IRS Targets: What to Do If You Are
One Of Them
The IRS
Line of Fire – Why All the Gun Smoke?
Even though the IRS
is responsible for successfully collecting $1.6 trillion in gross collections
for 1997, there is still an estimated $500 billion in shortchange produced by
drug sales, organized crime, and other illegal activities. This huge sector of
missed collection has come to be known as the underground
economy. This underground economy is being brutally attacked by the IRS and
as a result, innocent taxpayers are often being punished.
So how are you
supposed to know if you are in the line of fire? Well, the IRS has five
different categories it identifies as trouble areas. These are the self-employed,
people who work out of a home office, independent contractors,
cash-intensive businesses, and finally, non-filers.
Bulls Eye
One – The Self-Employed
This is defined as an
unincorporated business or profession in which net income is reportable by only
one person and runs from people who own a service business (beautician, tutors,
or home service and repairs) to professionals (doctors, lawyers) to insurance
agents or computer programmers and more.
For these types of
people, the IRS is focusing on the type of
business for which the schedule C is filed, particularly if the business
type falls into one of the IRS target areas: service providers, professionals,
or cash-intensive businesses.
If you are a sole
proprietor and are at high risk for an audit, the perfect solution might involve extracting yourself from the sole
proprietorship/Schedule C category and transforming your business into a
partnership or corporation. This can often remove yourself from the IRS hit
list.
Bulls Eye
Two – People Who Work Out Of A Home Office
As many as 40 million
people work out of a home office, with at least 8,000 home-based businesses
starting daily. Of these, 1.7 million claimed home-office deductions on their
1996 tax returns, amounting to over $3.7 billion.
The IRS decided in
the early 1990’s that the people who take home office deductions comprise too
large a portion of the underground economy. Clearly, the IRS’s most obvious
solution was to investigate more of these types of filers.
To defend yourself
against unnecessary audits, first make sure that you qualify for the Home Office
Deduction. A good rule of thumb is: Those
who can take the deduction are those who spend most of their working time in
the office and conduct most of their important business there, like meeting with
customers or patients on a regular basis.
Those who do not qualify
are the ones spending most of their time in other places (gardeners, plumbers)
and who only use their office for routine tasks like record keeping.
Once you’ve
determined if you qualify, taking care of the many different “gray areas” of
the Home Office Deduction is the next step. Make sure you watch specific trouble
areas like:
Maintain a separate telephone
number for the business
Encourage customers to visit your
home office on regular basis
Keep a visit log and a time log
explaining what time you spend in your home office (stress the important
activities you performed there)
Make sure that business correspondence is sent to your home office, rather than
to another place, like one of your biggest clients.
Following these
simple tips can save you from horrible and costly IRS audits. More importantly,
the tips listed above are the most simplified of all. Meet with your accountant
if any of these tips look unchecked in your overall goals or simply look like
new ideas to you. If these look new, you’re under the audit gun already!
It’s important to take the time your business deserves to make sure your home
office is audit-proof.
Bulls Eye
Three – Independent Contractors
Every additional
worker classified as an independent contractor means that the IRS loses tax
dollars through unpaid FICA, withholding, and unemployment taxes, and through
income tax deductions as well. Wouldn’t the IRS be delighted if all of these
independent contractors were reclassified as employees and this whole category
disappeared! To try to make this a reality, the IRS has waged an all out attack
on independent contractors.
Some of the tactics
used by the IRS to turn independent contractors into employees include:
A 20-Factor Test
Third party leads (basically just
informers)
A shift in IRS Examination
Division resources
Unannounced audit blitzes by the
Collection Department
There are specific,
key steps employers and independent contractors can take to strengthen their
respective positions. A contract between the business owner and the independent
contractor as a key item to assess worker classification and the IRS uses this. When
drawing up a contract, there are defined elements and precautions to help
guard against reclassification.
Specify the services to be rendered.
Use a defined starting and
completion date.
Make sure the contractor is
controlling the procedures necessary for completing the agreed-upon services.
Make sure the contractor is in
complete charge of supervising and directing how the work will be performed.
Indicate all insurance to be
provided by the contractor.
Try to keep payments slightly
sporadic – to justify treating the worker as an independent contractor.
Avoid separately allocating funds
for overhead costs like transportation and meals, since these should be included
in the contract price.
Spell out that the training of the
workers is the full responsibility of the contractor.
Do not include a provision that
states the contractor has an office or working space on the business owner’s
premises – if he (or you) needs the space, he/you will use it…there is no
need to spell it out in black and white.
Avoid paying bonuses.
Tell the contractor that if things
slow down, that he will not be given any more work to do. The business owner’s
obligation is only for the work originally assigned and agreed upon.
You
can also strengthen your position as an independent contractor:
Independent contractors should
always be able to take on other assignments from other companies.
Contracts should never appear to be
exclusive.
Independent contractors should be
able to prove that they receive income from other sources. This will help
legitimately determine their tax status as a self-employed person filing a
Schedule C.
Incorporate yourself. There is no
obligation to issue a 1099 form to a corporation. As the IRS hones in on the
independent contractors reviewing 1099 forms, you will no longer be included in
this group.
Bulls Eye
Four – NonFilers
An
estimated 6 million people in the U.S. do not file any income tax returns
whatsoever. That number is actually down from 9 or 10 million four years ago.
About 64% of nonfilers are self-employed people who deal primarily in cash. They
have been out of the system for an average of 4 years, are in their peak earning
years, and live affluently.
As a
group, nonfilers account for almost $14
billion a year in lost revenue to the IRS and cost each of the rest of us over
$600 extra a year in taxes! The good news for those of us who fall into this
category is that an average of 45% of all people using the Nonfiler Reentry
Program designed by the IRS actually received a refund the first year filing a
return!
So
what do you do if you are a nonfiler?
Relax.
Go to a tax professional.
The tax professional will contact
your local IRS office and inform them that he or she has a case of a nonfiling
taxpayer who wishes to file.
The tax professional will explain
that information for the past however many years is missing or lost due to
illness, divorce, or natural disaster, etc.
The revenue office will probably
cooperate by providing the professional with income data entered under the
matching program from the IRS computer listed under the taxpayer’s Social
Security number.
Next the tax professional will
reconstruct the 1040, enlisting the taxpayer’s support to fill in the
information such as estimates of contributions, medical expenses, and other
deductions. Revenue officers have been accepting reasonable estimates in cases
like this.
This entire process could take as
little as a few weeks or as much as a few months, if items can’t be found
immediately.
The IRS will add up to 25% in
penalties plus interest to the balance due. That is to be expected. However,
perhaps you will be one of the 25% of nonfilers who are due a refund!
No one will deny that
so far, the majority of the IRS’s attempts to pursue the underground economy
has been successful. But if you are unjustly attacked, you will be in the
strongest position to hold on to what you’re entitled to if you understand how
the IRS moves in and out of the underground economy, and if you learn your
rights.