Tuesday, October 12, 2010

NEW PENALTIES FOR FAILURE TO FILE INFORMATION RETURNS

Tax law requires businesses to provide information returns, such a 1099s, to each payee that the business has paid $600 or more for the year. The law also includes penalties for failure to file the same information returns with the IRS.

To ensure compliance with these requirements, there are substantial penalties, and, as part of the recently passed Small Business Jobs Act of 2010, those penalties have been doubled. The penalties are generally based upon how late the returns are filed with the IRS or provided to the recipient of the income and are broken down into three tiers:

Tier 1 – Where the returns are filed or provided late but within 30 days of the prescribed due date.

Tier 2 – Where the returns are filed or provided more than 30 days after the prescribed due date and before August 1 of the calendar year in which the filing was required.

Tier 3 – Where the returns are filed or provided after August 1 of the calendar year in which the filing was required.

In addition, the maximum penalties for the year are based on business size determined by the business’s gross receipts. Businesses with gross receipts of $5 million or less are subject to the small business penalty maximums.

In addition, the minimum penalty for each intentional failure-to-file act increases from $100 to $250.

Rental Owners Included in the Reporting Requirement Effective in 2011 – Effective for 2011 filings due in 2012, the 2010 Small Business Act provides that solely for purposes of filing information returns, a person receiving rental income from real estate will be considered to be engaged in a trade or business of renting property. Thus, recipients of rental income from real estate generally are subject to the same information reporting requirements as taxpayers engaged in a trade or business. In particular, rental income recipients making payments of $600 or more to a service provider (such as a plumber, painter, or accountant) in the course of earning rental income are required to provide an information return (typically Form 1099-MISC) to IRS and to the service provider. The new law does provide the IRS with the ability to permit exceptions to the filing requirement for hardship cases and when minimal rental income is received, but neither “hardship” nor “minimal” are yet defined.

In order to comply with these requirements and avoid these substantial penalties requires collecting the payee’s name, SSN number and contact information before making payment. If you need assistance setting up a procedure for collecting the required information or filing your information returns for the year, please give us a call at 562-912-4334

Saturday, October 2, 2010

OCTOBER 2010 TAX BRIEFING

Informal Claim for Refund:
Informal claims for refund typically arise when the period of time for filing a claim on the appropriate form has expired, but to obtain a refund the taxpayer contends that a letter or some other communication sent or provided to the IRS meets the minimum requirements set forth in Reg. 301.6402-2 . Here, taxpayer and the IRS narrowed their dispute to whether taxpayer's 2004 tax year claim for refund was barred by limitations. In finding for the taxpayer, a New York District Court noted that taxpayer's January 2007 letter, although brief, "put the IRS on notice that he believed his disability pension had been improperly taxed as earned income since 1983. Although [taxpayer] did not use the word refund , the only reasonable construction of his letter is as a request for refunds for tax years since 1983 and an assurance that his pension would not be improperly taxed in the future." McMillan v. IRS , 106 AFTR 2d 2010-XXXX (DC E.D. N.Y.).

SIFL Rates for Employer-provided Aircraft:
Under Reg. 1.61-21(g) , employers can use a special computation rule to value employees' flights on an employer-piloted aircraft. The employer multiplies the Standard Industry Fare Level (SIFL) cents-per-mile rate in effect at the time of the flight by the appropriate aircraft multiple provided in Reg. 1.61-21(g)(7) , then adds the applicable terminal charge. For flights taken from 7/1/10–12/31/10, the SIFL rate will be $.2243 per mile for trips up to 500 miles, $.1710 per mile for trips from 501 to 1,500 miles, and $.1644 per mile for trips over 1,500 miles. The terminal charge will be $41.00. Rev. Rul. 2010-22, 2010-39 IRB .

Changes in 2010 Reporting of Uncertain Tax Positions:
The IRS announced significant changes to its original proposals for the reporting of Uncertain Tax Positions (UTPs) on 2010 corporate returns. The changes include: (1) a five-year phase-in of the reporting requirement based on a corporation's asset size, (2) no reporting of maximum tax adjustment, (3) no reporting of the rationale and nature of uncertainty in the description of the position, and (4) no reporting of administrative practice tax positions. Corporations with assets of $100 million (increased from $10 million for 2010) or more must file Schedule UTP starting with 2010 tax years. Instead of reporting the maximum tax adjustment for each UTP, the corporation will rank all reported positions based on U.S. federal tax reserve. The final schedule and instructions are available at www.irs.gov/businesses/corporations/article/0,,id=221533,00.html . IRS Ann. 2010-75, 2010-41 IRB .

IRS Policy of Restraint for Uncertain Tax Positions:
The IRS announced an expanded policy of restraint in seeking documents related to Uncertain Tax Positions (UTPs) coinciding with the release of newly modified Schedule UTP. Taxpayers may remove the following information from tax reconciliation workpapers provided to the IRS: (1) drafts, revisions or comments concerning the description of tax positions reported on Schedule UTP, (2) the amount of any reserves for tax positions reported on the schedule, and (3) computations determining the ranking of tax positions reported on the schedule. IRS Ann. 2010-76, 2010-41 IRB .

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