Posted tagged ‘Social Security number’

Don’t be Scammed by Tax Season Cyber Criminals

February 19, 2012

Now that tax season is upon us, so are the e-mail scammers pretending to be the IRS. Most of these scams fraudulently use the IRS name, logo, and/or website header as a lure to make the communication appear more authentic and enticing. They lead you to believe you had a refund of some sort coming and request personal information. The goal of these scams, known as phishing, is to trick you into revealing your personal and financial information. The scammers can then use your information¾like your Social Security number, bank account, or credit card numbers to commit identity theft or steal your money.

DON’T BE A VICTIM – THE IRS DOES NOT INITIATE E-MAIL CORRESPONDENCE

The Internal Revenue Service receives thousands of reports each year from taxpayers who receive suspicious e-mails, phone calls, faxes, or notices claiming to be from the IRS. If you find something suspicious, you should immediately call this office before responding. In fact, it is a good policy to check with this office before responding to any inquiry from the IRS or state or local tax agencies.

Here are some tips you should know about phishing scams.

1. The IRS never asks for detailed personal and financial information like PIN numbers, passwords, or similar secret access information for credit card, bank, or other financial accounts.

2. The IRS does not initiate contact with taxpayers by e-mail to request personal or financial information. If you receive an e-mail from someone claiming to be a representative of the IRS or directing you to an IRS site:

Do not reply to the message.

Do not open any attachments. Attachments may contain malicious code that will infect your computer.

Do not click on any links. If you clicked on links in a suspicious e-mail or phishing website and entered confidential information, you may have compromised your financial information. If you entered your credit card number, contact the credit card company for guidance. If you entered your banking information, contact the bank for the appropriate steps to take. The IRS website provides additional resources that can help. Visit the IRS website and enter the search term “identity theft” for additional information.

3. The address of the official IRS website is http://www.irs.gov. Do not be confused or misled by sites claiming to be the IRS but ending in .com, .net, .org or other designations instead of .gov. If you discover a website that claims to be the IRS but you suspect it is bogus, do not provide any personal information on the suspicious site.

4. If you receive a phone call, fax, or letter in the mail from an individual claiming to be from the IRS but you suspect he or she is not an IRS employee, contact the IRS at 1-800-829-1040 to determine if the IRS has a legitimate need to contact you. Report any bogus correspondence. You can forward a suspicious e-mail to phishing@irs.gov.

If you have any questions or doubts related to a letter, phone call, or e-mail from the IRS or other taxing authorities, please call this office before responding or providing any financial or personal information. Better safe than sorry!

 

It’s Tax Time! Are You Ready?

January 14, 2012

If you’re like most taxpayers, you find yourself with an ominous stack of “homework” around TAX TIME! Unfortunately, the job of pulling together the records for your tax appointment is never easy, but the effort usually pays off when it comes to the extra tax money you save! When you arrive at your appointment fully prepared, you’ll have more time to:

• Consider every possible legal deduction;

Tax Preparation

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• Better evaluate your options for reporting income and deductions to choose those best suited to your situation;

• Explore current law changes that affect your tax status;

• Talk about possible law changes and discuss tax planning alternatives that could reduce your future tax liability.

Choosing Your Best Alternatives

The tax law allows a variety of methods for handling income and deductions on your return. Choices made at the time you prepare your return often affect not only the current year, but later year returns as well. When you’re fully prepared for your appointment, you will have more time to explore all avenues available for lowering your taxes.

For example, the law allows choices in transactions such as:

Sales of property

If you’re receiving payments on a sales contract over a period of years, you are sometimes able to choose between reporting the whole gain in the year you sell or over a period of time, as you receive payments from the buyer.

Depreciation

You’re able to deduct the cost of your investment in certain business property using different methods. You can either depreciate the cost over a number of years, or in certain cases, you can deduct them all in one year.

Higher Education Expenses

If you are paying college expenses for yourself, your spouse, or your dependent(s), you may qualify for a tax benefit of either an above-the-line tax deduction or a tax credit.

