by Fresh Start Tax | Mar 26, 2013 | Tax Help
Tax Preparation Services, Company – Pompano, Deerfield Beach, Former IRS 954-492-0088
We are a professional tax firm who have been preparing tax returns for South Floridians since 1982.
We are comprised of former IRS agents, managers and tax instructors. We can help audit proof your return from the Internal Revenue Service and assure that you are paying the lowest amount of tax allowed by law.
We are affordable, trustworthy and dependable.
Tax Tips Form Fresh Start Tax LLC
Home Office Deduction: a Tax Break for Those Who Work from Home
If you use part of your home for your business, you may qualify to deduct expenses for the business use of your home.
Here are fact to help you determine if you qualify for the home office deduction.
1. Generally, in order to claim a deduction for a home office, you must use a part of your home exclusively and regularly for business purposes. In addition, the part of your home that you use for business purposes must also be:
• your principal place of business, or
• a place where you meet with patients, clients or customers in the normal course of your business, or
• a separate structure not attached to your home. Examples might include a studio, workshop, garage or barn. In this case, the structure does not have to be your principal place of business or a place where you meet patients, clients or customers.
2. You do not have to meet the exclusive use test if you use part of your home to store inventory or product samples.
The exclusive use test also does not apply if you use part of your home as a daycare facility.
3. The home office deduction may include part of certain costs that you paid for having a home. For example, a part of the rent or allowable mortgage interest, real estate taxes and utilities could qualify.
The amount you can deduct usually depends on the percentage of the home used for business.
4. The deduction for some expenses is limited if your gross income from the business use of your home is less than your total business expenses.
5. If you are self-employed, use Form 8829, Expenses for Business Use of Your Home, to figure the amount you can deduct. Report your deduction on Schedule C, Profit or Loss From Business.
6. If you are an employee, you must meet additional rules to claim the deduction. For example, in addition to the above tests, your business use must also be for your employer’s convenience.
Tax Preparation Services, Company – Pompano, Deerfield Beach, Delray Beach – Former IRS
by Fresh Start Tax | Mar 25, 2013 | Tax Help
Trucking Industry – IRS Help – Tax Attorney, Tax Lawyer, Former IRS 1-866-700-1040
We are a professional tax firm that specializes in IRS issues and problems within the Trucking Industry.
With over 60 years with the IRS we can answer any questions you may have.
We are comprised of Tax Attorneys, Tax Lawyers, CPA’s and Former IRS agents and managers.
If you owe back taxes or need back tax returns filed call us today to immediately and permanently resolve these issues.
Over 206 years of specialized IRS Problem solving.
Call us for free tax consultation. We have are affordable tax experts.
Questions and answers often asked.
Who is required to file Form 2290 and pay Heavy Highway Vehicle Use Tax?
Anyone who registers a heavy highway motor vehicle in their name with a gross weight of 55,000 pounds or more must file Form 2290 and pay the tax.
Typically, owners of vans, pickup trucks, panel trucks and similar trucks are not required to file Form 2290 or pay tax on these smaller trucks.
Trucks that are used for 5,000 miles or less (7,500 for farm trucks) are also excluded from this tax.
Who is required to e-file Form 2290?
We encourage all 2290 filers to e-file. If you are reporting 25 or more heavy highway motor vehicles for any taxable period, you are required to e-file through an IRS-approved software provider.
Although you will have to pay a small service fee to your software provider or e-file transmitter, e-file offers many advantages. Electronic filing improves tax processing and saves you personal resources, including time and postage.
Why do I need an Employer Identification Number to e-file?
We need to have a system for protecting your privacy and making sure we know the identity of our filers. We use a combination of your EIN and your name as a unique identifier for each taxpayer.
My return was rejected by the Internal Revenue Service because the name control is not valid. What is my name control?
Your name control is assigned at the time the IRS approves your application for an Employer Identification Number. The name control consists of up to four alpha or numeric characters. Before the IRS can validate your electronically filed return, you must provide your name control and it must match what the IRS has in their records.
How do I determine my name control?
When you applied for your EIN you provided the name of your business, which is used to assign your name control and will remain so unless you request a name change. If you did not use a business name and instead used your individual name, your name control will be the first four letters of your last name.
If you applied for your EIN using a business name, the name control is assigned from the first four characters of your business name. There are some special rules. The ampersand (&) and hyphen (-) are the only special characters allowed in the name control. The name control can have fewer, but no more than four characters.
Spaces or blanks are not part of a name control. For example, the name control for Joe Doe Trucking is JOED. The word ”The” at the beginning of your business name is not used in your name control.
