Cincyblogs.com
Showing posts with label 2013. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2013. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 7, 2014

How Early Can You File Your 2013 Tax Return?



How soon can you file your 2013 tax returns?

  • If we are talking about your individual income tax return, you have to wait the entire month of January. The IRS will not open its electronic filing system until Friday, January 31.
  • If we are talking about a business return (Form 1120, 1120S, 1065), you can file more than two weeks earlier – on Monday, January 13.


Wednesday, January 30, 2013

You Can Start Filing Tax Returns Today



Today the IRS finally starts accepting 2012 individual tax return filings.  It is January 30, 2013.

Why so late? You recall that Congress passed, and the President signed, a tax bill on January 1, 2013. This tax bill was retroactive to 2012. While the IRS tried to anticipate what would be in the bill, to do so exactly is nearly impossible. The IRS in turn separated the tax changes into two categories: those affecting the most people and the balance of the changes. It has programmed those changes with the widest effect, and this first category of taxpayers can begin filing today.

So if you claim state sales tax (because your state does not have an income tax), claim an education deduction or claim schoolteacher expenses, you can begin filing today.

What if you claim depreciation, own and rent a duplex or have a kid in college and claim an education tax credit (rather than a deduction)? You are in the second group and have to wait until late February or March. Your tax preparer can prepare your tax return, but he/she cannot send it to the IRS until then.

Here is the list of tax changes and forms included in the second category, if you wish to labor through them:
  • Form 3800 General Business Credit
  • Form 4136 Credit for Federal Tax Paid on Fuels
  • Form 4562 Depreciation and Amortization (Including Information on Listed Property)
  • Form 5074 Allocation of Individual Income Tax to Guam or the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands
  • Form 5471 Information Return of U.S. Persons With Respect to Certain Foreign Corporations
  • Form 5695 Residential Energy Credits
  • Form 5735 American Samoa Economic Development Credit 
  • Form 5884 Work Opportunity Credit
  • Form 6478 Credit for Alcohol Used as Fuel
  • Form 6765 Credit for Increasing Research Activities
  • Form 8396 Mortgage Interest Credit
  • Form 8582 Passive Activity Loss Limitations
  • Form 8820 Orphan Drug Credit
  • Form 8834 Qualified Plug-in Electric and Electric Vehicle Credit
  • Form 8839 Qualified Adoption Expenses
  • Form 8844 Empowerment Zone and Renewal Community Employment Credit
  • Form 8845 Indian Employment Credit
  • Form 8859 District of Columbia First-Time Homebuyer Credit
  • Form 8864 Biodiesel and Renewable Diesel Fuels Credit
  • Form 8874 New Markets Credits
  • Form 8900 Qualified Railroad Track Maintenance Credit
  • Form 8903 Domestic Production Activities Deduction
  • Form 8908 Energy Efficient Home Credit
  • Form 8909 Energy Efficient Appliance Credit
  • Form 8910 Alternative Motor Vehicle Credit
  • Form 8911 Alternative Fuel Vehicle Refueling Property Credit
  • Form 8912 Credit to Holders of Tax Credit Bonds
  • Form 8923 Mine Rescue Team Training Credit
  • Form 8932 Credit for Employer Differential Wage Payments
  • Form 8936 Qualified Plug-in Electric Drive Motor Vehicle Credit

There is some rhyme or reason to what the IRS is doing. Category two changes require more extensive programming. In addition, those tax attributes tend to appear on more complicated returns. These returns – as a rule of thumb – are prepared later in the filing season or are extended.

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Change in Office-In-Home Rules (Starting Next Year)



The IRS surprised me yesterday.

Do you ever work from home? Let me phrase it differently: do you have an office-in-home, as the IRS defines the term?

I have an office at home and I work from home occasionally (I try to keep my workload at the office). I do not however have an office-in-home for tax purposes. Why? My office would have to meet one of three criteria to rise to a tax deduction:
 
(1)   My office–in-home is the principal place of my trade or business

·        I will not meet this test as I have an office in Cincinnati.

(2)   A place where I meet with clients, patients or customers in the normal course of my business

·        Granted, I do a lot of my work on a computer or over a cell phone, but I primarily meet with clients at my office in Cincinnati.

(3)   I work from home for the convenience of my employer

·        The IRS has interpreted this test to mean that the employer does not provide the employee with an office, so the employee – needing a place to work – has one in his/her home. If the employer does provide an office, one will have an almost insurmountable challenge in meeting this test. There may be some latitude in a hoteling situation, but you get the idea. I will likely fail this test.

Let’s say that you meet one of the three tests. Perhaps you freelance as a second job. That freelancing may qualify you for the office-in-home deduction. We meet for preparation of your taxes. We discuss expenses related to your office-in-home: the interest, taxes, utilities, insurance, security and etc. We calculate the depreciation. We then have to prorate between the personal use of your home and the business use. All the while, I am remembering that just putting this deduction on your return increases your odds of audit selection.

