Showing posts with label efile taxes online. Show all posts
Showing posts with label efile taxes online. Show all posts

Monday, January 14, 2013

New Tax Laws That Improve Estate Options


By Ronald Lipman | January 11, 2013

Source: http://www.chron.com/business/article/New-tax-laws-improve-estate-options-4188168.php 

The information in this column is not intended as legal advice but to provide a general understanding of the law. Readers with legal problems, including those whose questions are addressed here, should consult attorneys for advice on their particular circumstances.

Q: Can you provide an update on the estate tax now that the laws have changed? My wife and I have wills with trusts in them to save taxes. Do we need to change anything?

A: The most important change, and the one that received most of the press, was the increase in the estate tax exemption to $5.25 million per person. This increase is not a new exemption, but rather an extension of the exemption that had been set to expire at year-end. In fact, all of the estate tax laws that were in effect in 2012 were essentially unchanged by the New Year's deal in Washington, except that the estate tax rate rose to 40 percent from 35 percent.

The $5.25 million exemption is permanent, and it is indexed for inflation, meaning it will increase each year. In addition, the lifetime exemption for both the gift and generation skipping transfer tax also increased to $5.25 million per person. Transfers that exceed this limit will be taxed at the same 40 percent rate that applies to the estate tax. This exemption also is indexed for inflation.

The tax act further made portability a permanent part of the estate tax system. Portability is a way for married taxpayers to save taxes. Until 2010, if a person with a taxable estate died without proper estate planning, and left the estate outright to a surviving spouse, the survivor typically lost the ability to shelter property from estate taxes upon his or her death.

The inheritance would not have generated any estate taxes because an unlimited marital deduction exempts all property left to a surviving spouse.

Absent a bypass trust that likely would have been part of better estate planning, however, the surviving spouse would have all the property but only his or her own exemption. This would increase the estate tax exposure of that person's heirs.

Now when a spouse leaves property directly to a surviving spouse, the unused portion of the deceased spouse's $5.25 million exemption can be added to the survivor's exemption, thereby potentially doubling the amount that can be given away during lifetime or left tax-free at death.

Even with portability, creating a bypass trust is still a better option for many married couples because a trust is protected from creditors and can appreciate in value over time, whereas the unused exemption is a fixed amount.

For 2013, the gift tax annual exclusion, which is the amount that can be given away each year without using up any part of the lifetime exemption, is $14,000, up from $13,000 last year. The annual exclusion is indexed for inflation.

Such large exemptions make more planning options available to people who want to make gifts while they are alive, whether in trust or outright. You should meet with your estate planning attorney to see if the new laws would require a change to your current plan.

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Thursday, May 24, 2012

Bad Deductions You Shouldn't File Electronically or Ever!

All of my articles that have been about deductions and credits have been beneficial ones that will save you money and give you a great return. This time I have decided to list some deductions people have filed on their taxes that they shouldn't have. Included are reports of arson, drug trafficking, and a few others that should definitely show you that the Internal Revenue Service is serious about what you put down on your taxes, and they are looking.
Source for image
Hiring a person to burn your failing business down for the insurance money happens more often than you might think. To make it worse the greedy sneak not only collected his insurance money, but he pulled a stunt that most people wouldn't dream of trying. The man tried to deduct the money he hired the arsonist with on his taxes! This not only made him an accessory and a felon, but if he was audited he couldn't even present the hired hand's employment form. Do not try this unless you want to get caught.
Making sure your family has the best air quality possible is a noble effort, however futile it is with all the pollution we fill our atmosphere with every day. A man took this ideal and ran with it, so much so that he listed a deduction as “pure bubble.” The IRS agent who audited and inquired further about the man's efforts to make his home have the purest air possible was laughing so hard at this guy trying to deduct his purified air he waived all penalties, but not enough to put his deduction though, as it was still denied.
Being a drug lord is hard, but you're probably looking into the wrong line of work if you think the tax system of our Government is going to look highly on you claiming your drugs on your taxes. One entrepreneur listed a crop of marijuana as a deductible expense, and his honesty was not the best policy in this situation. His tax dollars were safe, but his cash crop and his property went “up in smoke” for lack of a better term.
It's common knowledge that the wedding industry is enormous, and extravagant. Being a 60 billion dollar industry means it's also very expensive. One cheap father had the brilliant idea to invite a few of his business clients to the wedding, which he attempted to use as leverage to write off his daughter's entire wedding as an entertainment expense for his business! This, to no one's surprise, was flagged by the IRS and he was forced to not only foot the bill for the wedding, but pay some hefty fines as well. Sometimes if you know they will say no, don't try it.
Your animals are special to you. They are even considered family by most. The Internal Revenue Service, however, does not consider your animals dependents. To some who have no children and only animals it may seem unjust, but having them under your care doesn't save you more on your taxes. It may suck you can't deduct that overpriced toy you bought them that they don't even give a second look to, but they're still your friends forever.
You may think a professional doing a procedure on your body for modification purposes may sound like something you can claim on your taxes, tattoos are an elective procedure. This prohibits you from using them as a deduction, and the IRS will not look too kindly on your personal forms of self expression. Yet another reason to think twice before you lay down under the knife or the needle.
In order to prevent these kinds of deductions going on your record and your tax filings, let Online Tax Pros make sure you qualify for everything you can claim, and step in to tell you what you can't claim. We are ready to get the most out of your return so your taxes don't have to be a scary situation like these peoples'. E file with us this tax season!