For example, The Jane Doe Trucking Company would have a name control of JANE. Blanks may be present only at the end of the name control. Do not include “dba” as part of the name control.
To help determine the name control for Hispanic, Asian and other ethnic surnames, see the Exhibits at the end of Publication 4164, Modernized e-File (MeF) Guide for Software Developers and Transmitters (PDF).
Can I still file my return electronically if I just received my EIN?
Yes, you may file your return electronically. However, you should wait two weeks from the date your EIN was assigned to allow your name control to be established in the IRS computer system.
Your return will be rejected if you try to file your return electronically before your EIN is fully established.
Where can I find an approved e-file provider?
You can find an approved provider for Form 2290 on the 2290 e-file partner’s page. We list approved providers for Form 8849, claim for Refund of Excise Taxes on the 8849 e-file partner’s page. Note: We do not endorse any particular providers and cannot make recommendations.
All listed transmitters and software providers are approved to submit returns to the IRS electronically. Expect transmitters and software providers to charge a small service fee for e-filing your return.
When are my Form 2290 taxes due?
Generally, the annual taxable period begins on July 1 of the current year and ends on June 30 of the following year. For vehicles that are in use at the beginning of the tax period, your 2290 filing deadline is August 31.
Taxes on the full tax period must be filed and paid in advance.
The due date for a partial period return depends on the month you first use your vehicle. If you place an additional taxable truck on the road during any month other than July, you are liable for 2290 taxes on it, but only for the months during which it was in service. You must file Form 2290 for these trucks by the last day of the month following the month the vehicle was first used on public highways.
You can find out when Forms 2290 are supposed to be filed in the table below, When Your Taxes Are Due.
These due date rules apply whether you are paying the tax or reporting the suspension of tax. It is important to file and pay all your 2290 taxes on time to avoid paying interest and penalties.
by Fresh Start Tax | Mar 19, 2013 | Tax Help
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
by Fresh Start Tax | Mar 6, 2013 | Offer in Compromise
Offer in Compromise, IRS Settlements – How to pay the very lowest, Former IRS 1-866-700-1040
We were former IRS teaching Agents who taught the Offer in Compromise Program.Call us for a free consult.
If you want to find out how to pay the very lowest amount and have IRS accept your offer compromise or a tax settlement accepted it only makes sense to contact former IRS agents who used to work the program, who accepted and denied offers in compromise and also taught the program to new IRS agents.
We are also comprised of tax attorneys, CPAs, and former IRS agents.
We have over 60 years of direct work experience at the Internal Revenue Service in the local, district, and regional offices of the Internal Revenue Service.
We have worked thousands of cases and know the exact procedures and tax settlement formulas to ensure that our clients pay the lowest amount allowed by law.
The Offer in Compromise is similar to an IRS tax audit
The offer in compromise is very similar to an IRS tax audit.
The IRS spends a lengthily amount of time doing due diligence before they accept an offer in compromise or a tax debt settlement.The average time to work an accepted offer in compromise 0r IRS settlement is 20 hours. Everything is reviewed, documented and verified.
Offers in Compromise, IRS Settlements are open to Public inspection
One of the reasons so long is spent working accepted offers is due to the very fact that all accepted offers in compromise are open to public inspection in certain regional or district offices for the period of one year.
Any person can walk into one of those offices and asked to inspect the files of accepted offers in compromise. As a result IRS is very cautious and painstakingly thorough before an accepted stamp gets placed on an offer.
IRS IRM 11.3.11.8 (06-30-2009)
Public Inspection of Accepted Offers-in-Compromise
IRC §6103(k)(1) provides for the public inspection of certain Offers-in-Compromise. Treasury Regulation 301.7122-1(j) and the instructions for Form 656, Offers in Compromise, both refer to this provision.
Treasury Regulation 601.702(d)(8) requires that Form 7249, Offer Acceptance Report, for each accepted offer in compromise with respect to any liability for tax imposed by Title 26 will be available for inspection and copying.
Applicable Forms 7249 will be available for one year from the date of execution in the location designated by SB/SE for the taxpayer’s geographic area of residence. The inspection file will be maintained so that it is readily available for examination by the public.
Case histories prepared by the appropriate functions relating to the consideration of the offer are not open to inspection and may be disclosed only as permitted by other provisions of IRC §6103.
Requests for copies of Form 7249 available under (2) above, where no personal inspection is involved, should be in writing and processed in accordance with IRM 11.3.13, Disclosure of Official Information – Freedom of Information Act.
Requests to inspect Forms 7249 that are not available under paragraph (2) above because more than one year has elapsed since acceptance should be in writing and processed in accordance with IRM 11.3.13, Freedom of Information Act.
