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Showing content with the highest reputation on 04/07/2017 in Posts

  1. Yesterday I had a client offer me to pay extra to prepare his personal and corporate tax return because he has to leave out of town and won't come back until the end of May, I said great, it should be ready by the time you come back
    7 points
  2. The Easter weekend is putting extra pressure on me to get done to be with family. Usually Easter comes early enough that a day off isn't such a big deal. Ugh - I still have a lot to do this week.
    6 points
  3. I threw a blank extension form at my crappy neighbor who literally pounded on my door yesterday. The neighbor who lets her two pit bulls run around off leash. Good riddance.
    6 points
  4. What happens to the extra $6,000 when he can't find the chick and has to refund the money? He can't sell what he doesn't own. I would advise the client to put the funds in some sort of escrow account where he has no constructive receipt and leave it there until this shakes out. And in the future, the buyer should be paying the $6,000 to the account custodian and not directly to the client.
    5 points
  5. The thing that bothers me is the big owers are usually the ones who put the dreaded tax appointment off until the last minute, and then the suspense starts to kill them, and then they lean all over us to find out the bad news, and then they cry. I try to just do my job and not get wrapped up in their drama, while I fake sympathy for their terrible plight.
    5 points
  6. Didn't show up. Called; he's coming tomorrow. That usually works for me, but not this case. I've been pricing him out - started 7 years ago at $125 and am now just south of $1K. Curious myself as to what happens now. I don't know how far we can go on this "family" board, but I heard one something like that recently re "ladies of....". Guy asked if he could stay overnight for a million dollars; she said "Yes," and then he said "How about five bucks?" Highly indignant, she asked "What do you think I am - a prostitute?" He replied, "We've already established that; now we're negotiating the price."
    5 points
  7. usually it's that cute little Shih-tzu in my picture waking me up. He's 8 years old now, and barks in the middle of the night if anyone gets up or - god forbid - the cat walks by. and sometimes he likes to go out on his leash at 2 am. but what really killed me last night, he woke me up to let me know the cat wanted to come in. i sleep through the cat scratching at the door, and I like it when he ignores the cat too, but my fussy little boy couldn't stand it until I got up and went to the door and let the cat in at 3 am last night. only to bark at him when he walked by the bedroom a few minutes later. Ugh! in my next life......nothing that eats or poops.....or talks or barks or meows......
    4 points
  8. Hubby did the classic "tuck and roll" with the covers at 2AM this morning and woke me up. I've been up since then and this is turning into a very, very long day. He is having a nice nap. I'll get him later.
    4 points
  9. I don't use ATX, but it's probably a box you need to check that he lived with his parents all year (all the year he was alive) or was born or died during 2016 or put 12 as months lived with parents or something along that line. Make sure you have his birth date in 2016 (I sometimes default to now, 2017, and get weird error messages). Save and exit and open and try again.
    4 points
  10. When the rant starts? "We can go have a beer and discuss that after April 15th, but for right now? You owe this..." Rich
    4 points
  11. Re: ATX This is it for me. I have stuck with you people through all of your problems with the software and all of your customer service glitches for 20+ years, but being turned over to a collection agency when my credit card on file was up to date and the problem was on your end and now finding out that I was LIED TO about the pricing is the last straw!!! The most recent post from the ATX Board about this subject. I will be leaving too !
    3 points
  12. I haven't counted but there is at least 7 or 8 posters on the ATX Board who have also received mystery collection letters just like yours. It is truly mind boggling, the level of incompetence at ATX to do something like this.
    3 points
  13. next saturday - that is. this saturday will be a long one....
    3 points
  14. I'm doing the best I can to finish returns with balances due but the others are going on extension if I run out of time by next Friday. And, I haven't even finished my own bookkeeping yet
    3 points
  15. interesting. will keep that strategy in mind. I have a husband who is awol. well - not mine own, although it would be nice....
    3 points
  16. Also, lest your client thinks they were "so close," you can point out that the highest number for that % line is 401. I'm guessing line four was 11,770. If so, the household income as percentage of federal poverty line is actually 441%. I had one that was 589%. I overrode the form and printed it for his copy and then restored before filing.
    3 points
  17. As your client's "payment due" amount is because of an "unexpected windfall", he/she probably already knows (or thinks) he will owe this year. The fact that he/she got a windfall and didn't contact you when it happened it NOT your fault! Don't take the blame for one second. Just tell him/her something to the effect "it's like I always tell my clients to call me during the year with any questions they may have or if they have unexpected income.....". Continue YOUR rant that had he/she done that, not a penny would be due now! Some people feel better if they can blame their problems on someone else. This problem is his/hers solely. You can also tell him/her that you dropped your crystal ball on the floor last year and it hasn't been working right ever since! Take care, Cathy
    3 points
  18. We have already polled our clients and will be filing extensions on Monday. I always do them a week early, and then go back to cranking out returns. Every year there are a goodly number of folks who get put on extension but then file on time. And every year, there are folks whose returns are ready for pickup, who end upon extension because they can't get here in time or don't mail back their 8879's in time. I finished up this week by doing the payroll tax filings for March and Q1 for my business and the one remaining in-house payroll client. Everyone else is on online do-it-for-me payroll. That has been great. Money shows up, and all I do is download quarterly reports and occasionally adjust a w-4 or add a new employee or inactivate a newly-former employee.
