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The IRS can make your life miserable by filing federal tax
liens. Federal Tax Liens are public records that indicate you owe the IRS
various taxes. They are filed with the County Clerk in the county from which
you or your business operates. Because they are public records, they will show
up on your credit report. This often makes it difficult for a taxpayer to
obtain any financing on an automobile or a home. Federal Tax Liens can also tie
up your personal property and real estate. Once a Federal Tax Lien is filed
against your property you cannot sell or transfer the property without a clear
title. Often taxpayers find themselves in a Catch-22 where they have property
that they would like to borrow against, but because of the Federal Tax Lien,
they cannot get a loan.
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An IRS levy is the actual action taken by the IRS to collect taxes. For
example, the IRS can issue a bank levy to obtain your cash in savings and
checking accounts. Or, the IRS can levy your wages or accounts receivable. The
person, company, or institution that is served the levy must comply or face
their own IRS problems. The additional paperwork this person, company or
institution is faced with to comply with the levy usually causes the taxpayer's
relationship to suffer with the person being levied. Levies should be avoided
at all costs and are usually the result of poor or no communication with the
IRS.
When the IRS levies a bank account, the levy is only
for the particular day the levy is received by the bank. The bank is required
to remove whatever amount is available in your account that day (up to the
amount of the IRS levy ) and send it to the IRS in 21 days unless notified
otherwise by the IRS. This type of levy does not effect any future deposits
made into your bank account unless the IRS issues another Bank Account Levy.
An IRS Wage Levy is different. Wage levies are filed
with your employer and remain in effect until the IRS notifies the employer
that the wage levy has been released. Most wage levies take so much money from
the taxpayer's paycheck that the taxpayer doesn't have enough money to live
on.
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Find a Local Tax
Professional to help you in your area The IRS can audit you by
mail, in their office, or in your home or office. The location of your audit is
a good indication of the severity of the audit. Typically, correspondence
audits are for missing documents in your tax return that IRS computers have
attempted to find. These usually include W-2's and 1099 income items or
interest expense items. This type of audit can be handled through the mail with
the correct documentation. The IRS office audit is usually with a Tax Examiner
who will request numerous documents and explanations of various deductions.
This type of audit may also require you to produce all bank records for a
period of time so that the IRS can check for unreported income. The IRS audit
scheduled for your home or office should be taken more seriously due to the
fact that the IRS Auditor is a Revenue Agent. Revenue Agents receive more
training and auditing techniques than a typical Tax Examiner. All IRS audits
should be taken seriously because they often lead to other tax years and other
tax deductions not originally stated in the audit letter.
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The IRS has extension powers when it comes to Seizure of Assets. These powers
allow them to seize personal and business assets to pay off outstanding tax
liabilities. This occurs when taxpayers have been avoiding the IRS. The IRS
attempts to collect amounts owed with a seizure as the ultimate act of their
collection efforts.
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Find a Local Tax
Professional to help you in your area The IRS wage garnishment
is a very powerful tool used to collect taxes owed through your employer. Once
a wage garnishment is filed with an employer, the employer is required to
collect a large percentage of each paycheck. The paycheck that would have
normally been paid to the employee, will now be paid to the IRS. The wage
garnishment stays in effect until the IRS is fully paid or until the IRS agrees
to release the garnishment.
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Find a Local Tax
Professional to help you in your area Taxpayers fail to file
required tax returns for many reasons. The taxpayer must be aware that failure
to file tax returns may be construed as a criminal act by the IRS. This type of
criminal act is punishable by one year in jail for each year a tax return was
not filed. Needless to say, it's one thing to owe the IRS money but another
thing to potentially lose your freedom for failure to file a tax return. The
IRS may file "SFR" (Substitute For Return) Tax Returns for you. This is the
IRS's version of an unfiled tax return. Because SFR returns are filed in the
best interest of the government, the only deductions you'll see are standard
deductions and one personal exemption. You will not get credit for deductions
which you may be entitled to such as exemptions for spouses, children, interest
and taxes on your home, cost of any stock or real estate sales, and business
expenses, etc. Regardless of what you have heard, you have the right to file
your original tax return no matter how late it's filed.
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The IRS penalizes millions of taxpayers each year. They have
so many penalties that it's hard to understand which penalty they are hitting
you with.
The most common penalties are: Failure to File and
Failure to Pay. Both of these penalties can substantially increase the amount
you owe the IRS in a very short period of time. To make matters worse the IRS
charges you interest on penalties.
Taxpayers often find out about IRS problems many
years after they have occurred. This causes the amount owed to the IRS to be
substantially greater due to penalties and interest.
Some IRS penalties can be as high as 75%-100% of the
original taxes owed. Often taxpayers can afford to pay the taxes owed, however
the extra penalties make it impossible to pay off the entire balance.
The original goal of IRS imposing penalties was to
punish taxpayers in order to keep them in line. Unfortunately they have turned
into additional sources of income for the IRS. The IRS does abate penalties.
Therefore before you pay the IRS any penalty amounts, you may want to consider
requesting the IRS to abate your penalties.
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