Truck Drivers & Industry – IRS Tax Levy Garnishments – Tax Relief – Former IRS


 

Truck Drivers & Industry – IRS Tax Levy Garnishments – Tax Relief – Former IRS    1-866-700-1040

 
If you have just received an IRS Tax Levy on your Bank Account or to your Employer, call us today to get fast, affordable and immediate IRS tax Levy relief.
We are comprised of tax attorneys, Certified Public Accountants , and former IRS agents.
We have over 60 years with the Internal Revenue Service and the local, district, and regional tax offices of the Internal Revenue Service.
We know the exact formats and protocols to get an IRS tax Levy garnishment released and get your cased closed off the IRS enforcement computer.
 

What will be needed to get a Release of an IRS Tax Levy garnishment

Believe it or not,  IRS does not want to levy your bank account or levy your employer. IRS does this because taxpayers have failed to respond to the IRS final notice of seizure that was sent to the taxpayer’s last known address.
Because of this the CADE 2 computer system of the IRS automatically and systematically sends out an IRS tax Levy to your last known employer or to your last known bank account.
To get your Tax Levy Garnishment released IRS will need a current financial statement along with all documentation to support the numbers reflected on that financial statement. IRS will use the form 433-f to verify your assets, income, and expenses.
After IRS carefully reviews your current financial statement and documentation IRS will place you in one of three categories
The three categories  for Tax Relief are:
1. IRS will place you into an economic hardship,
2. IRS will ask for installment repayment arrangement from you,
3. IRS will advise you that you are an offer in compromise candidate which is also known as an IRS tax debt settlements.
 

Tips for IRS Tax Levy Garnishment Releases

1.Have a 433 F filled out and ready to go,(find on our website )
2. Have all documentation on financial statement ready to fax to the IRS,
3. Make sure all your tax returns are filed.
Due to the new fresh start tax initiative set forth by Internal Revenue Service IRS has made tax settlements much easier.

Offers in Compromise or Tax Debt Settlements

 
The IRS is also expanding a new streamlined Offer in Compromise (OIC) program to cover a larger group of struggling taxpayers.
This streamlined OIC is being expanded to allow taxpayers with annual incomes up to $100,000 to participate.
In addition, participants must have tax liability of less than $50,000, doubling the current limit of $25,000 or less.
OICs are subject to acceptance based on legal requirements.
An offer-in-compromise is an agreement between a taxpayer and the IRS that settles the taxpayer’s tax liabilities for less than the full amount owed.
Generally, an offer will not be accepted if the IRS believes that the liability can be paid in full as a lump sum or through a payment agreement. The IRS looks at the taxpayer’s income and assets to make a determination regarding the taxpayer’s ability to pay.
See our website for more details on IRS Tax Settlements or call us today for more details.
 
Truck Drivers & Industry – IRS Tax Levy Garnishments – Tax Relief – Former IRS
 
 

Truck Driver – Owe Back IRS Taxes – IRS Tax Levy, Tax Lien Relief

 

Truck Driver – Owe Back IRS Taxes – IRS Tax Levy, Tax Lien Relief      1-866-700-1040

 
 
Let former IRS Agents settle your tax case and get IRS Tax Levies and Tax Liens Released.
Do not let the IRS have you by the short hairs, fight back with Former IRS agents and managers. IRS loves to bully taxpayers but we will have none of that.
We know exactly how to fight back and win.
We have a combined 60 years of direct work experience in the local, district, and regional tax offices of the Internal Revenue Service. If you owe back IRS taxes or the IRS has already sent out an IRS tax levy or tax lien call us today and we will tell you exactly what you need to do to stop IRS right in their tracks.
Taxpayers have various tax options that are available to them but have no idea how to put them into play. Due to our vast experience with the Internal Revenue Service we can offer go fast and immediate tax results so you can get your life back in order and stop worrying.
Call us today for free initial tax consultation. We will give you the information you need to give you peace of mind.
 

The IRS Tax Levy

 
If the IRS has sent out a tax levy we will contact them with a power of attorney,  secure a financial statement from you and get your tax levy released as well as work out an IRS tax settlement.
IRS will require an exit strategy to take you off the IRS enforcement computer. With that said, the IRS for either put your case into an economic tax hardship, enter you into a payment plan, or let you know that you could potentially qualify for IRS tax debt settlement or offer in compromise.
Because of the new IRS fresh start program or fresh start initiative there are many available tax options available to you.
Since each case is unique we will review your tax options and give you the best course of action to take with the IRS.
 

