Showing posts with label tax strategies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tax strategies. Show all posts

Monday, May 23, 2016

Paying your child can be a smart tax strategy


Can your children help out with some of the tasks connected with your business? Then a savvy way to take care of their allowances or spending money – at the expense of the IRS – is to pay them wages for work they do on behalf of the business. This is a perfectly legal way to keep income in the family while shifting some out of your higher bracket and into their lower bracket.

For this business expense to withstand IRS scrutiny, your children must actually render services. Also, wages paid to them can’t be more than the going rate for unrelated employees who perform comparable tasks.

The IRS doesn’t require you to be a parsimonious paymaster who doles out only the minimum wage. But you must treat your children the same as any other employee and keep the usual records showing amounts paid and hours worked.

Give them W-2 forms, even if they qualify to exempt their wages from withholding for income taxes, and use checks drawn on business accounts to evidence the payments. Otherwise, the IRS might contend that the payments exceeded the going rate or that your youngsters weren’t bona-fide employees; they merely rendered the token kinds of services that parents expect their children to perform.

For more information contact Neikirk, Mahoney and Smith at 502-896-2999.

Courtesy of AccountingWeb

Wednesday, December 2, 2015

Tax Planning Strategies for the Year's End

From Neikirk, Mahoney & Smith...
The year is coming to an end, and the Journal of Accountancy has published some tips on last minute tax planning strategies.
According to the Journal of Accountancy, "Taxpayers who have been sitting on the sidelines due to the lack of certainty on the expanded Section 179 deduction, bonus depreciation, the R&D credit and other items normally renewed in an extender package need to take action soon, according to Michael Silvio, director of tax services at Hall & Co. CPAs."

Their last minute strategies include:

1) A Hierarchy of Planning
"Last-minute tax issues could be things that can be done by the end of the year before it’s too late to do them, or could be things that can still be done up to the time you file the tax return or later, to get a better result for that prior year, according to Matthew Frooman, a member at the Atlanta office of Top 100 Firm Warren Averett."

2) New Due Dates
"For tax years beginning after Dec. 31, 2015, the due dates for partnership tax returns will change from April 15 for calendar-year partnerships to March 15, and the fifteenth day of the third month after the end of the fiscal year for fiscal-year partnerships. The due date for C corporations will be April 15, or the fifteenth day of the fourth month after the close of their year. S corporation return due dates continue to be March 15, or the third month following the close of the taxable year."

3) Extender Watch 
"The tax extenders have historically been passed, so we have to plan for the fact that they will be passed, advised Gary Fox, managing partner of tax services at Top 100 Firm Crowe Horwath."

4) Hoping for Better
"Next filing season can’t be as bad as the previous one, according to Rick Wojciechowski of Top 100 Firm The Bonadio Group: 'Provided the extenders get passed earlier than they did for 2014, it should be better. Plus, the tangible property regs are better understood now. But we do have layering of the ACA, which affects business clients. CPAs need to communicate the rules to their clients.'"

You can check out the full article at the Journal of Accountancy.
You can also contact Neikirk, Mahoney & Smith PLLC at 502-896-2999, or through our website contact form.

Thursday, March 26, 2015

Yes, Virginia, it IS taking longer to do your taxes this year:-)

Tax season is supposed to be over on April 15. But among certain groups—especially the wealthy—filing for an extension until Oct. 15 is now routine, according to Bloomberg Business and Neikirk, Mahoney & Smith CPAs.

In 2011, 11 million taxpayers filed for an extension; two years later, 13 million did, an increase of almost 20 percent. At the end of September 2014, more than 25 percent of those who had filed for an extension were still working on their filings. We're not just procrastinators. It has gotten harder to file on time. Here’s why:

1. You don't have the forms you need.

The more complicated your investments, the more likely it is that you won't have everything you need to file your taxes by April 15. Often, private equity, venture capital, and hedge funds are structured as partnerships, which means their earnings generate so-called “Schedule K-1” forms, which sometimes take until late summer to arrive.

Christine Freeland, a certified public accountant in Chandler, Ariz., says brokers are putting more of her clients in energy or real estate partnerships instead of (or in addition to) mutual funds, which means more K-1s. Some clients don't even know how many K-1s they'll be getting, she says, and they think their return is ready until they receive an additional K-1 in the mail. Sometimes the partnerships—which have to finish their own returns before they can issue K-1 forms—get extensions, although they must file by Sept. 15.

Simpler investments that generate 1099 forms can slow down the process, too. Brokerage statements have to be out by Feb. 15, but many note that the information may not be final. One of Freeland's clients once handed her a corrected brokerage statement that hadn't arrived until April 15.

2. You're waiting on other people.

The more middlemen standing between you and your tax forms, the greater the chances of delay. According to Bill Zatorski of accounting firm PwC, a common sticking point for wealthy taxpayers is data from funds of funds, hedge funds that invest in hedge funds. A fund of funds can’t send you a K-1 until it receives K-1s, or other needed forms, from all the various funds it holds.

Adding to the delay, says Kevin Meehan of Wealth Enhancement Group, is that investors rarely hold funds or other investments directly. Everything gets funneled through brokerages. You wait for your brokerage, which is waiting for your fund-of-funds, which is awaiting forms for all the funds it holds. An extension until Oct. 15 is only a partial solution for taxpayers with late tax forms: They still must pay an estimate of what they owe by April 15, even if the full return comes later.

3. The tax code is more complicated.

If all else fails, blame Congress. Taxpayers already must follow different rules for wages, capital gains, and two types of dividends—those that get taxed at a lower tax rate and those that don’t meet the “qualified” criteria. In 2013, yet another tax category was added, a 3.8 percent net investment income tax on married couples earning more than $250,000 per year.

Under a 2010 law, taxpayers also now must report all their overseas holdings—a process that sometimes requires the close reading of K-1 footnotes, Zatorski says. Finally, there’s the alternative minimum tax, or AMT, a parallel tax system designed to limit the deductions that wealthier Americans can take. Plenty of those affected aren’t particularly wealthy. About 4.2 million people were ensnared by the AMT in 2014, the Tax Policy Center estimates, up 8 percent from the year before. The AMT alone can almost double how long it takes to fill out a tax return, the National Taxpayer Advocate says.

Thursday, October 2, 2014

Interesting article from the Old Gray Lady...

"Tax Tactics Threaten Public Funds" says New York Times' Eduardo Porter.

"When the European Commission charged this week that Ireland’s sweetheart tax treatment of Apple amounted to an illegal corporate subsidy, the company said that it had done nothing wrong. Apple executives might have added that whatever they did, they were not alone.

"Corporate tax strategies intended to minimize global taxes, by hook or by crook, are by now standard practice. Google and Facebook move money through Ireland to lower their taxes. Starbucks uses the Netherlands, a practice that is under review by Europe as well."

Here's the rest of the article - definitely worth your time - http://www.nytimes.com/2014/10/02/business/economy/multinational-tax-strategies-put-public-coffers-at-risk.html?ref=todayspaper&_r=0

And if you have questions about this or any tax related issues, call Neikirk, Mahoney & Smith at (502) 896-2999.
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