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Tuesday, February 9, 2010
Checking on Economic
Recovery Payments
Taxpayers who can’t recall
if they received an economic recovery payment should personally contact one of the agencies listed below for confirmation
before completing and filing their 2009 tax return. The IRS will not be able
to provide this information. If taxpayers need to know whether they got a payment, they should contact the agency that
would have issued their payment.
11:39 am pst
Thursday, February 4, 2010
Be
Sure to Know Whether You Qualify for the Earned Income Tax Credit
The Earned Income Tax Credit, commonly
referred to as EITC, can be a financial boost for working people adversely impacted by hard economic times. However, one in
four eligible taxpayers could miss out on the credit because they don’t check it out. Here are the top 10 things the
Internal Revenue Service wants you to know about this valuable credit, which has been making the lives of working people a
little easier for 35 years.
1. Just
because you didn’t qualify last year, doesn’t mean you won’t this year. As your financial, marital or parental
situations change from year-to-year, you should review the EITC eligibility rules to determine whether you qualify.
2. If
you qualify, it could be worth up to $5,657 this year. EITC not only reduces the federal tax you owe, but could result in
a refund. The amount of your EITC is based on the amount of your earned income and whether or not there are qualifying children
in your household. New EITC provisions mean more money for larger families.
3. If
you qualify, you must file a federal income tax return and specifically claim the credit in order to get it – even if
you are not otherwise required to file.
4. Your filing status cannot be Married Filing Separately.
5. You must have a valid Social Security Number. You,
your spouse – if filing a joint return – and any qualifying child listed on Schedule EIC must have a valid SSN
issued by the Social Security Administration.
6.
You must have earned income. You have earned income if you work for someone
who pays you wages, you are self-employed, you have income from farming, or – in some cases – you receive disability
income.
7. Married couples
and single people without kids may qualify. If you do not have qualifying children, you must also meet the age and residency
requirements as well as dependency rules.
8.
Special rules apply to members of the U.S. Armed Forces in combat zones.
Members of the military can elect to include their nontaxable combat pay in earned income for the EITC. If you make this election,
the combat pay remains nontaxable.
9.
It’s easy to determine whether you qualify. The EITC Assistant, an interactive tool available on IRS.gov, removes
the guesswork from eligibility rules. Just answer a few simple questions to find out if you qualify and estimate the amount
of your EITC.
3:45 pm pst
Here are the top five changes that may show up on your 2009 return.
1. The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act
ARRA provides several tax provisions that affect tax year
2009 individual tax returns due April 15, 2010. The recovery law provides tax incentives for first-time homebuyers, people
who purchased new cars, those that made their homes more energy efficient, parents and students paying for college, and people
who received unemployment compensation.
2. IRA Deduction Expanded
You may be able to take
an IRA deduction if you were covered by a retirement plan and your 2009 modified adjusted gross income is less than $65,000
or $109,000 if you are married filing a joint return.
3. Standard Deduction Increased for Most Taxpayers
The 2009 basic standard deductions all
increased. They are: - $11,400 for
married couples filing a joint return and qualifying widows and widowers
- $5,700 for singles and married individuals filing separate returns
- $8,350 for heads of household
Taxpayers can now claim an additional standard deduction based
on the state or local sales or excise taxes paid on the purchase of most new motor vehicles purchased after February 16, 2009.
You can also increase your standard deduction by the state or local real estate taxes paid during the year or net disaster
losses suffered from a federally declared disaster.
4. 2009
Standard Mileage Rates
The standard mileage rates changed for 2009. The standard
mileage rates for business use of a vehicle: The standard mileage rates for the cost of operating a vehicle for medical reasons or a deductible move: The standard mileage rate for
using a car to provide services to charitable organizations remains at 14 cents per mile.
5. Kiddie Tax Change
The amount of taxable investment
income a child can have without it being subject to tax at the parent's rate has increased to $1,900 for 2009.
3:41 pm pst
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