So the IRS came out yesterday and provided a simplified rule for an office-in-home. They will spot you $5 per square foot – up to 300 square feet - for your office. No depreciation. No proration of expenses. There is a downside: you will not be able to carryover excess office-in-home deductions under this method. There is an upside: you can elect annually which method you want to use. Obviously if you have more than 300 square feet, or your expenses run more than $5 per square foot, you will probably elect to use actual expenses.

  • NOTE: The simplified election starts with tax year 2013. We cannot use this election when preparing your 2012 individual tax return, unfortunately.

By the way, let me clarify what the IRS means by office-in-home. Any direct expenses you have – say a camera or film for a photographer or payroll for an employee – are not considered office-in-home expenses. An alternate phrasing is that these expenses would be avoidable if you did not engage in the business activity. The office-in-home expenses are indirect and unavoidable. That is, you would still have the mortgage, taxes, and insurance whether you freelanced or not.


Monday, January 7, 2013

New Business Tax Provisions


So what are the key business tax changes from the American Tax Relief Act of 2012? Here are the ones that caught my eye:

(1)  Bonus depreciation extended through 2013.

The bonus allows one to immediately deduct 50% of the cost of qualifying assets.  If you buy a backhoe, for example, you can immediately expense one-half the cost – and you get to depreciate the remaining half.  

(2)  S corporation built-in gain tax recognition period

OK, this one is somewhat obscure. Suffice to say that a C corporation that switches to an S corporation cannot sell its business until after several years have run. It used to be that the period was 10 years, then reduced to 7 and then to 5 years. The Act extends the 5 years for sales through 2013.

What this is about is allowing tax planners to restructure businesses, or parts of businesses, for sale, in the hope of spurring – or at least not deterring – business and job activity.
 
(3)  Expensing for certain film and television activities

If Peter Jackson had filmed The Hobbit in the United States, he would have been able to expense the first $15 million in production costs. Three-fourths of the movie production must take place in the U.S.

The Act extends this break through 2013.

(4)  Increase in Section 179 expensing

Section 179 allows taxpayers to immediately expense equipment used in a business. Normally this type of expenditure would be depreciated over time (barring the bonus depreciation discussed in (1) above). Section 179 however has a limit on the amount that can be expensed and the amount of assets you can purchase and still qualify for the break.

In 2011 the amount that could be expensed was $500,000 as long as assets purchased did not exceed $2 million. That dropped to $125,000 and $500,000 for 2012. The Act retroactively changes 2012 to and sets 2013 at $500,000 and $2 million.

(5)  Faster depreciation of leasehold improvements

The Act extends the 15-year depreciation period for qualifying leasehold, retail and restaurant leasehold improvements.  

For example, the new Mad Mike’s at the Newport Levee would have been depreciated over 39 years. Now it can be depreciated over 15 years.



(6)  Research tax credit 

The Act extends the research credit through 2013.           

This credit is available for improvements in the production process as well as to the product itself. Think Apple and Pfizer.

(7)  Work opportunity tax credit 

This is the tax credit for hiring individuals on welfare, being released from prison, collecting social security disability and so forth.  

The credit is not insignificant: 40% of the first $6,000 in wages. 

Who is this credit important to? Think Cracker Barrel and ....


(8)  Veterans credit 

Technically this is a subset of the work opportunity credit from (7) above. 

Unemployed and disabled veterans are a qualifying category for the tax credit, although the credit amount can vary from $2,400 to $9,600 depending on how long the veteran has been unemployed and whether disabled. 

(9)  The Nascar loophole 

If you were thinking of building a “motorsports entertainment complex,” the Act will allow you to take accelerated depreciation. You have to build it soon, though.

 This one could not be more obvious if Jeff Gordon ran over you.           

(10)   Cover over of the rum excise tax 

There is an excise tax of $13.50 on every gallon of rum sold in the United States. That would normally be a business-breaker, but the government refunds almost all the tax - $13.25 – to Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands in the form of economic aid. This is called the “cover over.” 

By far most of the money goes to Puerto Rico.

However... 

Do you know Diageo? They are based in London and produce  – among others - Captain Morgan rum. A few years ago, they moved their production of Captain Morgan from Puerto Rico to St. Croix, which is in the Virgin Islands. It seems that the USVI was able to provide a (1) 90% tax break, (2) a bigger kickback of the cover over, and (3) an exemption from property taxes.  
     
(11)    The “Subpart F active financing exception”

You ever wonder how a company like General Electric can pay no corporate income tax?           

Well, one way is that they lost a lot of money in previous years. This provision is another way.  

The U.S. (generally) considers interest earned by a U.S. corporation anywhere in the world to be a passive business activity. Makes sense, as accountants could easily move interest from country to country. By calling it passive, the goal is to make the interest taxable to the U.S. There are exceptions, of course, and this is one. 

This provision came into being in 1997 and with a significant amount of lobbying by General Electric. Why? Think G.E. Capital, and you are on the right track. It allows one to establish a captive finance company overseas, generate profits there but not pay taxes on the profits until the money is brought back to the U.S. 

This provision has been extended many times since 1997. It has now been extended again.