Where to Begin?

Ideally, preparation for your tax appointment should begin in January of the tax year with which you’re working. Right after the New Year, set up a safe storage location—a file drawer, a cupboard, a safe, etc. As you receive pertinent records, file them right away, before they’re forgotten or lost. By making the practice a habit, you’ll find your job a lot easier when your actual appointment date rolls around.

Other general suggestions to consider for your appointment preparation include…

• Segregate your records according to income and expense categories. For instance, file medical expense receipts in an envelope or folder, interest payments in another, charitable donations in a third, etc. If you receive an organizer or questionnaire to complete before your appointment, make certain you fill out every section that applies to you. (Important: Read all explanations and follow instructions carefully to be sure you don’t miss important data. Organizers are designed to remind you of transactions you may miss otherwise.)

• Keep your annual income statements (e.g., W-2s from employers, 1099s from banks, stockbrokers, etc., and K-1s from partnerships, etc.) separate from your other documents. Be sure to take these documents to your appointment, including the instructions for K-1s!

• Write down questions you may have so you don’t forget to ask them at the appointment. Review last year’s return. Compare your income on that return to the income for the current year. For instance, a dividend from ABC stock on your prior-year return may remind you that you sold ABC this year and need to report the sale.

• Make certain that you have social security numbers for all your dependents. The IRS checks these carefully and can deny deductions for returns filed without them.

• Compare deductions from last year with your records for this year. Did you forget anything?

• Collect any other documents and financial papers that you’re puzzled about. Prepare to bring these to your appointment so you can ask about them.

Accuracy Even for Basic Details

To ensure the greatest accuracy possible in all details on your return, make sure you review personal data. Check name(s), address, social security number(s), and occupation(s) on last year’s return. Note any changes for this year. Although your telephone number isn’t required on your return, current home and work numbers are always helpful should questions occur during return preparation.

Marital Status Change

If your marital status changed during the year, if you lived apart from your spouse, or if your spouse died during the year, list dates and details. Bring copies of prenuptial, legal separation, divorce, or property settlement agreements, if any, to your appointment.

Dependents

If you have qualifying dependents, you will need to provide the following for each:

• First and last name

• Social security number

• Birth date

• Number of months living in your home

• Their income amount (both taxable and nontaxable)

If you have dependent children over age 18, note how long they were full-time students during the year. To qualify as your dependent, an individual who is not a qualifying child must pass several strict dependency tests. If you think a person qualifies as your dependent (but you aren’t sure), tally the amounts you provided toward his/her support vs. the amounts he/she provided. This will simplify making a final decision about whether you really qualify for the dependency deduction.

Some Transactions Deserve Special Treatment

Certain transactions require special treatment on your tax return. It’s a good idea to invest a little extra preparation effort when you have had the following transactions:

Sales of Stock or Other Property: All sales of stocks, bonds, securities, real estate, and any other type of property need to be reported on your return, even if you had no profit or loss. List each sale and have the purchase and sale documents available for each transaction. New for 2011, when a broker knows the purchase price of the stock that was sold during the year, the brokerage firm is required to show that amount on the broker transaction report, Form 1099-B.

Purchase date, sale date, cost, and selling price must all be noted on your return. Make sure this information is contained on the documents you bring to your appointment.

Gifted or Inherited Property: If you sell property that was given to you, you need to determine when and for how much the original owner purchased it and its value when you received it. If you sell property you inherited, you need to know the date of the decedent’s death and the property’s value at that time. You may be able to find this information on estate tax returns or in probate documents. If the property was inherited from someone who died in 2010, special complicated rules may apply in determining your inherited basis. Please call for further details.

Reinvested Dividends: You may have sold stock or a mutual fund in which you participated in a dividend reinvestment program. If so, you will need to have records of each stock purchase made with the reinvested dividends. If you sold mutual fund shares, you may have received a statement from the fund that shows your average cost basis for the shares sold and any “wash sale” adjustments. Be sure to bring this statement to your appointment along with the purchase and reinvestment records you have.

