Tax Guru – Ker$tetter Letter

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Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Family Employee Benefits

Posted by taxguru on February 15, 2006

Employer-Reimbursed Medical Benefits Excludable by Employee, Deductible by Employer; Burden of Proof Shifted to IRS – I have long worked with small business owners and explained many of the lucrative tax benefits of hiring their own kids and spouses, such as employee benefits, including medical costs and education assistance which are deductible on the business schedule, but not income to the family employees.  This case is a good example of how that works, including a common misconception that I have had to fight with IRS over on a number of occasions, that benefits can be in lieu of actual wages.

The amounts paid to the husband, which were in lieu of compensation, were reasonable because they were substantially less than the wife would have had to pay someone else to perform the same duties.

 

 

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Posted by taxguru on February 15, 2006

Tools That May Make Tax Time Easier for Property Owners – While this article from the WSJ speaks highly of the Quicken Rental Property Manager program, I am still adamant that QuickBooks is a much better double entry accounting system for keeping track of all kinds of business activity, especially rentals.  I prepare hundreds of tax returns a year for clients who use the Class function in QB to easily get a P&L for each separate property, making it a very easy task for me to enter the details into Schedule E and Form 8825.

 

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Posted by taxguru on February 14, 2006

IRS Updates Tax Gap Estimates – No surprise here because IRS had earlier told us to expect a new SWAG from them. It’s also not surprising that so many others are swallowing these figures as gospel, such as TaxAnalysts.  The fact that these higher tax gap calculations are being used to justify more money and power for IRS couldn’t possibly have influenced their measurement of something that is inherently impossible to measure with any precision, could they?

 

Feds bust father & daughter tax preparers in Wichita for claiming bogus deductions on their clients’ returns.

 

Despite Federal Tax Credits, Solar Power Isn’t for Tightwads

Even with the new federal credit, it often takes 20 or more years to recoup the initial investment through energy-bill savings.

 

Taking Inventory of Your Home To Get Adequate Insurance – Dealing with insurance adjusters can often be worse than IRS auditors.

 

 

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State Tax Burdens

Posted by taxguru on February 14, 2006

Q:

Subject: Illinois State Taxes
 
Kerry Kerstetter: We are considering moving to Illinois and I find their residential real estate taxes are double ours in KS. Is there a site or resource that has a net, bottom line analysis of all state’s total taxes, so one can compare them to determine the most expensive/least expensive? Thanks! 

A:

Check the following that I found via a quick Google search

http://www.stateline.org/live/ViewPage.action?siteNodeId=136&languageId=1&contentId=28297

http://www.taxadmin.org/fta/rate/tax_stru.html

http://www.taxfoundation.org/publications/show/335.html

http://www.retirementliving.com/RLtaxes.html

Good luck.

Kerry Kerstetter

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Deducting Vehicle Costs

Posted by taxguru on February 14, 2006

Q:

Subject: Tax question about vehicle
 
 I have my own business and I want to be able to write off mileage and my cost for he vehicle.  If I have advertising signs on my vehicle are my mileage allowances still subject to percentage use rulings?  That is the primary use of the vehicle is to advertise my business and get to and from appointments.

A:

If you are serious about running your business properly, you will engage the services of a tax professional who can give you guidance. 

Any competent tax pro will tell you that just placing a sign on a vehicle doesn’t make the vehicle’s costs deductible.  Any deductions for that vehicle will be based on the business miles driven, either via the IRS’s standard per mile allowance or based on a pro-rata percentage of actual costs. 

Good luck.

Kerry Kerstetter

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Death of Partner

Posted by taxguru on February 14, 2006

Q:

Subject: Preparing 1065 & K1’s the Year of Partners Death

Kerry, I came across your website and Blogs while I was doing research regarding the preparation of this Partnerships 1065 & K1’s.