Reviews of Offers in Compromise, IRS Settlements
Not only does the agent working the case have to accept the offer but his or her group manager must place their acceptance but also the area supervisor and the District Counsel of the IRS. Offers are thoroughly reviewed. They are reviewed by Counsel for legal matters only.
How to ensure you pay the lowest amount for your offer
To the person who does not spend a lot of time in this vertical is impossible for them to understand the web of details that can drive your offer in compromise to his lowest possible amounts. IRS puts various information out there on the web you can read about many of these things you can find on different web sites however the experience of former IRS agents who know all the details and particulars of having other items included as expenses can help drive the offer in compromise down to the lowest acceptable amount.
IRS is concerned only about two things:
1. Your Assets,
2. Your income.
They could care less about your emotional or personal problems. This is all about the numbers so sob stories have no place. Remember, this is a numbers game only.
As far as your assets, use distrait values only, no more no less.
As far as your income and expense ratios, make sure a true experience professional reviews allowable expenses. There are other allowable expenses that can be included if properly documented.
It is best to call us because each situation is unique and there are volumes that can be written or spoken about this issue. Truly, each case is unique.
at fresh start tax we will not submit an offer in compromise or an IRS settlement and less we feel it has an excellent chance of getting accepted by the Internal Revenue Service.
25% of all offers in compromise sent in to the IRS are accepted.
In speaking with a IRS agent who works the offer in compromise program stated to me the best guess was that 80% of those offers that were accepted were sent in by professional tax firms.
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
- Offer in Compromise, IRS Settlements
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”
- 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
Offer in Compromise, IRS Settlements – How to pay the very lowest, Former IRS
by steve | Jul 27, 2011 | IRS Tax Advice, Tax News
Have Former IRS Agents who know the system end your problem once and for all.
Fresh Start Tax L.L.C. Since 1982 IRS Tax Experts A Professional Tax Firm “A”Plus Rated by the Better Business Bureau
If you need to file back years tax returns call us before you decide anything. We are true Tax Experts. We can not only file but settle your tax case as well. You will never speak to the IRS.
We have worked for the IRS for over 60 years out of the local, district and regional IRS offices.
We have prepared thousands of back returns for clients since 1982. Being Former IRS Agent, Managers and Instructors we can reconstruct any tax returns with or without tax records. We know exactly how to prepare audit proof tax returns.
We taught Tax Law out of the local , district and regional IRS offices.
Areas of Tax Practice:
- Immediate IRS Tax Representation
- Offers in Compromise/ IRS Tax Debt Settlement
- Immediate Release of Bank Garnishments or Wage Levies
- IRS Bill/Notice of “Intent to Levy” or Final Notices
- IRS Tax Audits Small and Large Dollar
- Hardships Cases / Unable to Pay
- Payment Plans, Installment Agreements
- Innocent Spouse Relief
- Abatement of Penalties and Interest
- State Sales Tax Cases
- Payroll/ Trust Fund Penalty Cases
Our Company Resume: ( Since 1982 )
- Our staff has over 205 years of professional IRS tax representation experience collectively
- On staff, Board Certified Tax Attorney’s, IRS Tax Lawyers, Certified Public Accountants, Enrolled Agents,
- Former IRS Managers, Instructors and Trainers
- Highest Rating by the Better Business Bureau “A”
- Fast, affordable, and economical
- Licensed to practice in all 50 States
- Certified by the Internal Revenue Service
- Nationally Recognized Veteran Former IRS Agent
- Nationally Recognized Published Tax Expert
- As heard on 90.3 FM Monthly Radio Show-Business Weekly
LOST TAX RECORDS – The process of filing back or unfiled tax returns: (Lost or few tax records )
If you have unfiled tax returns, this process Fresh Start Tax LLC uses to get current with the IRS and get you immediate and permanent tax relief.
1. We verbally review a year by year history of your income and expenses.
2. We review any records you may have.
3 We pull all IRS information that they have received from 3rd party sources that have been placed on the IRS computer system over the past 7 years.
4. If you have lost all your records we have easy and simple forms that can help you reconstruct your tax return.
5. We can prepare through years of experience a “reconstructed” tax return that the IRS will accept and process.
6. We review all returns for accuracy with the client and send them into the IRS.
7. We work out a settlement agreement with the IRS to permanent close your tax case.
File, Unfiled Past Due Back Tax Returns – CPA’s, Former IRS Veteran Agents – Los Angeles, Glendale, Long Beach, Pasadena, Torrance, Burbank, Santa Clarita, Inglewood, Pomona – LOS ANGELES COUNTY