“The IRS is taking a number of steps to ensure taxpayers have the correct information on these deductions when they prepare and file their tax returns,” IRS Commissioner Mark W. Everson said in a prepared statement. Although the 2007 filing season will begin on time, the IRS will not be able to process a small percentage of individual tax returns until early February due to recent changes in the law involving deductions for state and local sales tax, higher education tuition and fees and educator expenses. Based on filings earlier this year, only about 930,000 tax returns claimed any of the three extenders provisions by February 1. The sales tax deduction was claimed on approximately 11.2. million tax returns filed in 2006 for Tax Year 2005. The tuition deduction was claimed on about 4.7 million returns and the educator expense deduction was claimed on 3.5 million returns. The IRS expects to receive about 136 million tax returns this year. January is the slowest part of the filing season for the IRS, with less than 6 percent of all individual returns coming in during the agency’s first two weeks of processing. Typically, early returns are from taxpayers with simpler refund returns who do not claim the extender provisions. The IRS urges taxpayers to e-file rather than submitting paper forms in order to minimize the confusion over late changes and reduce the chances of making extender-related errors on their returns. “As we always do, we encourage taxpayers who think they may claim these deductions to file electronically,” Everson explained. “They will get their refunds faster through e-file. Even more importantly, e-file will greatly reduce the chances for making an error compared to claiming the deductions on the paper 1040.” Form 1040 Changes The IRS also announced details on how taxpayers can use existing lines on the current Form 1040 and other tax documents to claim the three major extenders provisions. The key forms (Forms 1040, 1040A, Schedule A & B, and instructions) went to print in early November and reflected the law in effect at the time. The instructions contain a cautionary note to taxpayers that the legislation was pending at the time of printing. The majority of taxpayers file electronically, but taxpayers using a paper Form 1040 will have to follow special instructions if they are claiming any of the three deductions. Form 1040 will not be updated. Taxpayers should follow the following steps when claiming deduction under the extender provisions. State and Local General Sales Tax Deductions:
Higher Education Tuition and Fees Deduction:
Educator Expense Adjustment to Income:
AccountingWEB.com Dec-28-2006 Categories: Accounting (General), IRS, Taxation, Legislation Times read: 2824
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