    2 points
  19. I have been lazy about looking for new software. but I think this is it.
    2 points
  20. Remembering that the LLC is only a state designation - I think this is your answer - to file single member Sch C - because essentially the other member doesn't exist since they are not a citizen, don't have ID #, and the LLC is ineffective. They could not have formed an S-corp anyway. Can't see personally how the LLC protects them anyway. Essentially, the person loaned some money. They should have just made a legal contract, not an LLC
    2 points
  21. Perhaps your client could contribute to an IRA, if eligible, and get out of paying back the APTC. You don't have to add back the IRA contribution to calculate Modified AGI. It won't take much of a contribution to get back to say 399% of MAGI. I've done this a few times and saved the client a lot of money. Grace
    2 points
  22. NYS imposes a personal income tax on a nonresident individual's taxable income that is derived from NY sources (Sec 601(e) NYS Tax Law). NY provides some guidance on how one can be exempted from paying nonresident taxes if you meet certain factors. See TSB-M-06(5)(I) at www.tax.ny.gov. See also "Huckaby v. NYS Division of Tax Appeals" wherein an individual was liable for taxes on 100% of the wages earned from a NY employer while working from his home in Tennessee. Looks like your client may have to file a NYS Non-Resident Return (IT-203) as well as a Resident return for the state she resides in. Grace
    2 points
  23. I always mark the box "lived in home for 12 months" in these situations and it solves the problem. Another issue may be one of phase out. Is that an issue?
    2 points
  24. Glad you like it. Your client might prefer that arrangement to risking fraud charges brought by the buyer for accepting funds without actually having the right to sell the property. Not to give legal advice, but if it was me, I would want a contract that spells out the contingency to the buyer so he informed and that funds plus interest will be refundable if the seller is unable to obtain proper title. This is a very stinky arrangement.
    2 points
  25. So, the 1098-T is reported on the parents' return when the student is their dependent, right? But, the 1099-Q is not reported on the parents' return?
    2 points
  26. I don't think that you need to worry about it as long as they are not your client. Hopefully, they kept a copy of it. I always show i the distribution on line 21 with another to 0 it out, if it's not taxable on the return with the SS#.
    2 points
  27. Also, if the parents have not exceeded the income limits for claiming AOTC, take a look at using some of the 529 distribution as *taxable* income in order to get the credit. And correct for basis (assuming parents funded the plan)! You can take a small income tax hit of a couple hundred bucks in trade for a larger credit.
    2 points
  28. Client is not going to be a happy camper. He will have to pay back the subsidy. Complete part 2 question 9 and 10 then enter only amounts in column f, nothing in a-e. Depending on his income his pay back may be capped at less than 100%.
    2 points
  29. If this is the only 1099Q, then you first deduct the scholarships and then the distributions. The remainder plus any books and eligible fees would be left for tuition credits or tuition deduction. You have to check out the cashier's transactions to see if it was all paid in 2016. I don't remember if you are using ATX or not, but it gets deducted on the education expense detail page for ATX.
    2 points
  30. Strike 1 - Late Strike 2 - Liar Strike 3 - Loser
    1 point
  31. I have 20 returns yet to do. 9 of them are corporations, 1 a decent size 990, and the other 10 moderately complicated 1040s. My extension list is at 66 and growing. Everything that comes in from here on out will be extended. We should be done completing returns and working on extensions by Tuesday. We are well positioned for the four day weekend I have been so looking forward to since January 2nd. The office will close at 6:00 p.m. on Thursday and re-open at 8:00 a.m. on Tuesday the 18th. And it will be blow and go for two weeks when we return to get the quarterly payroll reports done.
    1 point
  32. This company is a personnel management service that provides services to local medical providers. The client is an Illinois resident who only works in the local area. They should have taken Illinois withholding, but defaulted to NY on the records. No one noticed until the W-2 arrived. They have corrected the file, but she has to deal with the mix up on the 2016 return and for 2 months of 2017. I don't believe that the client would owe NY tax as this company simply vets the credentials of the employees for the local provider and handles payroll. Why is it that the highly skilled people pay the least attention to the pay stub?
    1 point
  33. The LLC is disregarded, so wouldn't your client just report an installment sale? He ought to change the LLC papers with whatever his State dept. who handles that stuff, but I wouldn't complicate it with a 1065.
