09/27/2021
As the fourth quarter of 2021 approaches we begin to prepare ourselves for the annual ritual of filing our tax returns!
Okay, maybe YOU arenât thinking about it, but I am. The past two tax filing seasons have presented challenges due to all of the changes made in the tax code, Unemployment Compensation being taxable until it wasnât, unless you made too much. Unemployment Income causing the Advanced Payment for ACA insurance to trigger a re-payment until at the end of March the congress decided, OOOPS! We didnât mean for that to happen, IRS will correct the tax refund accordingly. Reconciling two stimulus payments which werenât taxable but were limited if you made too much based on your 2019 income, but if your income was reduced in 2020 over 2019 you could claim the stimulus that you didnât get based on your 2019 adjusted gross income as a credit on your 2020 tax return. (Got all that)?
Well, there is a third stimulus payment in 2021 which will have to be reconciled on your 2021 tax return. In addition, taxpayers with dependent children have started getting the Advance Child Tax Credit as a monthly payment based on the 2020 tax return. Those payments will also have to be reconciled so that the correct figures can be calculated on the tax return. And it remains to be seen what the 535 congress critters will do to the tax code in the next quarter or even beyond, in arrearsâŚ
If the proper figures are not reported on the tax return the IRS will use the amounts that they have and send the taxpayer(s) a letter explaining that the amounts reported on the tax return donât match their figures and adjusting the refund accordingly. Then the taxpayer(s) call me and ask what the???
Since the Advance Child Tax Credit depends on the age of the child and dependent status, and some families alternate dependency due to divorce, I predict that 2021 will be even more challenging based on the possibility that the IRS will be sending the advanced payments to the wrong parent based on the 2020 tax return. This may cause a refund to turn into a tax due situation. I do not know if the IRS is able to consider those with alternating years for dependents. (If you are in this situation and you havenât filed form 8332 â Release of Child Exemption, you may want to consider doing so).
So, I have a suggestion for everyone out there, but especially for those with dependent children. The IRS has created a personal portal where you can view your tax history including the amounts for each of the stimulus payments, child tax credit as well as to review your tax history. You can register for your own personal account at irs.gov and be able to see all of the pertinent information. They ask some personal questions based on the last tax return you filed to verify your identity and you create your own user name and password. You will also see if there are any surprises out there and also be able to see the status of your current tax return once the IRS has received it.
We will be asking for the dollar amounts received for the third stimulus payment as well as the Advance Child Tax Credit amounts received, accurate figures will make filing an accurate tax return much easier and prevent the dreaded letter from the IRS.
If you have any questions, please feel free to contact us.