I read a considerable amount on a routine basis. It might be fairer to say that I skim, changing it to a read if I think that something might apply here at Galactic Command.
I came across something recently that made me scoff
out loud.
Somebody somewhere was talking about never receiving an
IRS CP2000 notice again.
Yeah, right.
What is a CP2000?
You know it as the computer match. The IRS cross-checks
your numbers against their numbers. If there is a difference – and the difference
is more than the cost of a stamp – their computers will generate a CP2000
notice.
How does the IRS get its numbers?
Easy. Think of all the tax reporting forms that you have received over the years, such as:
W-2 (your job)
1099-INT (interest from a bank)
1099-DIV (dividends from a mutual fund)
1099-SA (distribution from an HSA)
1099-B (proceeds from selling stock)
It is near endless, and every year or so Congress and/or
the IRS requires additional reporting on something. There is already a new one
for 2022: the minimum threshold for payment card reporting has been reduced
from $20,000 to $600. Think Venmo or Pay Pal and you are there.
If the IRS has information you didn’t report: bam! Receive
a CP2000.
It happens all the time. You closed a bank account but
forgot about the part of the year that it did exist. You traded on Robinhood for a couple of weeks,
lost money and tried to forget about it. You reimbursed yourself medical expenses
from your HSA.
The common denominator: you forgot to tell your tax preparer.
We get a ton of these.
Then your tax preparer might have caused it.
Maybe you did a 60-day roll on an IRA. Your preparer needs
to code the distribution a certain way. Flub it and get a CP2000.
These you try to never repeat, as you are just making
work for yourself.
Is this thing an audit?
Technically no, but you might still wind-up owing
money.
The notice is proposing to make changes to your
return. It is giving you a chance to respond. It is not a bill, at least not
yet, but ignore the notice and it will become a bill.
The thing about these notices is that no one at the
IRS reviews them before they go out. Yours are the first set of eyes to look
upon them, and your preparer the second when you send the notice to him or her.
You there have one of the biggest frustrations many practitioners have: the IRS
sends these things out like candy; many are wrong and would be detected if the
IRS even bothered. Attach an explanation to your return in the hope of
cutting-off a notice? Puhleeze.
You really need to respond to a CP2000. I have lost
track of how many clients over the years have blown these notices off, coming
to see me years later because some mysterious tax debt has been siphoning their
tax refunds. Combine this with the statute of limitations – remember, three
years to file or amend – and you can be digging a hole for yourself.
If you agree with the notice, then responding is easy:
check the box that says you agree. The IRS will happily send you a bill. Heck,
don’t even bother to reply. They will send you the same bill.
If you disagree, then it can be more complicated.
If the matter is relatively easy – say an HSA distribution
– I might attach the required tax form to my written response, explaining that the
form was overlooked when filing.
If the matter is more complicated – say different types
of mismatches – then I might change my answer. My experience – especially in recent
years – is that the IRS is doing a substandard job with correspondence
requiring one to think. They have repetitively forced me into Appeals and
unnecessary procedural work. My response
to more complicated CP2000 notices? I am increasingly filing amended returns. Mind
you, the IRS DOES NOT want me to do this. Neither do I, truthfully, but the IRS
must first give me reason to trust its work. I am not there right now.
You can fax your response, fortunately.
You might try to call the IRS, but I suspect that will
turn out poorly. Shame, as that would be the easiest way to request additional
time to reply to the CP2000.
Whatever you do, you have 30 days. The days start
counting beginning with the date of the letter, so mail delays can cost you.
Is the IRS gunning for you?
Remember: no one at the IRS has even looked at the notice
you received.
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