    1 point
  34. They shouldn't have legally been able to form an LLC without each member having an SSN or ITIN. Also, the LLC couldn't elect S-corp with a foreign owner. That leaves partnership or disregarded entity. Were these two individuals married at the time of LLC formation? In general, H-W LLCs can elect to be a disregarded entity. I'll post a link to a topic that I remember on this subject from a while ago. Anyway, the question in my mind on this ultimately is this - If the ex-wife is not sharing in the profits, gains, deductions, and losses, is there really a partner relationship at all, or is this a disregarded entity to be reported solely on your client's return based on that fact alone? Is the installment sale the only reportable item or was the property rented prior to sale, are there other properties involved? Maybe you don't need this, but here is the link to the other topics:
    1 point
  35. thanks for the bleepity bleeps. that's what I was thinking.......
    1 point
  36. I filed a NY Non-resident return and zero out the NY income. Mine is a VA resident. We have done that for 2 years.
    1 point
  37. All my Ass estimated payment coupons are printing with 4/18 - and that makes sense. That *is* the first business day after the 15th. (Good grief - something about taxes making sense?!?! It can't be! -And it isn't. It's not the taxes that make sense; it's merely the calendar. Phew!)
    1 point
  38. One of my clients had several rental properties. One year her husband disappeared. When she filed for divorce, the court appointed a curator for him in absentia to deal with the property division.
    1 point
  39. Honestly, this is an old man and that gal will likely never be found. If she is found, who knows if she will agree to the sale? It's really sticky, and I too would want an contract with a contingency in case he never gains proper title.
    1 point
  40. I don't think you have to worry about it if the recipient isn't your client because that's whose return it would be reported on. The ones I've seen have had the funds paid out in the student's name so that it's reported to the student who then turns over the funds to parents that are paying the bill. Sometime if you are interested, Pub 970 explains the Coverdell and QTP payouts very nicely, and includes an example of how to reduce the qualify education expenses by any that were used by the parents in calculating any education credits claimed on their return. The QTP chapter was only about 4 or 5 pages that I easily followed that for the last one I did. Again though, I don't think you will be doing anything with the one you have if it is in someone else's name.
    1 point
  41. Household employees don't have a 941 filing so there might be a small penalty for late-filing a W-2. All the taxes (federal) are paid on Sch H with the 1040. However, there might be state tax and unemployment taxes that could have late-filing and late-paying penalties. In Mass., those tend to be about 1/2 of 1% of the tax due, per month, and therefore usually in the annoying but not hurtful category.
    1 point
  42. I use 4835 as I have sharecroppers. There's a line for Lime that I actually used one year. And, cash rent on E. I just do what my cousins tell me!
    1 point
  43. If your client is filing a farm return (sch F) I would put it on line 4a, Agricultural Program payments. And unless you have information that says otherwise, I would treat it as taxable income.
    1 point
  44. Having total control over what the macros do is a huge benefit. Drake is so flexible you can customize them to do whatever works best - either populate the form and return to the input screen or populate down to a certain point and then wait for input on the target screen. It's almost like having customizable "bunny hops" on steroids.
    1 point
  45. · "My client’s results are their personal responsibility"
    1 point
  46. I usually preface these situations by saying "this is the worst part of my job" and "please don't hate me, I'm just the messenger." A quick explanation so they understand and you're done. Showing compassion and understanding with their ranting and raving is good, as long as it is over quickly, you've got the next guy to listen to, unless it's wine per diem time, which you probably need.
    1 point
  47. My handiest one right now is the extension macro I wrote. Alt-F1 for Federal and Alt-F2 for state of NC. It checks the boxes and waits for my entry for the tax liability. I also set up Alt-W to go to the W-2 input screen & wait for entries, Alt-H to answer "Yes" to Healthcare coverage & then return to the input screen, and Alt-F for the default entry for foreign accounts & return to the input screen. . Another useful macro for me is one which populates local Goodwill address info on the 8283. I have a few others as well.
    1 point
  48. I have a sale of a rental property that generated a $70k gain, and he is trying every way to Tuesday to reduce his tax liability. I told him that most of my clients call me when they sell a rental so we know what is coming. I'm not crying over it. But I am ready to give a hug...
    1 point
  49. Yes, this requirement to purchase separate efiling for RITA, a city form really yanks my chain, too. I have figured out that I have to delete the efile part and can fill in the RITA manually and print. The clients (fortunately only 3) either mail in or take to the local tax office for filing. I despise the whole RITA concept as currently implemented anyway. Rental carryovers are generic and can't be tied to the specific location now. General city is the way to go, I think.
    1 point
  50. What if you tell it to delete the PRS? I never use the RITA form. I use the generic city for all cities.
    1 point
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