What is a IRS Tax Levy

 
A levy is a legal seizure of your property to satisfy a tax debt. Levies are different from liens. A lien is a claim used as security for the tax debt, while a levy actually takes the property to satisfy the tax debt.
If you do not pay your taxes (or make arrangements to settle your debt), the IRS may seize and sell any type of real or personal property that you own or have an interest in.
IRS can and will:
1.   seize and sell property that you hold (such as your car, boat, or house), or
2.  could levy property that is yours but is held by someone else (such as your wages, retirement accounts, dividends, bank accounts, licenses, rental income, accounts receivables, the cash loan value of your life insurance, or commissions).
 

IRS can only  levy only after these three requirements are met:

1.   IRS  assessed the tax and sent you a Notice and Demand for Payment;
2.   You neglected or refused to pay the tax; and
3.   IRS sent you a Final Notice of Intent to Levy and Notice of Your Right to A Hearing (levy notice) at least 30 days before the levy.
IRS may give you this notice in person, leave it at your home or your usual place of business, or send it to your last known address by certified or registered mail, return receipt requested.
 

 Form 2290 Excise tax

Use Form 2290 to:
a. Figure and pay the tax due on highway motor vehicles used during the period with a taxable gross weight of 55,000 pounds or more.
b. Figure and pay the tax due on a vehicle for which you completed the suspension statement on another Form 2290 if that vehicle later exceeded the mileage use limit during the period.
c. Figure and pay the tax due if, during the period, the taxable gross weight of a vehicle increases and the vehicle falls into a new category.
d. Claim suspension from the tax when a vehicle is expected to be used 5,000 miles or less (7,500 miles or less for agricultural vehicles) during the period.
Claim a credit for tax paid on vehicles that were destroyed, stolen, sold, or used 5,000 miles or less (7,500 miles or less for agricultural vehicles).
e. Report acquisition of a used taxable vehicle for which the tax has been suspended.
f. Figure and pay the tax due on a used taxable vehicle acquired and used during the period.
 

Use Schedule 1 (Form 2290):

1. To report all vehicles for which you are reporting tax (including an increase in taxable gross weight) and those that you are reporting suspension of the tax by category and vehicle identification number (VIN).
As proof of payment to register your vehicle(s) (unless specifically exempted) in any state. 2. Use the Schedule 1 returned to you by the IRS for this purpose. You will get Schedule 1 returned to you almost immediately if you e-file.
 
Truck Driver – Owe Back IRS Taxes – IRS Tax Levy, Tax Lien Relief

Trucker Drivers – Tax Preparation, Back Tax Returns – Tax Settlements

Trucker Drivers – Tax Preparation, Back Tax Returns – Tax Settlements   1-866-700-1040

 
We are former IRS agents, managers, and instructors who are experts in the trucking industry.
We have prepared hundreds of returns for both truck drivers and those in the industry and can assure and guarantee to you that you will pay the lowest amount allowed by law.
Being former IRS agents and managers we know all available tax deductions and loopholes to make sure you’re paying only your fair share.
 

Back  or Unfiled Tax Returns

If you have not filed your back tax returns we can file all back years whether you have records or have lost your records. We are experts in IRS tax reconstruction. We can easily get you back into the IRS system to not be worried if you have multiple back years of tax returns you have the file.
Because we have prepared so many tax returns for truck drivers and those in the industries we have good idea of what the percentages and standards are for everyone in this field.
 