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Wednesday, May 16, 2012

The Difference Between Credits and Deductions

image source: http://www.mcnuttservicegroup.com/tax_credits.html
Many people may have never learned the difference between tax credits and tax deductions. The actual definition of a tax credit is something that reduces your actual tax amount that you have to pay. This is different from a deduction because a deduction only reduces your taxable income. This difference makes tax credits much more beneficial, and dollar for dollar the credit will be a better deal because it is directly subtracted from the tax owed. Here are a few tax credits that you may not know you qualify for.

The amount you paid for child care can be counted as a tax credit. The credit starts at thirty-five percent if your adjusted gross income is less than $15,000 and reduces to twenty percent if your adjusted gross income is more than $43,000. This goes to a maximum of $3,000 for one child and $6,000 for two or more children. The Internal Revenue Service requires you treat most home child care workers as employees of the household(one of the few exemptions to this rule are part-time babysitters under the age of 18). This credit is one of the most complicated credits to figure out, but nothing that is worthwhile is easy.

In order for students to recover costs associated with getting an education, there are two different credits that they can take advantage of: The Lifetime Learning Credit and the American Opportunity Credit. Only one may be used a year, so choose carefully. First, the Lifetime Learning Credit allows up to $2,000 for educational expenses enrolled in eligible educational institutions. A pursuit in a degree is not required to qualify for this credit. The American Opportunity Credit is a maximum credit of up to $2,500 per student, and is available for four years of eduction to those pursuing a degree. Anyone whose adjusted gross income is $80,000 or less or $160,000 or less for married couples filing jointly is not qualified for this credit.

These credits are great ways to reduce your tax that is due, and you definitely get the most bang for your buck if you take the time to find the right ways to save. Keep doing your homework and you'll continue to save, you can only see if you're qualified if you ask, so try this tax season to qualify for all the credits you can, because no one else will do it for you (for free at least!) and happy savings, Everyone!
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Monday, March 26, 2012

What do I need before I can e-file?

I hope this isn't your stack of papers labelled, "For Taxes"

To begin this article, first make sure you are up to date on tax law changes for 2011 income taxes. You can check out these changes in detail at http://www.irs.gov/newsroom/article/0,,id=254023,00.html on The I.R.S. Website.

With tax time looming ever closer, you now have about 3 weeks to e file your income taxes. Just because the deadline is coming quickly doesn't mean that you should rush to turn in your return so hastily. Taking the time to make sure you have all your documents and records handy and organized will save you from scrambling and forgetting the more obvious stuff that most would overlook.

Here's a quick list of the MOST important things you should bring. I use this small list as a, “If your house were on fire and you can only grab 5 important documents for your tax preparation” guideline:
  1. Last year's return. If you used income tax preparation software, you should import last years electronically filed tax return.
  2. Information from your bank account
  3. Yours and your dependents' social security numbers
  4. Receipts in regards to your business
  5. Charitable deductions

Now on to the real nitty gritty. You may have more things than this but as a good rule of thumb, “If it's a receipt and it's related to your business or any other expense, bring it.”

Income information and forms:
  • Jobs: W-2 tax forms
  • Past returns
  • 1099 forms
  • Any alimony you have received
  • Business income
  • Any home business expenses
  • Social Security benefits(if any)
  • Any income from sales
  • Any income from anything else(keep those receipts!)

Income Adjustments:
  • Interest from student loans
  • Self-employed payments for health insurance
  • Alimony you have paid
  • Moving expenses you may have incurred

Other Information:
  • Any amount of your current year taxes you have paid during the year
  • Information for your direct depositing(Account and Routing numbers)

Most income tax preparation software will run error and audit checks on your return when you've completed your return. In order for these to work though,
MAKE SURE YOUR INFO AND NUMBERS ARE CORRECT!
The software can only check errors correctly if your input is correct, so double check what you're filling in before making the error checks.
Making sure you have these documents handy for when you efile your taxes will make you that much more prepared for when you decide to stop procrastinating and get those taxes filed! I mean come on, the longer you take to e file, the longer you have to wait for your refund! Unless you owe taxes, then...sorry and good luck, Sir or Madam!

