Beancount.io LogoBeancount.io

94 tagged with "Irs Reporting"

IRS reporting requirements for cryptocurrency and investments

View all tags

Form 8886: The Reportable Transactions Disclosure That Triggers 75% Penalties and Six-Year IRS Lookbacks
·mike

Form 8886: The Reportable Transactions Disclosure That Triggers 75% Penalties and Six-Year IRS Lookbacks

Form 8886 carries a 75% penalty for undisclosed listed transactions, capped at $200,000 for entities, with no reasonable cause defense and a statute that stays open until one year after you file. Here's who must file, what counts as reportable, and how to handle late disclosure.

tax
tax-compliance
irs-reporting
compliance
+3
Innocent Spouse Relief: A Guide to Form 8857 and Section 6015
·mike

Innocent Spouse Relief: A Guide to Form 8857 and Section 6015

Innocent spouse relief under IRC Section 6015 lets divorced or separated taxpayers escape joint liability for a spouse's tax misconduct via Form 8857. This guide covers the three types of relief—traditional, separation of liability, and equitable—plus deadlines, evidence requirements, and the common reasons the IRS denies claims.

tax
tax-compliance
divorce
personal-finance
+4
S-Corp Basis, Form 7203, and the Phantom Distribution Trap: A Section 1366(d) Guide
·mike

S-Corp Basis, Form 7203, and the Phantom Distribution Trap: A Section 1366(d) Guide

Section 1366(d) caps S-corporation loss deductions at stock basis plus direct shareholder debt, and Form 7203 is how the IRS verifies the math. A working guide to suspended losses, phantom capital gains on distributions, the $25,000 open-account debt rule, why personal guarantees do not create basis, and how the Regulation 1.1367-1 ordering rules decide which losses survive each year.

s-corp
s-corporation
stock-basis
tax-compliance
+4
Section 1061 Carried Interest Three-Year Holding Period: How Hedge, PE, and VC Fund Managers Lose Long-Term Capital Gains Without It
·mike

Section 1061 Carried Interest Three-Year Holding Period: How Hedge, PE, and VC Fund Managers Lose Long-Term Capital Gains Without It

Section 1061 recharacterizes carried interest gains from long-term to short-term unless the underlying asset was held more than three years — a 17-point federal rate swing for hedge, PE, and VC fund managers. A practitioner guide to applicable partnership interests, Worksheet A and B reporting, the capital interest exception, and 2026 planning moves.

tax
tax-planning
tax-compliance
partnerships
+4
Section 170(h) Conservation Easement Deductions: Why High-Income Donors Face 40% Penalties, Automatic Audits, and a 6% Court Allowance Rate
·mike

Section 170(h) Conservation Easement Deductions: Why High-Income Donors Face 40% Penalties, Automatic Audits, and a 6% Court Allowance Rate

Section 170(h) lets landowners deduct the value lost when they place a permanent conservation restriction on real property, but the IRS has labeled high-ratio syndicated structures listed transactions and now disallows over 90% of the claimed deduction in court. This guide explains the four-part qualification test, the 2.5x basis cap under Section 170(h)(7), the 40% strict liability penalty, Form 8283 requirements, the six-year statute of limitations, and the 2026 IRS settlement window.

tax
tax-deductions
tax-compliance
charitable-giving
+4
Section 170(h) Conservation Easements: 40% Penalties, the 2.5x Partnership Limit, and the 6% Court Allowance Rate
·mike

Section 170(h) Conservation Easements: 40% Penalties, the 2.5x Partnership Limit, and the 6% Court Allowance Rate

Section 170(h) lets landowners deduct the diminution in fair market value caused by a perpetual conservation easement, but syndicated versions now face a 2.5x partnership-basis cap under SECURE 2.0, a 40% gross valuation misstatement penalty, and an average 6% Tax Court allowance rate at trial.

tax-deductions
charitable-giving
partnerships
real-estate
+4
The 90-Day Letter: How Small Businesses Can Fight an IRS Notice of Deficiency in Tax Court
·mike

The 90-Day Letter: How Small Businesses Can Fight an IRS Notice of Deficiency in Tax Court

A statutory notice of deficiency gives a small business owner exactly 90 days to petition the U.S. Tax Court — the only path to challenge an IRS adjustment without paying first. This guide explains CP3219A, the Section 6213 deadline, the $50,000 small tax case election, and the records that decide outcomes.

tax
small-business
tax-compliance
irs-reporting
+4
AOTC vs Lifetime Learning Credit in 2026: How Parents and Students Pick the Right $2,500 or $2,000 Education Credit Without Double Dipping
·mike

AOTC vs Lifetime Learning Credit in 2026: How Parents and Students Pick the Right $2,500 or $2,000 Education Credit Without Double Dipping

The AOTC is worth up to $2,500 per student with $1,000 refundable; the Lifetime Learning Credit caps at $2,000 per return. A 2026 walkthrough of Form 8863 and Form 1098-T covering when each credit wins, the Pell Grant election that unlocks the refundable AOTC, how to coordinate a 529 plan, and the four mistakes that can trigger a 2-to-10-year IRS ban.

tax-credits
education
tax-planning
personal-finance
+2
The BBA Partnership Audit Playbook: Partnership Representatives, Push-Out Elections, and the Imputed Underpayment Trap You Did Not See Coming
·mike

The BBA Partnership Audit Playbook: Partnership Representatives, Push-Out Elections, and the Imputed Underpayment Trap You Did Not See Coming

Under the Bipartisan Budget Act centralized audit regime, the IRS assesses partnership tax adjustments at the entity level at the highest individual rate. This guide explains when to elect out under Section 6221(b), how the partnership representative can modify or push out the imputed underpayment under Section 6226, and how to file an administrative adjustment request on Form 8082.

partnerships
tax
tax-compliance
tax-planning
+4
FIRPTA Withholding: The Buyer's 2026 Guide to Section 1445 and Form 8288
·mike

FIRPTA Withholding: The Buyer's 2026 Guide to Section 1445 and Form 8288

FIRPTA requires US real estate buyers to withhold 15 percent of the gross sale price from foreign sellers and remit it on Form 8288 within 20 days of closing. This guide explains Section 1445, the $300,000 personal residence exemption, the 10 percent reduced rate, withholding certificates on Form 8288-B, and how buyers avoid personal liability with an Affidavit of Non-Foreign Status.

real-estate
international-tax
tax-compliance
foreign-corporations
+4
Form 5329 and the Missed RMD: How SECURE 2.0's 25%/10% Penalty Rules Work
·mike

Form 5329 and the Missed RMD: How SECURE 2.0's 25%/10% Penalty Rules Work

SECURE 2.0 cut the missed-RMD excise tax from 50% to 25%, and to just 10% if the shortfall is corrected within a two-year window. Form 5329 is how taxpayers claim the reduced rate or request a full reasonable-cause waiver, and the form also starts the IRS's three-year limitations clock.

tax
tax-compliance
tax-planning
retirement-savings
+4
Form 8027: How Restaurants Apply the 8% Tip Allocation Rule and Avoid W-2 Box 8 Surprises
·mike

Form 8027: How Restaurants Apply the 8% Tip Allocation Rule and Avoid W-2 Box 8 Surprises

Form 8027 requires large food and beverage establishments to reconcile gross receipts against employee-reported tips and allocate any shortfall below 8% to directly tipped employees on W-2 Box 8. This guide covers the 10-employee filing test, the three approved allocation methods, the tip-versus-service-charge distinction, and the reconciliation discipline that keeps Box 8 empty.

restaurant
payroll
tax-compliance
irs-reporting
+4
Showing 37–48 of 94 posts