 I work for a partnership founded in 1946.  The percentage of ownership was as follows:

Founder – 10%

Partner 1 (Son) – 20%

Partner 2 (Son-in-law) – 20%

Partner 3 – 16.667%

Partner 4 – 16.667%

Partner 5 – 16.667%

As of June 28th 2005, our founder passed away.  He held 10% of the ownership at the time of his passing.  His percentage was absorbed by his son and son-in-law who now own 25% each of the company.  How do you suggest I set up Turbo Tax?  Am I required to do the first half 2005, second half 2005, and then a final combined return?  If you could please advise I would greatly appreciate it “oh Grand TaxGuru of ours”.

Best Regards,

A:

I don’t use TurboTax, so I can’t give any specific data entry advice on it.

However, it sounds as if you may need to make manual allocations of the 2005 K-1 info between the various partners, including the deceased one, to account for the proper split.  The actual computation of the allocation can be done various ways. 

In similar cases that I have worked on, I have figured the P&L for the time with the old ownership (1/1 to 6/28 in your case) and figured that split.  Then, I did the same for the rest of the year with the new ownership percentages and then totaled the two figures to get the full allocations for the year.   The method used should be designed with the input of all of the surviving partners, the deceased partner’s survivors, as well as all of their personal tax and legal advisors.

You only need to do one 1065 for the entire year of 2005, with proper notation on the K-1s of the beginning and ending ownership percentages of each partner.

Good luck.

Kerry Kerstetter

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Selecting Corp Type

Posted by taxguru on February 14, 2006

Q:

Subject: THANKS FOR THE S VS C ARTICLE

HERE IN FL. MOST SMALL CONTRACTORS WORKING ALONE HAD TO REVERT TO CORP. STATUS TO BE ABLE TO CONTINUE IN BUSINESS DUE TO WC.

WE CHOSE S CORP.  HOPE WE MADE THE RIGHT DECISION. 

THANKS AGAIN  

A:

If you made that decision based solely on what you read on the web, I would have no faith in your conclusion.  You absolutely must work with a competent tax professional who can take all of the particular factors into consideration.

Good luck.

Kerry Kerstetter

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Posted by taxguru on February 14, 2006

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No More QB Basic

Posted by taxguru on February 13, 2006

Q:

Subject: Quickbooks
 
I am using Quickbooks Basic.  It is my understanding that this program is no longer available.  My question to you is, do I need to upgrade to Quickbooks Pro or can I continue to use this program for now?

Thanks

A:

It is true that, starting with the 2006 QB programs, they have dropped the least expensive Basic version.  It’s an obvious scheme to squeeze more money out of people.

It doesn’t matter to me which year’s version of the program you use.  I have a dozen different ones installed on my computer to enable me to work with everyone’s data files.

You should upgrade to newer versions whenever you feel that you want the newer features or the official Intuit support, which they drop after three years.  If you are using QB to process a company payroll, you will need to upgrade more frequently in order to keep the withholding tables accurate.  However, for basic bookkeeping tasks, which is really all that most people need, you can stay with your current program for as long as you want.

Kerry

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Corp Payments

Posted by taxguru on February 13, 2006

Q:

Hi Kerry,

I have a quick question, I hope you have time to help me out.  My brother and I started a s-corp in the state of Washington last year, we do not have any employees.  It’s year end and we have around 60k in the bank, I’ve taken about 5k out of the corp and he has taken $0.00.    What would you recommend we do with the 60k?  I’m married and my wife and I made about 35K last year, my brother has made about 30k outside of the corp.  I know this is so last minute, but any insight would be so helpful.

Thanks in advance!!

A:

You really should be discussing this with your own personal tax advisor.  If you are actually trying to operate an S corp without a tax advisor, you are asking for big trouble. 

A tax pro will inform you that paying S corp money out to the shareholders will have no tax effect, and is something that should have been evaluated when you decided to become an S corp in the first place.

Good luck.

Kerry Kerstetter

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