Category: Blog
Today, the Internal Revenue Service, the U.S. Department of the Treasury and the Bureau of the Fiscal Service announced they are disbursing several million more payments in the third batch of Economic Impact Payments from the American Rescue Plan. This brings the total disbursed so far to more than 130 million payments worth approximately $335 billion.
As announced on March 12, Economic Impact Payments continue to roll out in batches to millions of Americans. The third...
IRS projects stimulus payments to non-filer Social Security and other federal beneficiaries will be disbursed later this week
As work continues on issuing millions of Economic Impact Payments to Americans, the Internal Revenue Service and Treasury Department announced today that they anticipate payments will begin to be issued this weekend to Social Security recipients and other federal beneficiaries who do not normally file a tax return, with the projection that the majority of these payments would be sent electronically and received on April 7.
After receiving data from the Social Security Administration...
Emergency aid granted to students due to COVID are not taxable
The Internal Revenue Service issued frequently asked questions today on how students and higher education institutions should report pandemic-related emergency financial aid grants.
StudentsEmergency financial aid grants made by a federal agency, state, Indian tribe, higher education institution or scholarship-granting organization (including a tribal organization) to a student because of an event related to the COVID-19 pandemic are not included in the student’s gross income.
Also,...
IRS extends additional tax deadlines for individuals to May 17
The Internal Revenue Service today announced that individuals have until May 17, 2021 to meet certain deadlines that would normally fall on April 15, such as making IRA contributions and filing certain claims for refund.
This follows a previous announcement from the IRS on March 17, that the federal income tax filing due date for individuals for the 2020 tax year was extended from April 15, 2021, to May 17, 2021. Notice 2021-21 provides details...
IRS to recalculate taxes on unemployment benefits; refunds to start in May
To help taxpayers, the Internal Revenue Service announced today that it will take steps to automatically refund money this spring and summer to people who filed their tax return reporting unemployment compensation before the recent changes made by the American Rescue Plan.
The legislation, signed on March 11, allows taxpayers who earned less than $150,000 in modified adjusted gross income to exclude unemployment compensation up to $20,400 if married filing jointly and $10,200...
Deducting Disaster Losses for Individuals
We seem to be living in an age of natural disasters. Floods, fires, hurricanes, tornados, and other disasters often dominate the news.
If a disaster strikes you, the tax law may help.
You may qualify to deduct a tax code-defined disaster loss from your taxable income. The rules for personal losses are complex and far more restrictive than for business losses.
Only Casualty Losses Are Deductible
Damage to personal property caused by a disaster is deductible only if it qualifies as...
Update: COVID-19 Tax Relief Measures after the New Law
The Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act (CARES Act) made many temporary changes in the tax law. The new Consolidated Appropriations Act (CAA) adjusted some of these and left others to die on December 31, 2020.
With all the changes that took place in 2020, I thought you would like to be informed of the following insights.
Borrow $100,000 from Your IRA and Pay It Back within Three Years with No Tax Consequences
Thanks to the CARES Act, IRA owners who were adversely affected...
Business Tax Breaks Thanks to the Recently Enacted CAA
When you operate a business, you have a variety of tax breaks available.
The recently enacted Consolidated Appropriations Act extends and expands some of the breaks. We bring the following selection of them to your attention as a tax-strategy buffet.
You can deduct 100 percent of your dine-in and take-out business meals that are provided by restaurants in 2021 and 2022.For hiring members of 10 targeted groups, you can obtain the work opportunity tax credit for first-year wages through 2025.You...
Deducting Business Casualty Losses: You Don’t Need a Disaster
Disasters such as storms, fires, floods, and hurricanes damage or destroy property.
If property such as an office building, rental property, business vehicle, or business furniture is damaged or destroyed in a disaster, your business may qualify for a casualty loss deduction.
It’s easier to deduct business casualty losses than personal losses, but the rules are complex.
What Casualty Losses Are Deductible
Disasters such as fires and floods can result in a “casualty” because the damage,...
QBI Update: Impact of Negative QBI and Previously Suspended Losses
For 2018-2025, you (and estates and trusts) can use your qualified business income (QBI) to create the 20 percent deduction under Section 199A.
While federal income tax losses from business activities are usually beneficial, losses from pass-through business entities can have the adverse side effect of reducing allowable QBI deductions for pass-through business entity owners—such as you.
In this context, pass-through entities are defined as sole proprietorships, single-member (one owner)...