Business Travel Expenses

Travel expenses are the ordinary and necessary expenses of traveling away from home for your business, profession, or job.
Generally, employees deduct these expenses using Form 2106 (PDF) or Form 2106-EZ (PDF) and on Form 1040, Schedule A (PDF).
You cannot deduct expenses that are lavish or extravagant or that are for personal purposes.
You are traveling away from home if your duties require you to be away from the general area of your tax home for a period substantially longer than an ordinary day’s work, and you need to get sleep or rest to meet the demands of your work while away.
Generally, your tax home is the entire city or general area where your main place of business or work is located, regardless of where you maintain your family home.
An example
For example, you live with your family in Chicago but work in Milwaukee where you stay in a hotel and eat in restaurants. You return to Chicago every weekend. You may not deduct any of your travel, meals, or lodging in Milwaukee because that is your tax home. Your travel on weekends to your family home in Chicago is not for your work, so these expenses are also not deductible.
If you regularly work in more than one place, your tax home is the general area where your main place of business or work is located.
In determining your main place of business, take into account the length of time you are normally required to spend at each location for business purposes, the degree of business activity in each area, and the relative significance of the financial return from each area. However, the most important consideration is the length of time spent at each location.
Travel expenses paid or incurred in connection with a temporary work assignment away from home are deductible. However, travel expenses paid in connection with an indefinite work assignment are not deductible.
Any work assignment in excess of one year is considered indefinite.
Also, you may not deduct travel expenses at a work location if it is realistically expected that you will work there for more than one year, whether or not you actually work there that long.
If you realistically expect to work at a temporary location for one year or less, and the expectation changes so that at some point you realistically expect to work there for more than one year, travel expenses become nondeductible when your expectation changes.
You may deduct travel expenses, including meals and lodging, you had in looking for a new job in your present trade or business. You may not deduct these expenses if you had them while looking for work in a new trade or business or while looking for work for the first time.
If you are unemployed and there is a substantial break between the time of your past work and your looking for new work, you may not deduct these expenses, even if the new work is in the same trade or business as your previous work.
Travel expenses for conventions are deductible if you can show that your attendance benefits your trade or business.
Special rules apply to conventions held outside the North American area.
Deductible travel expenses while away from home include, but are not limited to, the costs of:
a. Travel by airplane, train, bus, or car between your home and your business destination. (If you are provided with a ticket or you are riding free as a result of a frequent traveler or similar program, your cost is zero.)
b. Using your car while at your business destination. You can deduct actual expenses or the standard mileage rate, as well as business-related tolls and parking fees. If you rent a car, you can deduct only the business-use portion for the expenses.
c. Fares for taxis or other types of transportation between the airport or train station and your hotel, the hotel and the work location, and from one customer to another, or from one place of business to another.
d. Meals and lodging.
e. Tips you pay for services related to any of these expenses.
f. Dry cleaning and laundry.
g. Business calls while on your business trip (This includes business communications by fax machine or other communication devices).
h. Other similar ordinary and necessary expenses related to your business travel (These expenses might include transportation to and from a business meal, public stenographer’s fees, computer rental fees, and operating and maintaining a house trailer).
i. Shipping of baggage, and sample or display material between your regular and temporary work locations.
Instead of keeping records of your meal expenses and deducting the actual cost, you can generally use a standard meal allowance, which varies depending on where you travel.
 
The Trucker Drivers – Tax Preparation, Back Tax Returns – Tax Settlements
 

Trucker Drivers Industry – IRS Tax Audit Specialist, Former IRS


 

Trucker Drivers Industry – IRS Tax Audit Specialist, Former IRS    1-866-700-1040

 
We are IRS Tax Experts for the Trucking Industry.
We have over 60 years of working directly for the Internal Revenue Service and the local, district, and regional offices of the Internal Revenue Service.
 
As former IRS agents we audited  hundreds and hundreds  of tax returns and only make sense that we know every tax defense possible.
 
If you are about to undergo an IRS tax audit or an IRS tax examination contact us today for a free tax consultation and see how we can best serve your need. Not only have we worked as former IRS agents we also have been managers, instructors and also on staff IRS appeals agents.
To find out about the IRS trucking industry overview click on the link below.
This link will be a more comprehensive and exhaustive look about the way IRS trucking industry overview works within the IRS format.
http://www.irs.gov/Businesses/Trucking-Industry-Overview—Complete-Version


Accounting Principles Observed by the IRS

The link between financial accounting and tax accounting is the Schedule M-1 of the Corporate Income Tax Return, Form 1120. Examples of M-1 adjustments that should be reviewed due to differences between financial and tax accounting include:
1. Abandonment’s
2. Accrued Rent paid to greater than 50 percent stockholder
3. Accrued Wages, Bonus and Vacation Pay of greater than 50 percent stockholder
4. Depreciation variances
5. Indirect and Direct Costs Capitalized (IRC Section 263A)
Insurance,
6. Officers Life Insurance-Increase in Cash Surrender Value
7. Self Insurance Reserve
8. Interest Expense Capitalized, (IRC Section 263A)
9. Inventory and Parts Write downs
10. Lease of Equipment (Lease vs Depreciation)
11. Lobbying (Dues to organizations that lobby)
12. Meals expense 50 percent reduction
13. Penalties and Traffic Citations
14. Prepaid/accelerated expenses
15. Tires on new tractors and trailers (deducted for tax, capitalized for book)
16. Write downs of Asset Values
17. Industry Operating Procedures
 
You do not want to be unrepresented for IRS tax audit if you are in the truck driving industry. Contact us today for free tax consultation.
 

