In 1898, the federal government passed a law assessing taxes on long distance phone use in the United States. The tax was so relatively small, ranging from one to three percent, that it was never questioned. Last year, that changed. The tax was challenged in court and found to be invalid. After a few challenges, the IRS agreed to stop collecting the tax. It even went so far as to agree to issue refunds on some of the taxes collected.
Given the fact the 1898 law covers just a bit of time, the issue of telephone tax refunds is potentially a complicated one. Simply put, how do you figure out how much tax you have paid on phone bills for this specific assessment through the years? At one to three percent, it certain is not much. Further, how do you prove the tax payments if you are audited? Anyone have phone bills from 1898? Probably not. In truth, the refund amount only looks back 41 months, but you get the idea.
To overcome these issues, the IRS is proposing a flat rate refund for taxpayers. The refund amounts are proposed to be $30 to $60 depending on specifics. More importantly, taxpayers will not be required to dig through old phone bills to substantiate the deduction. To claim the tax refund, you will need to fill in a yet undeclared area on your 2006 tax return. Just to be clear, this is the return you should file on April 2007.
So, how do you figure out how much you can claim as a refund? The refund amounts are being tied into the number of exemptions you claim. The standard amounts are $30 for a person filing a return with one exemption, $40 for two exemptions, $50 for three exemptions and $60 for four or more exemptions. If you are single and claim one exemption, the refund amount will be $30. If you wish to go through your phone bills and claim the exact amount of tax you paid as a refund, you also have this option.
Given the fact businesses tend to use long distance telephone services more, there is no standard deduction amount. The IRS is playing around with ways to come up with a set amount, but most believe businesses will have to dig through their phone bills to calculate the correct amount. Businesses simply vary too much to come up with universal numbers.
My Irs Tax Refund
To make things simple, the IRS has created a standard refund deduction where most people can mark a button to get a $30 or $60 refund for the previous taxes. Alternatively, taxpayers can go through and figure out the amount of tax they actually paid from March of 2003 through July 2006. Many businesses are choosing to do the monthly calculation, but are grossly claiming excessive refund amounts. The IRS is not amused.
In an unprecedented move, the IRS is proactively going after tax prepares and taxpayers that are abusing the telephone tax refund program. The agency is sending IRS agents to the business and tax preparers for a little one on one time to check the figures. For blatantly excessive claims, the IRS is threatening potential criminal prosecution for fraud.
What would bring on such aggression from the IRS? Well, the agency is reporting that it is seeing continual outlandish deduction amounts. In one case, a business claimed a telephone tax refund in excess of the total income it collected during the period. In another, individual taxpayers requested more than $30,000 in refunds. Keep in mind, this is not for a business. It is a single person sitting on the phone calling friends and family! A $30,000 refund would equate to a telephone bill of around $300,000 for three years! Now, that is reaching out and talking to someone.
The Agency has surprisingly given some details on its current audit actions. It has sent agents to the offices of 22 tax preparers and is auditing over 1,500 tax returns. That may not sound like a lot, but keep in mind most people have not even begun to file tax returns yet. In short, the IRS is dealing with problems now and letting everyone know it is not going to put up with abuse in this program.
So, what should you do given the hostile IRS reaction? Nothing really. Determine your tax refund from the telephone tax and claim it when you file the taxreturns. Just make absolutely sure you have the paperwork to back it up.
Richard A. Chapo has sinced written about articles on various topics from Finances, Tax Deductions and Tax. Richard A. Chapo is with BusinessTaxRecovery.com - providing information on .. Richard A. Chapo's top article generates over 22200 views. to your Favourites.
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