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TOPICS / TAX

IRS issues withholding tables for American Taxpayer Relief Act

On Friday, the IRS issued newly revised percentage withholding tables to implement the rates that will be in effect this year now that the American Taxpayer Relief Act, H.R. 8, has been enacted (Notice 1036, Rev. Jan. 2013, IR-2013-1). The tax rates in the tables are 10%, 15%, 25%, 28%,

To fight identity theft, IRS proposes rules for truncating identifying numbers

On Thursday, the IRS issued proposed regulations (REG-148873-09) that permit filers of information returns to use truncated taxpayer identification numbers (TTINs) when issuing payee statements in the Form 1099, 1098, and 5498 series (with the exception of Form 1098-C, Contributions of Motor Vehicles, Boats, and Airplanes, because that form is

Tax and fiscal cliff resources

The Journal of Accountancy is dedicated to ensuring CPAs stay well informed about the tax issues. This page gathers together news stories and articles from AICPA magazines and newsletters discussing the many aspects of the fiscal cliff that loomed at the end of 2012. The fiscal cliff had many different

Congress passes fiscal cliff act

Pulling back from the “fiscal cliff” at the 13th hour, Congress on Tuesday preserved most of the George W. Bush-era tax cuts and extended many other lapsed tax provisions. Shortly before 2 a.m. Tuesday, the Senate passed a bill that had been heralded and, in some quarters, groused about throughout

Practice safe e-filing

Since 2012, e-filing generally has been mandatory for tax preparers or firms that anticipate filing 11 or more federal individual or trust returns in a calendar year. However, e-filing presents a variety of dangers and unintended consequences not present with paper filing. Here are tips to make e-filing as safe

Tax season: Cued up and ready?

The tax organizer files are starting to come in, the return preparation software is updated, and the staff has cleared its calendar for the long days and nights ahead. That’s right, it’s tax preparation season, and for 2012 returns, CPAs have much to consider that’s new. They may also have

Nina Olson: Taxpayers’ voice at the IRS

Nina E. Olson is the IRS’s National Taxpayer Advocate. Since 2001, she has led the Taxpayer Advocate Service (TAS), a nationwide organization of approximately 2,000 taxpayer advocates who help U.S. individual and business taxpayers resolve problems and work with the IRS to correct systemic and procedural problems. In this capacity,

Tangible property regs. amended to implement delayed effective date

On Friday, the IRS released technical amendments to T.D. 9564 that, in response to numerous comments from taxpayers, delay the effective date of the temporary regulations it issued in December 2011 governing whether tangible property expenses could be deducted or had to be capitalized. Those regulations were supposed to apply

IRS issues proposed regs. on 3.8% net investment income tax

On Monday, the IRS released proposed regulations governing the 3.8% net investment income tax imposed under Sec. 1411 that was added to the Code by the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010, P.L. 111-152 (REG-130507-11). Taxpayers can rely on the proposed regulations for purposes of complying with the

Guidance issued on additional Medicare tax

The IRS issued proposed regulations concerning the 0.9% Medicare surtax, which takes effect next year (REG-130074-11). The proposed regulations contain guidance for employers and individuals on the implementation of the tax, including the requirement to file a return reporting the tax, the process for employers to make adjustments of underpayments

Per diem rates updated

The IRS issued the annual update of special per diem rates for use in substantiating certain business expenses taxpayers incur when traveling away from home (Notice 2012-63). The notice provides the transportation industry meal and incidental expenses rates, the rate for the incidental- expenses-only deduction, and the rates and list

Year-end tax planning: Preparing for the tax cliff

Rarely has there been such a major difference between the laws in effect in one year and the next. The maximum income tax rates next year could be as high as 43.4% on ordinary income (44.6% if the potential impact of reinstated limitations on itemized deductions is taken into account)

Spousal payments are not child support

The Tax Court held that spousal support payments received by a taxpayer from her ex-husband prior to the fourth and final support reduction were alimony payments, not child support, since the final reduction was not clearly associated with a contingency related to a child. Generally, cash payments received by a

Income from partnership is self-employment income where taxpayer chose not to be a partner

The Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals held that payments a taxpayer received from a nursing home business were taxable self-employment income despite the taxpayer’s convoluted attempts to characterize them as partnership distributions (Plotkin, No. 12-10620 (11th Cir. 11/27/12), aff’g T.C. Memo. 2011-260). The taxpayer operated nursing homes through various partnerships

New ITIN procedures issued for 2013 filing season

As the IRS promised when it issued the strict new individual taxpayer identification number (ITIN) procedures earlier this year, it has issued slightly easier procedures, effective Jan. 1, 2013, for the 2013 filing season (FS-2012-11). While some requirements have been eased slightly, others have been made more stringent. The IRS

Hurricane Sandy victims can take hardship distributions, loans from retirement plans

The IRS on Friday announced that it will allow taxpayers who have been adversely affected by Hurricane Sandy to take hardship distributions or loans from their retirement plans (Announcement 2012-44). To qualify under the announcement, hardship distributions made on account of a hardship resulting from Hurricane Sandy must be made

Modernized e-File is improving, but IRS can’t retire legacy system yet

The Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration (TIGTA) on Wednesday reported on the IRS’s progress in retiring its Legacy e-File system and moving to the Modernized e-File (MeF) system (TIGTA Rep’t No. 2012-20-121). The IRS started to phase out the legacy system in 2004 with the introduction of an internet-based

IRS extends deadlines, provides relief for Hurricane Sandy victims

Late on Friday, the IRS announced various tax relief measures for individuals and businesses affected by Hurricane Sandy in Connecticut, New Jersey, and New York (e-News for Tax Professionals No. 2012-44). The relief applies to taxpayers in areas in those states declared a disaster area by the Federal Emergency Management

S.C. taxpayers’ Social Security numbers, credit cards hacked

The South Carolina Department of Revenue is providing affected taxpayers a year of credit monitoring after a hacker stole information including 3.6 million Social Security numbers and 387,000 credit and debit card numbers from its computer systems. State revenue officials announced Friday that the S.C. Division of Information Technology learned

FROM THIS MONTH'S ISSUE

Flip out with the latest Tech Q&A

The September Technology Q&A column shows how to create dynamic to-do lists with Excel's checkboxes and also how to set up multifactor authentication texts that don't rely on phones. Flip through both items and view a video walkthrough in our digital format.