6 tagged with "Disaster Loss"
Casualty and disaster loss deductions for federally declared disaster areas, including the Section 165(i) election to claim losses on a prior-year return, Form 4684 reporting, and recordkeeping for IRS substantiation
Hurricane Season Financial Continuity for Coastal Small Businesses
A pre-storm playbook for coastal small businesses — 60 to 90 day cash reserves, geotagged inventory documentation, business interruption policy review, pre-positioned SBA EIDL and Physical Disaster Loan paperwork, and how IRS Section 7508A and Section 165(i) prior-year casualty loss elections work in federally declared disaster zones.
Section 1033 Involuntary Conversion: A Non-Farm Business Guide to Deferring Gain on Property Destroyed, Stolen, or Condemned
Section 1033 lets non-farm businesses defer gain on property that is destroyed, stolen, or condemned if the proceeds are reinvested in qualifying replacement property within 2, 3, or 4 years. This guide covers the election mechanics on Form 4797, the similar-or-related-in-service-or-use vs. like-kind tests, the carryover-basis recapture trap, and the bookkeeping needed to survive an IRS look-back.
Section 139 Disaster Relief Payments: Tax-Free Employer Aid After Federally Declared Disasters
Section 139 lets employers pay employees tax-free aid after a federally declared disaster — no FICA, no W-2 reporting, no 1099, and fully deductible to the employer. The guide covers qualifying expenses, the disaster definition, the documentation that survives an audit, and a worked $54,000 example.
Section 7508A Disaster Tax Relief: How FEMA-Declared County Residents Get Postponed Deadlines, Coordinate With Form 4868, and Decide on a Prior-Year Casualty Loss
Section 7508A lets the IRS postpone almost any tax-related deadline by up to one year after a federally declared disaster. This guide explains who qualifies as an affected taxpayer, how postponement interacts with Form 4868, what happens to penalties already accruing, and when to elect a prior-year casualty loss under Section 165(i).
Section 7508A: How Federally Declared Disaster Relief Postpones Your Tax Deadlines
Section 7508A lets the IRS postpone tax deadlines up to one year for taxpayers in federally declared disaster counties—usually automatically by address. A Section 165(i) election can also move a casualty loss to the prior year's return for a faster refund.
Section 165(i) Disaster Loss Election: How Homeowners and Small Businesses Pull Casualty Refunds Forward One Year
Section 165(i) lets disaster-affected taxpayers deduct a current-year casualty loss on the prior year's return, turning an 8-to-16-week refund into rebuild cash. A practical guide to Form 4684, the six-month election deadline, the 2026 OBBBA changes, and the recordkeeping that holds up under IRS audit.