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Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Online Tax Filing Tips: Credits and Deductions Everyone Should Use

Everyone has to pay taxes. It's part of our daily lives in almost everything we purchase. Taxes are taken out in nearly every profession, whether you pay them with each paycheck or at the time of income tax filing. Since everyone has to pay these taxes, then everyone should get a break on them, right? Below are several credits and deductions you can apply for when you file(or e file) your taxes that cater to everyday individuals who have to pay taxes. If you're wondering what is the difference between credits and deductions, here's a little blurb from a previous article I wrote to explain. We hope you find some of this info useful, and hope it helps you get a great refund! 

Click here for source


Difference Between Credits and Deductions:

Many people may have never learned the difference between tax credits and tax deductions. The actual definition of a tax credit is something that reduces your actual tax amount that you have to pay when you file your taxes. This is different from a deduction because a deduction only reduces your taxable income. This difference makes tax credits much more beneficial, and dollar for dollar the credit will be a better deal because it is directly subtracted from the tax owed. Here are a few tax credits that you may not know you qualify for.

The amount you paid for child care can be counted as a tax credit. The credit starts at thirty-five percent if your adjusted gross income is less than $15,000 and reduces to twenty percent if your adjusted gross income is more than $43,000. This goes to a maximum of $3,000 for one child and $6,000 for two or more children. The Internal Revenue Service requires you treat most home child care workers as employees of the household(one of the few exemptions to this rule are part-time babysitters under the age of 18).This credit is one of the most complicated credits to figure out, but nothing that is worthwhile is easy.

Dependents:

First, you need to know that your family is referred to as “dependents.” This may be less true in the case of a spouse, as they may even be making more money than you. If you have young children, you know that the term “dependent” is pretty accurate. To subtract from your Adjusted Gross Income, the IRS requires you to have such dependents and this is when family can help you save money on your tax returns.

Last year a new exemption allows you to benefit from a $3,650 break on your AGI for each qualifying child. They don't have to be biological, and can be a foster or step-sibling, and even grandchildren. These individuals must be 19 or under and live in your residence at least half the year. These children must not provide more than half of their own support or they do not qualify. More good news is that both you and your spouse may reap an additional $3,650 just for being parents as a personal exemption!

Children are not the only family members you can claim, but there are more strict requirements for claiming parents, grandparents or other relatives. These relatives are still worth $3,650 but have to qualify for these major stipulations. First, the person must be a full-time member of your household. Next, they must be a legal citizen of the United States and they cannot file a joint return with anyone. You must also provide the majority of their support and they must make less than $3,650 for their AGI.

You might be asking yourself, so who actually does qualify as a relative? They have to have first been a member of your household for the whole year you're claiming them, blood relative or not. If they didn't live with you the whole year, they have to be a bit closer to you. The relatives considered by blood and marriage are children, grandchildren(including steps), siblings(half and step), parents, grands and other direct ancestors. Stepparents, uncles, aunts, nieces, nephews, and immediate in-laws. Using these guidelines, your family can help you save in this troubled economy. Using a qualified tax professional like Online Tax Pros can help you file online and save the most on your refund! We look forward to seeing you save.

Here are a few other credits for your dependents, taken from http://onlinetaxprofessionals.blogspot.com/2012/01/online-tax-article-credits-and.html:

Education Tax Credits: These two credits can't be claimed by any one person, but they are good for if you have a custody agreement to give one to each parent. The first is the Lifetime Learning Credit. This credit gives you a maximum of $2,000 for tuition fees and up to $4,000 for students in disaster areas of the Midwest. You can claim this credit every year your child is enrolled in undergraduate and graduate college programs.

Next, the Hope Credit only applies to the first two years of college or technical education courses. This credit is valued at $1,800 per student for parents or college-enrolled dependents, and the value increases to $3,600 if you're in the Midwestern disaster areas as with the Lifetime Learning Credit.

Adoption Credit: You may be able to take a tax credit for qualifying expenses paid to adopt an eligible child. If you claim the adoption credit, you must file a paper tax return with required adoption-related documents.

Child Tax Credit:
This $1,000 tax credit is available for each child in the cases of most single parents. However, if the household income is more than $75,000 and the filing status is single, qualifying widow(er) or head of household, the credit decreases in value. Only the parents with primary custody get to take advantage of this credit, but if there is a shared-custody agreement, it's up to the parents' discretion how they can either alternate or let one parent have it each year.