General information regarding to truck drivers industry

The  Trucking Industry is pervasive.
It serves as the carrier of choice for most small businesses, especially the very small firms, who rely on package express carriers to meet their transportation and logistics needs.
By revenue, food and food products, lumber or wood products, as well as petroleum or coal account for 34.8 percent of truck traffic. By volume, clay, glass, concrete and stone, farm products, as well as petroleum and coal account for 35.6 percent of truck traffic. Trucking’s customer focus has played a key role in helping to create the logistics revolution of the past decade.
Although the popular image of the industry is the tractor-semi-trailer hauling goods long distances over the Interstate highways, this image is not reality for two reasons.
First.
Truck equipment is diverse, dominated by smaller vehicles and a wide variety of equipment types.
Second.
The bulk of trucking operations is local.
Fact
About 66 percent of truck tonnage moves distances of 100 miles or less. Local and regional hauls account for almost half of all truck revenues and are the dominant arrangement for private carriers.
Contract Carriers.
Enter into a bilateral agreement with the shipper or consignee for transportation services. The contract defines the services to be provided, the commodities transported, the projected tonnage and the rates charged.
Contracts are to contain a specific termination date, not exceeding one year.
The contract can be renewed by amendment. The contract carrier can offer freight rates that are lower than a common carrier’s published tariff since the rate will be based on the projected tonnage of freight for the year.
Private Carriers.
Are corporations who run their own truck fleets to better coordinate their manufacturing processes or better serve their customers and distributors.
These firms have decided that it is better to provide their own services rather than use the services of for-hire motor carriers.
Local and regional hauls account for almost half of all truck revenues and are the dominant arrangement for private carriers. Most of their operations are moves of less than 100 miles.
This industry segment’s average length of haul is 51 miles.
Interstate For-Hire, Common Carriers .
Are companies who provide transportation services to the general public. A common carrier must obtain licensing and publish rates through the Surface Transportation Board and the PUC.
For-hires travel much farther distances than their private counterparts, with their minimum hauls being from 200 miles to 1,500 miles or more per trip.
The average trip is 1300 miles.
Distance varies based on the state, territory, or possession being served. A single driver can drive 450 to 500 miles per day. Team or relay driving can go farther in a 24-hour period. Dedicated service can move goods cross-country by the third morning.
More normal times are 4- 7 days.
A common carrier may be referred to as the prime carrier.
A Prime Carrier.
Is the principal or overlying common carrier. The prime carrier enters into a contract with a shipper to provide transportation services, but in turn, engages the services of another authorized common carrier or independent contractor (sub-hauler) to perform the transportation service.
They offer service either on a truckload (TL) or on a less-than-truckload (LTL) basis.
Truckload (TL).
Means the goods of only one customer are being carried on the vehicle. There generally are low start up costs associated with these operations because the truck equipment is the primary expense.
Less-than-truckload (LTL).
Means a vehicle is carrying the goods of many customers. This service has much higher start up costs because in addition to equipment costs, assembly and distribution facilities must be created to consolidate and then distribute the freight.
Inter-modal refers to the use of various forms of transportation (ships, trains, planes and trucks) used to move goods from other countries to the United States and across the continent.
In the 1980’s, trucks spearheaded the just-in-time revolution. It was motor carriers and shippers who were the first to experiment with set times for pick up and delivery so that less inventory was needed in the overall production process. In essence, their actions began integrating transportation into manufacturing and distribution as another business process.
Motor carriers face competition from airfreight for high value commodities and from railroads for lower value goods.
On high value goods, the competition pits traditional airfreight services against package express or courier services as well as expedited carriers. Because transportation costs are a small portion of the purchase price of these goods, firms are willing to pay premium rates. In this segment of the industry, delivery is predicated upon strict time and service requirements.
Air freight has an average value of $26 per pound and package express $15 per pound, while trucking’s general average shipment value is 35 cents per pound. Here carriers compete for commodities like computers and related goods, fresh flowers and foods, as well as letters and business documents.
On lower value goods, trucks share a dual nature relationship with railroads. They cooperate in providing inter-modal services. They also compete to capture market share on goods like automobiles and auto parts, food and kindred products, and inter-modal shipments. Weight and distance affect this competition.
In general, under 100 miles, competition occurs only on shipments weighing more than 60,000 pounds.
At 100-300 miles, competition occurs on shipments weigh between 60,000 and 90,000 pounds.
At 300 -500 miles, competition occurs on shipments that weigh between 30,000 and 90,000 pounds.
At 500 miles or more, commodities weigh between 10,000 and 60,000 pounds.
It should be noted that shipments in excess of 50,000 normally require a special permit to operate configured as a single load. The heaviest single trucks usually serve this part of the market or longer combination vehicles that run under more tightly controlled conditions than general trucking.
Because of these vehicles’ ability to compete with railroads, the rail industry is keenly interested in assuring that the current competitive market environment is maintained.
For trips under 100 miles, it is private carriers who are providing the competition. For trips over 100 miles, it is the for-hire motor carriers who are doing so.
Exception.
The only exception is for loads weighing between 30,000 and 60,000 pounds moving between 100-200 miles. Here, private trucking seems to be the carrier of choice.
Trucking and Railroads
The reason competition is so fierce between trucking and railroads is that while these goods are not the highest value freight for the trucking industry; they are high return for the railroad industry. Railroads see the returns made from these shipments, as well as those made from inter-modal shipments, as key to maintaining their profitability.
The relationship between railroads and truck lines is the most complicated of the modes of transportation because trucks have the ability to both generate freight for the railroads and take it away from them.
Railroads and trucks are business partners in providing inter-modal services. Trucks provide the short haul connections between the firm sending the freight and the railroad as well between the railroad and the customer receiving the freight. Trains provide the long haul service between origin and destination.
When trucks and trains compete, they compete for types of traffic, mostly the goods which give the railroads their higher profit margins – inter-modal, transportation equipment (automobiles – finished products as well as assembly supplies), chemicals, and food products. Inter-modal freight is subject to competition from long distance trucking companies.
As a result, even when there is a rail/truck business relationship with one motor carrier for an inter-modal move, there is a competitive tension with other long distance truckers seeking to capture the same business.
 
