

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