94 tagged with "Irs Reporting"
IRS reporting requirements for cryptocurrency and investments
Section 530 Safe Harbor: How Businesses Survive IRS Worker Reclassification Audits
Section 530 of the Revenue Act of 1978 blocks the IRS from assessing back payroll taxes on reclassified 1099 workers if a business proves reasonable basis, substantive consistency, and reporting consistency. Revenue Procedure 2025-10 now requires examiners to consider the relief first and sets 25% / 10-year thresholds for the industry-practice safe harbor.
Section 6751(b) Supervisory Approval: The Procedural Defense That Can Erase IRS Penalties
Section 6751(b) requires a real IRS supervisor to personally approve penalties in writing before assessment. A working guide to using Chai, the Graev trilogy, and the December 2024 final regulations to defeat accuracy-related, fraud, and information-return penalties — which penalties qualify, what documents to demand, and how to raise the argument at Appeals before paying for Tax Court.
VEBAs Under Section 501(c)(9): Pre-Funding Employee Benefits Without Tripping Section 419 or 4976
A Voluntary Employees' Beneficiary Association under Section 501(c)(9) lets small and mid-sized employers pre-fund retiree medical, severance, and other welfare benefits tax-free — but Section 419 deduction caps, the 100% Section 4976 excise tax on disqualified benefits, and listed-transaction rules in Notices 95-34 and 2007-83 punish mistakes. Here is how a single-employer VEBA actually works, what it can fund, and the three IRS exams it has to pass every year.
Form 14457 and the IRS Voluntary Disclosure Practice: A Survival Guide for Willful Non-Filers, Crypto Whales, and Offshore Account Holders
How willful non-filers, crypto whales, and offshore account holders use IRS Form 14457 to trade criminal exposure for a defined six-year civil resolution under the Voluntary Disclosure Practice — including the December 2025 proposed framework, disqualifying traps, and when to choose Streamlined or DIIRSP instead.
Form 8300: Reporting Cash Transactions Over $10,000 for Car Dealers, Jewelers, Real Estate, and Attorneys
Form 8300 requires businesses to report cash payments over $10,000 within 15 days. This guide covers who must file, what counts as cash (including cashier's checks under $10,000), the 24-hour and 12-month aggregation rules, structuring penalties up to $31,000 per form, and the industry traps that hit car dealers, jewelers, real estate operators, and attorneys.
Section 7345 and the CP508C: How the IRS Can Revoke Your Passport and How to Get It Back
Section 7345 lets the IRS certify a "seriously delinquent" tax debt — roughly $66,000 in 2026 — to the State Department, which can deny, refuse to renew, or revoke a U.S. passport. This guide explains how the CP508C notice works, the five practical paths to decertification, the expedited procedures for imminent travel, and what the courts have recently said.
1099-K Threshold Whiplash: What Gig Workers and Online Sellers Need to Know for 2026
For the 2026 tax year the Form 1099-K threshold reverted to $20,000 and more than 200 transactions, but you must still report all income whether or not a form arrives. This guide explains who gets a 1099-K, how to reconcile Box 1a from gross to taxable income, and where the numbers go on Schedule C or Schedule 1.
Form 1099-DA, Per-Wallet Cost Basis, and the Rev. Proc. 2024-28 Safe Harbor: A 2026 Crypto Tax Guide
Form 1099-DA introduces IRS broker reporting for digital asset sales beginning with 2025 transactions and adds cost-basis reporting for covered assets in 2026. Rev. Proc. 2024-28 simultaneously ends universal wallet accounting in favor of per-account allocation. This guide explains how investors and businesses reconcile 1099-DA against their own records, use the one-time safe harbor, and avoid paying capital gains tax twice.
Form 4506-T and 4506-C: IRS Tax Transcripts for Mortgage and SBA Lending
A practical breakdown of Form 4506-T, Form 4506-C, Form 8821, and the five IRS transcript types — what mortgage and SBA lenders need before first disbursement, and how borrowers can avoid identity holds, name mismatches, and no-record errors that stall closings.
Form 911: Escalating Stalled Refunds, Wrongful Levies, and Identity Theft to the Taxpayer Advocate Service
Form 911 opens the door to the Taxpayer Advocate Service, an independent IRS office that intervenes in stalled refunds, wrongful levies, and identity-theft cases under IRC Section 7811. This guide explains the four hardship categories, how to file, and what to write so a case gets expedited rather than queued.
Section 6603 Deposits: Stop IRS Interest on Disputed Tax Without Giving Up Appeal Rights
A Section 6603 deposit freezes IRS underpayment interest on contested tax while preserving your appeal, Tax Court, and withdrawal rights. This guide covers the written designation under Rev. Proc. 2005-18, when a deposit beats a payment, LIFO withdrawal mechanics, and the procedural traps that turn planned deposits into accidental payments.
Section 6603 Deposits: Stop IRS Interest Without Conceding the Audit
A Section 6603 deposit halts interest on a disputed IRS liability without paying the tax, conceding the position, or forfeiting Tax Court access. Revenue Procedure 2005-18 spells out the mechanics—a written designation that names the tax, year, amount, and basis for disputability.