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How to Stay Out of Jail as an Entrepreneur

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Presentation on theme: "How to Stay Out of Jail as an Entrepreneur"— Presentation transcript:

1 How to Stay Out of Jail as an Entrepreneur
Karen Brehmer IRS Stakeholder Liaison February 2017

2 Objectives Recordkeeping – why, how long, what?
IRS Resources for small business owners Sharing Economy Payments to Independent Contractors Secure Access Authentication

3 Recordkeeping – Why? Prepare tax returns
Support items reported on tax returns Monitor progress of business activity Identify receipt sources Track deductible expenses Prepare financial statements

4 Recordkeeping – How long?
Keep all documents verifying income, purchases, deductions and credits Timeframes: Minimum three years Employment tax – four years (Pub 15) Business property – life of the asset

5

6

7 Publication 463: Travel, Transportation, Entertainment, and Gift Expenses

8 On IRS.gov

9 Small Business and Self-Employed Tax Center on IRS.gov

10 Small Business Taxes: The Virtual Workshop

11 SHARING ECONOMY

12 Sharing Economy Tax Center
If you use one of the many online platforms available to rent a spare bedroom, provide car rides, or to connect and provide a number of other goods or services, you’re involved in what is sometimes called the sharing economy. The IRS developed the Sharing Economy Tax Center to help you meet your tax obligations for your activity in the sharing economy

13 Issues for Individuals Performing Services
Participate in the sharing economy Received a payment during the calendar year Self-employed individual, an employee or a small business May be required to file a tax return to report that income to the IRS.

14 Rules for Home Rentals Rental Income and Expenses Vacation Property
Personal use business property Casualties, Disasters and Thefts

15 Self-Employment Taxes
Self-Employed / Independent Contractor Social Security Medicare Taxes No employer matching Estimated taxes

16 Tax Payments, Including Estimated Tax Payments
Form 1040 ES - Estimated Tax for Individuals Direct pay EFTPS (Electronic Federal Tax Payment System) Form W-4 - Employee's Withholding Allowance Certificate

17 Resources IRS Web site - Sharing Economy Tax Center:
IRS Website – Key words Sharing Economy Pub 17 - Your Federal Income Tax For Individuals Pub 15-A – Employer’s Supplemental Tax Guide

18 Payments to Independent Contractors

19 Type of Business Relationship
Independent contractor Employee (common-law employee) Behavioral Financial Type of Relationship

20 Form SS-8 Form SS-8, Determination of Worker Status for Purposes of Federal Employment Taxes and Income Tax Withholding

21 Form 1099 - MISC Payment to someone who is not your employee;
Payment for services in the course of your trade or business; Payment to an individual, partnership, estate, or in some cases, a corporation; and Payments to the payee of at least $600 during the year.

22 Form W-9 Form W-9, Request for Taxpayer Identification Number and Certification Used to provide name and SSN/EIN to payer. Used by payer to complete Form 1099-MISC Type of entity matters Sole proprietor, 1099 required Partnership, 1099 required “C” or “S” Corporation, no 1099 needed some exceptions, see instructions LLC – more info needed

23 Form W-9 LLC = Limited Liability Company Single member LLC could be:
Disregarded entity (files Schedule C), required If LLC elects corporation status, no 1099 needed Multiple member LLC could be: Partnership, 1099 required Corporation, no 1099 needed (generally)

24 New Secure Access Process for Get Transcript Online and other IRS
New Secure Access Process for Get Transcript Online and other IRS.gov Tools

25 Secure Access Process Secure Access Process
New authentication framework More rigorous validation process 2-Factor authentication: Password credentials Security code sent by text Secure Access Authentication used for: Get Transcript Online, Get an IP PIN, Online Installment Agreement

26 Process Prior to 2015 Email confirmation code Identity Proofing
Name and SSN Date of Birth Filing status and address on last filed return Knowledge-Based Authentication (KBA) Series of financial/personal questions only a taxpayer should know

27 New Authentication Steps
confirmation code Same as before; code sent to address; taxpayer re-enters in order to continue to next step Identity proofing Similar as before Two new steps: Financial Verification Activation code text sent to mobile phone

28 How to Successfully Authenticate
A readily available address that you can check immediately An SSN Account number information from either: Credit card (last eight digits), or Home mortgage, or home equity mortgage or home equity line of credit, or Auto loan

29 How to Successfully Authenticate
A mobile phone that is Supported by a data plan that includes texts Associated with your name and/or address Not a business-owned phone Not a virtual phone, i.e. Skype, or a pay-as-you-go phone Remove “credit freeze” if through Equifax

30 How to Successfully Authenticate
Returning Users (registered via Secure Access) Need their username and password Need their mobile phone to receive security code Returning Users (registered via KBA process) Password and user name still valid Must provide financial verification Must receive mobile phone text code

31 Higher Security/Lower Access
Trade offs for higher security Fewer people able to authenticate IRS monitoring pass rate; Evaluate and adjust as necessary Get Transcript by Mail option Taxpayers always should retain copies of prior year tax returns

32 Looking Ahead – Digital Demand
Secure Access provides foundation for future self-help tools Taxpayers demanding more digital options Cost of IRS personal service: $40/$60 per transaction Cost of IRS digital service: $1 per transaction IRS remains committed to providing services needed by taxpayers

33 IRS Tax Calendars

34 IRS Tax Calendar on IRS.gov

35 IRS Tax Calendar


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