Sale of Home: The tax law provides special breaks for home sale gains, and you may be able to exclude all (or a part) of a gain on a home if you meet certain ownership, occupancy, and holding period requirements. If you file a joint return with your spouse and your gain from the sale of the home exceeds $500,000 ($250,000 for other individuals), record the amounts you spent on improvements to the property. Remember too, possible exclusion of gain applies only to a primary residence, and the amount of improvements made to other homes is required regardless of the gain amount. Be sure to bring a copy of the sale documents (usually the closing escrow statement) with you to the appointment.

Home Energy-Related Expenditures: If you made home modifications to conserve energy (such as special windows, roofing, doors, etc.) or installed solar, geothermal, or wind power generating systems, please bring the details of those purchases and the manufacturer’s credit qualification certification to your appointment. You may qualify for a substantial energy-related tax credit.

Car Expenses: Where you have used one or more automobiles for business, list the expenses of each separately. To claim auto-related business expenses, the government requires that you provide your total mileage, business miles, and commuting miles for each car on your return, so be prepared to have that information available. If you were reimbursed for mileage through an employer, know the reimbursement amount and whether the reimbursement is included in your W-2.

Charitable Donations: Cash contributions (regardless of amount) must be substantiated with a bank record or written communication from the charity showing the name of the charitable organization, date, and amount of the contribution. Cash donations put into a “Christmas kettle,” church collection plate, etc., are not deductible unless verified by receipt from the charitable organization.

For clothing and household contributions, the items donated must generally be in good or better condition, and items such as undergarments and socks are not deductible. A record of each item contributed must be kept, indicating the name and address of the charity, date and location of the contribution, and a reasonable description of the property. Contributions valued less than $250 and dropped off at an unattended location do not require a receipt. For contributions of $500 or more, the record must also include when and how the property was acquired and your cost basis in the property. For contributions valued at $5,000 or more and other types of contributions, please call this office for additional requirements.

Foreclosure or Cancellation of Debt: If you lost your home to a foreclosure, short sale, or voluntary reconveyance, you will have to report both the sale of the home and cancellation of debt (COD) income. However, you may be able to exclude the gain and the COD income under provisions of the tax code. The lender may issue either a Form 1099-A or 1099-C or both. These forms should be retained as they include valuable information needed to report the transaction and exclude debt relief income. It may also be appropriate to contact this office in advance to determine exactly what additional information must be assembled in order to complete your return.

If you had credit card debt discharged, the amount discharged is taxable income and you will receive a 1009-C. If, at the time the debt was forgiven, you were insolvent (where your liabilities were more than your assets), you will be able to exclude the debt relief income to the extent your liabilities exceeded your assets. Please call the office in advance of your appointment to determine what information will be needed.

2012 Standard Mileage Rates Announced

The Internal Revenue Service has issued the 2012 optional standard mileage rates used to calculate the deductible costs of operating an automobile for business, charitable, medical, or moving purposes.

Beginning on January 1, 2012, the standard mileage rates for the use of a car (also vans, pickups, or panel trucks) will be:

• 55.5 cents per mile for business miles driven (includes a 23 cents per mile allocation for depreciation);

• 23 cents per mile driven for medical or moving purposes; and

• 14 cents per mile driven in service of charitable organizations.

The new rate for business miles is the same as the rate for the second half of 2011, while the rate for medical and moving miles is down a half-cent from the July through December 2011 rate.

The standard mileage rates for business, medical, and moving uses are based on an annual study of the fixed and variable costs of operating an automobile that is conducted by an independent contractor for the IRS.

A taxpayer may not use the business standard mileage rate for a vehicle after using any depreciation method under the Modified Accelerated Cost Recovery System (MACRS) or after claiming a Section 179 deduction for that vehicle. In addition, the business standard mileage rate cannot be used for more than four vehicles used simultaneously (i.e., a fleet).

Taxpayers always have the option of calculating the actual costs of using their vehicle rather than using the standard mileage rates.

For Other Important Tax Dates Read Our List of Dates You Should Know

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