Trucker Drivers Industry – IRS Tax Audit Specialist, Former IRS

Trucker Drivers, IRS Tax Problem Help – File, Settlements, Tax Levy Relief

 

 

Trucker Drivers, IRS Tax Problem Help – File, Settlements, Tax Levy Relief   1-866-700-1040

 
Use Former IRS agents to resolve your tax problems. Fast and Affordable
We are IRS Tax Experts who specialize in Tax Relief for all those in the trucking industry. We have represented thousands of clients throughout the years and can help you through any IRS tax problem that you may have.
We are comprised of tax attorneys, CPAs, and former IRS agents with over 206 years of professional tax experience.
We are very affordable and assessable.
We have over 60 years of working directly for the Internal Revenue Service in the local, district, and regional offices of the Internal Revenue Service.
We can resolve any IRS problem you may have.
We know all there is to know about the problems and situations that truck drivers face every day.
We audited their tax returns as former IRS agents  so it only makes sense that we know the exact protocol could become their best advocate for any IRS problem they may have.
As former IRS agents we sent out many tax liens and tax levies on truck drivers who failed to pay their back taxes. As a result of our best years of experience we can help work out tax settlements and relieve you of the IRS pressures you may have.
Due to the demands of being on the road all the time many times it is impossible for truck drivers and those in the industry to find time to file their tax returns.
Also due to the demand of high fuel costs and other related truck expenses the monies truckers receive are being eaten alive just trying to keep their trucks on the road.
Call us today and let us be your tax representative for any issues that you may have. We can file any back tax returns or file a current tax return you have and make sure that you pay the lowest amount allowed by law.
Call us today for free initial tax consultation.
 

Our Company Resume: ( Since 1982 )

 

  • Our staff has collectively over 205 years of Professional IRS Tax Representation Experience

  • On staff, Board Certified Tax Attorney’s, IRS Tax Lawyers, Certified Public Accountants, Enrolled Agents,

  • We taught Tax Law in the IRS Regional Training Center

  • Former IRS Agents, Managers and Instructors with over 60 years experience  in the local, district and regional IRS offices.

  • Highest Rating by the Better Business Bureau  “A” Plus

  • Fast, affordable, and economical

  • Licensed and certified to practice in all 50 States

  • Nationally Recognized Veteran /Published  Former IRS Agent

  • Nationally Recognized Published EZINE Tax Expert

  • As heard on GRACE Net Radio.com – Monthly Radio Show-Business Weekly

 
 

Areas of Professional Tax Practice:

 

  • Same Day IRS Tax Representation

  • Offers in Compromise or IRS Tax Debt Settlements

  • Immediate Release of IRS Bank Levies or IRS Wage Garnishments

  • Tax Relief from a IRS Bill, Letter or Notice of “Intent to Levy”

  • IRS Tax Audits

  • IRS Hardships Cases or Unable to Pay

  • Payment Plans, Installment Agreements, Structured agreements

  • Abatement of Penalties and Interest

  • State Sales Tax Cases

  • Payroll / Trust Fund Penalty Cases / 6672

  • Filing Late, Back, Unfiled Tax Returns

  • Tax Return Reconstruction if Tax Records are lost or destroyed

  • Trucker Driver Experts

 
Trucker Drivers, IRS Tax Help – File, Settlements, Tax Levy Relief