Month: August 2021

Big Mistake: Filing Your Tax Return Late

Three bad things happen when you file your tax return late.

What’s Late?

You can extend your tax return and file during the period of extension; that’s not a late-filed return.

The late-filed return is filed after the last extension expired. That’s what causes the three bad things to happen.

Bad Thing 1

The IRS notices that you filed late or not at all.

Of course, the “I didn’t file at all” people receive the IRS’s “come on down and bring your tax records” letter. In general, the meeting with the IRS about non-filed tax returns does not go well.

For the late filers, the big problem is exposure to an IRS audit. Say you’re in the group that the IRS audits about 3 percent of the time, but you file your tax return late. Your chances of an IRS audit increase significantly, perhaps to 50 percent or higher.

Simply stated, bad thing 1 is this: file late and increase your odds of saying: “Hello, IRS examiner.”

Bad Thing 2

When you file late, you trigger the big 5 percent a month, not to exceed 25 percent of the tax-due penalty.

Here, the bad news is 5 percent a month. The good news (if you want to call it that) is this penalty maxes out at 25 percent.

Bad Thing 3

Of course, if you owe the “failure to file” penalty, you likely also owe the penalty for “failure to pay.” The failure-to-pay penalty equals 0.5 percent a month, not to exceed 25 percent of the tax due.

The penalty for failure to pay offsets the penalty for failure to file such that the 5 percent is the maximum penalty during the first five months when both penalties apply. 

But once those five months are over, the penalty for failure to pay continues to apply. Thus, you can owe 47.5 percent of the tax due by not filing and not paying (25 percent plus 0.5 percent for the additional 45 months it takes to get to the maximum failure-to-pay penalty of 25 percent).

Don’t let the three bad things happen to you. If you want to discuss any of the bad things, please call me on my direct line at 408-778-9651.

Refresher: Principal Residence Game Exclusion Break

The $250,000 ($500,000, if married) home sale gain exclusion break is one of the great tax-saving opportunities.

Unmarried homeowners can potentially exclude gains up to $250,000, and married homeowners can potentially exclude up to $500,000. You as the seller need not complete any special tax form to take advantage. 

To take full advantage of the principal residence gain exclusion break, you must pass two tests: the ownership test and the use test.

  • To pass the ownership test, you must have owned the home for at least two years out of the five-year period ending on the sale date.
  • To pass the use test, you must have used the home as your principal residence for at least two years out of the five-year period ending on the sale date. 

Key point. These two tests are completely independent. In other words, periods of ownership and use need not overlap.

If you’re married and you and your spouse file your tax returns separately, you can potentially qualify for two separate $250,000 exclusions.

If you’re married and file jointly, you qualify for the $500,000 joint-filer exclusion if:

  • either you or your spouse pass the ownership test for the property and 
  • both you and your spouse pass the use test. 

When you file jointly, it’s possible for both you and your spouse to individually pass the ownership and use tests for two separate residences. In that case, you and your spouse would qualify for two separate $250,000 exclusions. 

Each spouse’s eligibility for the $250,000 exclusion is determined separately, as if you were unmarried. For this purpose, a spouse is considered to individually own a property for any period the property is actually owned by either spouse.

The other big qualification rule for the home sale gain exclusion privilege goes like this: the exclusion is generally available only when you have not excluded an earlier gain within the two-year period ending on the date of the later sale. In other words, you generally cannot recycle the gain exclusion privilege until two years have passed since you last used it. 

You can claim the larger $500,000 joint-filer exclusion only if neither you nor your spouse took advantage of it for an earlier sale within the two-year period. If one spouse claimed the exclusion within the two-year window, but the other spouse did not, the exclusion is limited to $250,000.

As you can see, there’s much to know about the home sale exclusion. If you would like to discuss how the exclusion would work for you, please call me on my direct line at 408-778-9651.

Know Why The Court Denied Losses On Four Of Six House Rentals

If you own rental properties that can provide you tax shelter with their losses and your Form 1040 adjusted gross income is less than $150,000 (without considering rental losses), you need to overcome the tax code passive loss rules.

Here are some important points.

Keep a time log. Make sure your time log proves you pass the

  1. more-than-half-your-work-time test,
  2. more-than-750-hours test, and
  3. material participation tests for each of the properties, or group, if you elected to group them.

Tax law contains seven possible material participation tests. You materially participate in a property if you pass any one of the seven tests. But realistically, it’s likely you have only two of the seven tests that apply, as follows:

  1. You (and your spouse, if married) materially participate in a rental if you perform substantially all the work on the rental.
  2. If others participate in the rental, you (and your spouse, if married) materially participate if (a) you participate in the rental 100 hours or more and (b) no other individual participates more than you.

Consider this example. You rent out a single-family home. You hire a gardener who comes weekly to mow the lawn and take care of the landscaping.

To materially participate in this rental

  • you must materially participate for 100 hours or more, and
  • that must be more than the gardener spends working on this rental home.

Do you have proof? You need proof of not only your work time but the work time of your gardener.

If you would like to discuss your rental properties, please call me on my direct line at 408-778-9651.

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