538 tagged with "Tax"
Tax strategies, planning, and compliance for individuals and businesses
Section 471(c) Inventory Exception: The $32M Rule That Lets Small Businesses Skip UNICAP
For tax year 2026, businesses with a three-year average of gross receipts at or below $32 million can elect Section 471(c) to skip UNICAP, treat inventory as non-incidental materials and supplies, and file Form 3115 — often producing a one-time Section 481(a) deduction in the year of change.
The Section 691(c) Deduction: How IRA Beneficiaries Recover Estate Tax
Beneficiaries of taxable estates can claim a Section 691(c) income tax deduction for federal estate tax already paid on inherited IRAs and other IRD assets. This guide covers eligibility, the with-and-without calculation, where to claim it on Schedule A, and the errors that cost families six figures.
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.
How to Use the Tax Court Small Case Procedure (Section 7463) to Dispute IRS Bills Under $50,000
Section 7463 lets a taxpayer challenge an IRS deficiency of $50,000 or less in U.S. Tax Court without a lawyer for a $60 filing fee, using a simplified Form 2 petition and informal trial — in exchange for giving up the right to appeal and the ability to set precedent.
The 30-Day Decision That Can Save Founders Millions: A Plain-English Guide to the Section 83(b) Election
A Section 83(b) election lets founders and early employees pay ordinary income tax today on the full value of restricted stock instead of at each vest. Filed within 30 days on IRS Form 15620, it can convert millions of phantom ordinary income into long-term capital gain and start the QSBS holding clock on day one.
Subchapter T Patronage Dividends Explained: How Co-ops Avoid Double Tax, Issue Qualified and Nonqualified Written Notices of Allocation, and Report Member Distributions on Form 1099-PATR
How Subchapter T lets U.S. cooperatives deduct patronage dividends and avoid corporate double tax — covering the 20% cash floor for qualified written notices of allocation, the post-2017 shift toward nonqualified treatment, per-unit retains, Form 1099-PATR box-by-box reporting, Section 199A(g) for specified ag co-ops, and the recordkeeping that turns a deduction into a defensible one.
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.
Accountable Plans: How to Reimburse Owners and Employees Tax-Free
An accountable plan lets an S corporation reimburse owners and employees for mileage, home office, and supplies tax-free under Treasury Regulation 1.62-2. It requires three things—business connection, substantiation within 60 days, and return of excess within 120 days—and replaces the employee expense deduction the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act eliminated.
Constructive Receipt and the December 31 Check: Why 'I Didn't Cash It' Won't Save You at Tax Time
A practical guide to the constructive receipt doctrine under Treasury Reg. 1.451-2 — what counts as income in the year you got the check, what doesn't, and which year-end deferral moves actually survive an audit.
Form 8275: How a One-Page Disclosure Defeats the Section 6662 and 6694 Penalties
Form 8275 is a one-page disclosure statement that, when attached to a tax return, can neutralize the 20% Section 6662 accuracy-related penalty and the Section 6694 preparer penalty for gray-area positions that have a reasonable basis.
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.
IFTA Quarterly Fuel Tax Returns: A Filing and Audit Guide for Owner-Operators
IFTA returns are due quarterly on April 30, July 31, October 31, and January 31, and tax follows the miles you drove, not the fuel you bought. This guide shows owner-operators how to calculate fleet MPG, net taxable gallons, and surcharges, and which record-keeping habits survive an audit.