Tax Preparer Guide to 1040 Flashcards
Earned Income
Income from the performance of personal services. Examples include salary and wages, earnings from self-employment, tips, and taxable scholarships and grants.
Unearned Income
is income from investments and other sources not involving personal services. Examples include taxable interest, ordinary dividends, capital gain distributions, unemployment benefits, taxable social security benefits, pensions and annuities, and distributions of unearned income from trusts.
Form 5329
Additional Taxes on Qualified Plans (including IRAs) and Other Tax-Favored Accounts - If the only reason for filing a return is to report the additional tax on IRAs or other tax-favored accounts, a taxpayer can file form 5329 by itself. No income tax return needs to be filed.
Dependent
is an individual whose exemption may be claimed on another person’s income tax return. Filing thresholds for dependents are different from the usual filing thresholds.
When is the filing deadline? And when is the date extended?
The income tax return is due by the fifteenth day of the fourth month after the close of the tax year, which is April 15. However, this date is extended if April 15 falls on a weekend or national holiday. Emancipation Day is a holiday in Washington D.C that is usually observed on April 16, and this occasionally extends the filing deadline.
Who is allowed an automatic two month extension from the filing deadline?
U,S citizens and resident aliens are allowed an automatic two-month extension of time to file if they are living outside of the United States or Puerto Rico on the ordinary due date for the filing the tax return and either 1. their main place of business is outside the United States or Puerto Rico, or 2. they are on duty on military or naval service outside of the United States or Puerto Rico.
Form 4868
Application for Automatic Extension of Time to File U.S Individual Income Tax Return - If for any reason, a taxpayer cannot meet the filing deadline, he or she must make an extension request by the filing deadline. This request provides an automatic six-month extension. Thus, anyone who timely requests an extension will not be penalized if their return is filed by October 15. The date is extended if it falls on a weekend.
Penalty for Late Payment
The late payment penalty is usually half of 1% (0.005) of the tax not paid by the due date. It is charged for each month or part of a month that the tax is unpaid; the maximum penalty is 25%.
Penalty for Late Filing
A late filing penalty can apply if the return is not filed on time (postmarked or e-filed by midnight of the filing deadline) and no filing extension is obtained. The penalty is usually 5% of the amount due for each month or part of a month that return is late. The maximum penalty is 25%, If the return is more than 60 days late, the minimum penalty is $135.
Whats is the difference between the 1040 and the 1040-SR forms?
You can only use Form 1040-SR if you were born before January 2, 1955. … * The only differences on page 1 of the two forms is that Form 1040-SR has bigger print, bigger spaces for the information and numbers that senior taxpayers must enter, and a more easily-decoded standard deduction table with bigger print.
Form 1040X
Form 1040-X is issued by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) to taxpayers who need to amend their tax returns for any reason. A 1040-X form is necessary for an amended tax return that will change tax calculations, such as changes to filing status, number of dependents, or corrections to income credits or deductions.
Form 1040
is the most comprehensive return. It must be used for anyone who itemizes deductions, reports business income, or has income, deductions, credits, and other taxes not allowed to be reported on either of the other tax return options.
Filing status: Single
The taxpayer's filing status is single if, on the last day of the tax year, the taxpayer was unmarried, widowed, divorced, or legally separated from his or her spouse and does not qualify for another filing status. A widow(er) is single if the spouse died prior to the current tax year and he or she does not qualify to file under the head of household or qualifying widow(er) status rules.
Married Filing Jointly
is the filing status used by most couples. A married couple can file a joint income tax return if they both agree to do so. This means that a couple’s combined income and combined deductions are taken into account in figuring the couple’s combined tax liability. A married couple can file jointly even if one spouse has no income.
Married Filing Separately
is the filing status with the least favorable tax rules.
What are the advantages of filing married separately?
- To avoid joint and several tax liability on the joint return. Each spouse is “jointly and severally liable” for the tax on the joint return, which means the IRS can look to either spouse for the full amount owed on the joint return, regardless of which spouse is responsible for the income or any omissions on the return.
- To save the couple income taxes (in special situations). For example, if one spouse has lower income and higher medical deductions, casualty or theft losses, and/or miscellaneous itemized deductions, filing separately allows for greater deductions because these three itemized deductions all have income threshold that must be exceeded. The income threshold is easier to meet for the taxpayer with lower income.
Community Property laws
Community property law requires that a divorcing couple split their assets 50/50, but only assets acquired while they were domiciled in the state.
Property owned by either spouse prior to the marriage or after the legal separation may not be considered or divided as community property.
Only nine states are classified as community property states, but state laws vary; some lean more toward the community property standard, and others abide by a common law standard.
Head of Household
is a filing status that is more beneficial in many ways than the single status. As head of household, a taxpayer may use tax rates that are better than those for single or married persons filing separate returns, and the standard deduction is higher.
What are the three conditions a taxpayer must meet to qualify as a head of household?
- Unmarried or considered unmarried - a taxpayer must be unmarried on the last day of the tax year.
- Cost of keeping up the home - the taxpayer must pay more than half the cost of keeping up a home for the entire year.
- Qualifying person - taxpayer must have a qualifying person who lived in the home for more than half the year.
Qualifying Widow(er) with a Dependent Child
Use the same tax rates and standard deduction amount as those who are married filing jointly. This filing status applies only to the two years following the year of a spouse’s death; it cannot be used for more than two years.
Legal Marriage
A marriage that is recognized by state law is usually recognized as a legal marriage for federal income tax purposes. Also marriages performed outside the United States are usually recognized as legal marriages for federal income tax purposes.