Child Care Credit: It's hard to watch your kids all the time. The Internal Revenue Service knows this, and has put forth a credit that allows you some help and not make every day “take your child to work day.” You have to include the name and tax identification number for the child care provider at the time of filing. This credit allows you to claim $3,000 on one child, and up to $6,000 for two or more children. This is completed on IRS form 2441 and attached to your 1040 tax return.

Earned Income Tax Credit:
This credit was created to help families in lower income brackets. You're almost guaranteed a refund if your taxes owed are less than the Earned Income Tax Credit.
According to irs.gov, the values for 2012 are as follows:
Earned Income and adjusted gross income (AGI) must each be less than:
    $45,060 ($50,270 married filing jointly) with three or more qualifying children
    $41,952 ($47,162 married filing jointly) with two qualifying children
    $36,920 ($42,130 married filing jointly) with one qualifying child
    $13,980 ($19,190 married filing jointly) with no qualifying children
Tax Year 2012 maximum credit:
    $5,891 with three or more qualifying children
    $5,236 with two qualifying children
    $3,169 with one qualifying child
    $475 with no qualifying children
Investment income must be $3,200 or less for the year.

Claiming College Students as Dependents:
When your kids go off to college, you can still continue claiming your child as a dependent as long as they are enrolled full-time. Keep in mind though that if your children are working as well as going to a University, they can't claim an exemption on themselves if you have already claimed them with this deduction.

Hopefully these credits and deductions will give you a big refund. In these hectic times you can always e-file with Online Tax Pros and get your taxes taken care of from home. This will allow you to get your refund directly deposited in your bank account for your disposal. You definitely deserve it for all the hard work you do to take care of your children.

Kay Bell listed these two excellent tips from her article 12 tempting tax tips for 2012:

Tip 2: Claim your American Opportunity: The American Opportunity Tax Credit was a centerpiece of the 2009 stimulus bill. The new education tax break expanded the existing Hope Credit, providing a credit of up to $2,500 of the cost of qualified tuition and related expenses, and up to $1,000 of the credit could come back to the taxpayer as a refund.
The American Opportunity Credit was originally supposed to end in 2010, but it was extended through 2012. However, this could be the credit's last year. Congress is looking for ways to cut the federal deficit, and allowing tax breaks to expire is an easy way to save some dollars. If you have eligible education expenses, be sure to claim the American Opportunity Credit while you can.

Tip 10: Give gifts:Giving to charity can help reduce an annual tax bill, but if you have a large estate, gifts also are important estate tax tools. Thanks to the resurrection of the estate tax in 2011, the unified gift tax also returned. This means you can give away $5 million during your lifetime without having to pay the 35 percent gift tax.
There's also an annual amount to note in giving away your estate's assets while you're still around to get thanks. In 2012, you can give up to $13,000 each to as many individuals as you wish without any tax costs to you or your gift recipients.

Kay has two very informative, well-known and respected tax blogs that you should subscribe to! Here are links to her Bankrate Blog and Don't Mess With Taxes.

Please give her some tax nerd love! She's a very inspirational blogger and helped me share lots of great info on my Twitter page when I started out. Leave a comment on her blogs or my own if she's helped you with your taxes. She's definitely a pro and worth reading!


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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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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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Monday, January 2, 2012

Online Taxes: Why is E-file so Important to the IRS?


Why is E-file so important to the IRS? Returns filed electronically are more accurate and enable faster refunds, thus improving service for taxpayers.:

Facts:
a) About half of all taxpayers use paid tax preparers to file their tax returns.

b) Approximately 97% of all returns can now be e-filed.

c) Electronic returns go through an “error check” process. A valuable result of this increased precision is fewer IRS notices resulting from input errors.

d) The IRS acknowledges e-filed returns and extensions with an electronic receipt.

Based on their goal and the facts, IRS has partnered with a list of companies to offer the E-file service for free. There is a growing number of companies that are offering e-file services for free, however, each have certain criteria that has to be met. For example, if the adjusted gross income (AGI) is lower than $57,000, then your e-file is free but you will incur a charge if it is higher. Or some services make the resident state or age part of the criteria as to whether the free file is allowed. These are a few of the differences in the criteria used by the various free-file service providers.

Online Tax Pros is a participant in such a program and E-file is offered as a free service for federal income tax returns if the client follows the link directly from the IRS free e-file page. However an additional fee is charged for state preparation.

Online Tax Pros has created a system that will ensure that your tax return is filed on time and as accurate as possible and with the best security that is available to protect your personal information.