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Thursday, November 1, 2007

WILL I GET AUDITED ?

It's the dread of every US taxpayer - the IRS audit. Most of citizens only have a vague idea of what an audit is and how to prepare for it. Everyone has heard nightmarish stories of audits - lost receipts, probing questions about deductions taken years ago, and, the worst, owing huge sums of back taxes. The audit has been called the financial equivalent of a rectal examine.

The odds of being audited by the Internal Revenue Service are really quite slim. Of 131 million returns received by the IRS for the 12 month period ending October 2005, only 1,216 were audited. But it's a perpetual possibility for which everyone must be prepared.

Many taxpayers take the standard deductions and will never have to worry with the years of old receipts and financial records from the past. In fact if the IRS decides to take a look at the tax history of a citizen who has only taken standard deductions, chances are she will never know that she was investigated. The IRS agents will simply look at her past returns, see that she took the standard deductions, and move on to the next taxpayer.

But anyone that claims deductions beyond the standard deductions should be prepared to defend their tax return. Self-employed worker, small business owners, anyone claiming investment losses or virtually any other financial circumstance beyond the usual salary minus standard deduction scenario should be prepared.
Taking deductions or claiming that certain expenditures are business expenses reduce the total taxes owed. The IRS expects make taxpayers to make such claims. Deciding what is a legitimate deduction or business expense is left largely up to the taxpayer and her advisors. Deciding whether to accept them is up to the IRS and, in the case of an audit, the auditing agent. Therefore surviving an audit depends on being prepared to defend the deductions taken.

Good record keeping is the key to being prepared. Save all receipts and keep them in an orderly way so that if an audit ever happens locating them will be easy. Keep records of all transactions that affect each year's taxes - both income and deductions. Make sure that all transactions are clear, traceable and can be explained. Maintaining honest and straightforward financial records will offer most taxpayers the ability to survive an audit.

1 comment:

MK said...

Worry free. Fight like a pro if you are audited. Ask your tax questions on TaxGuruHelp.com and get free opinions from thousands of tax gurus like CPA's, Attorneys & Strategic tax planners having wide range of experience.

 
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