Sunday, January 30, 2011

filing delay date

The IRS has specified February 14, 2011, as the date on which it will begin accepting returns with certain characteristics. The most popular of these characteristics is itemized deductions. Most returns without itemized deductions are already being accepted.

Monday, January 10, 2011

Landlords must issue 1099s

Beginning in 2011, landlords must issue 1099s if they pay someone (e.g., a self-employed carpenter or plumber) $600 or more during the year. Previously, landlords were not covered by the 1099 laws.

Some landlords will be exempt if their rental income is very small. The IRS will let us know at a later date (hopefully sometime this year) how much rental income will trigger the 1099 requirement.

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Qualified Charitable Distribution

One of the last-minute changes in the new tax law had to do with the option for people over 70 and a half years old to make a charitable donation directly from their IRA without declaring it as income. That provision was supposed to expire as of 12/31/09, but there was some confusion over it during the year, probably because it was almost, but not quite, renewed during the year. Now it has indeed been renewed. And because of the last-minute nature of the renewal, eligible taxpayers have been given the option to make such a distribution in January of 2011 that can be counted as happening in 2010. Contact your IRA administrator.

Tax filing delay

The IRS has announced that it will need some extra time to reprogram their computers in regard to some of the provisions of the new tax law. Therefore returns with certain tax features will not be accepted until mid- to late February. Those situations are:

1. Anyone who files a Schedule A
2. State and local sales tax deduction
3. Tuition and fees deduction for higher education
4. Educator expenses.

The IRS will announce specific dates later.

Estate tax law at last

The new estate tax top rate is 35% on anything above $5 million. Also, a person who dies and leaves everything to his or her spouse, and does not use up the $5M exemption, can also pass on the unused portion of the exemption to the spouse. Formerly this was done by setting up trusts, but the new law may make such trusts less necessary.

For executors and family of a person who died in 2010, the option exists to apply the new law as outlined above, or the law that existed during most of 2010, which was quite different. Under that law there was no estate tax, and the basis of inherited assets was treated differently.

Under the new law, the gift tax also has a $5M exclusion, as opposed to $1 million before.

Unfortunately the new estate tax law expires in 2013, unless Congress acts.

New law same as old

Many of the tax provisions that were scheduled to expire in 2010 or 2011 were revived by Congress in the recently passed tax bill. The specifics of the bill are still hard to come by. If you are viewing this from my web site, you can e-mail me with a question that applies to your tax situation.