Form 4868 Filed After April 15 and On or Before May 17, 2021 Will Not Extend the Time to File a Gift Tax Return
A question that many professionals had after the IRS announced the formal extension of time to file calendar year Forms 1040 in Notice 2021-21 was the impact of that extension on using a Form 4868 to extend both the income tax and gift tax return for 2020. In an update to the What’s New page for estate and gift taxes on the IRS website, the IRS provided information on this issue.[1]
The IRS states that a six-month extension of time to file the Form 709 otherwise due on April 15, 2021 can be obtained by:
Filing Form 4868, Application for Automatic Extension of Time To File U.S. Individual Income Tax Return (or, in limited cases, Form 2350, Application for Extension of Time to File U.S. Income Tax Return) on or before April 15, 2021 which will extend the due date for both the income tax and gift tax return; or
Filing Form 8892, Application for Automatic Extension of Time to File Form 709 and/or Payment of Gift/Generation-Skipping Transfer Tax on or before April 15, 2021.[2]
IRS Finally States How the Agency Will Apply Overpayments on 2020 Returns to 2021 Estimated Taxes
The IRS has now clarified how it will handle overpayments on 2020 individual tax returns applied to 2021 income taxes in a post on the IRS website.[1] We had covered pre-existing guidance in a prior article released on April 6, 2021.[2]
As we discussed in that article, the IRS was entering a bit of uncharted territory since we hadn’t before faced a due date that had been moved back from the original due date by the agency itself, while leaving the next year’s estimate date untouched. Luckily, the IRS did not take the most heavy-handed approach possible, though they took quite a bit of time deciding to clarify the issue.
Read MoreIRS Notes Nonacquiesence with Court Holding an Interest in a Defined Benefit Pension Plan Was not an Asset for Insolvency Test
In Action on Decision AOD 2021-01 the IRS announced that the agency will not acquiesce in a decision that treated an interest in a defined benefit pension plan in which the taxpayer only had rights to monthly payment was not an asset for computation of the insolvency exception to the exclusion of cancellation of debt income from tax under IRC §108(a)(2).
Read MoreIRS Issues Guidance on 2020 Advance Premium Tax Credit Form 1040 Filings
The American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 added IRC §36B(f)(2)(B)(iii) that provided that taxpayers are not required in tax year 2020 to repay advance premium tax credits received in excess of the premium tax credit they actually qualified for. In IR-2021-84[1] the IRS described the procedures that taxpayers will use to deal with this retroactive change in the law, one enacted after some taxpayers had filed 2020 tax returns paying back the excess advance premium tax credit.
Read MoreCan a Taxpayer Apply an Extension Payment in 2021 That Results in an Overpayment to the First Quarter Estimated Tax Payment for 2021?
Let’s start this article by noting that this is an issue that likely costs more in wasted time to research and resolve than the dollars that might be saved by finding the tax payment can be pushed back a month. But many advisers are stressing quite a bit over trying to answer this question: “If a taxpayer pays money with an extension filed on May 17, ends up with an overpayment when the return is finally filed and applies the amount to the 2021 return, will that overpayment be treated as paid as part of the first estimate due on April 15?”
Some advisers have gotten used to “beefing up” the payment with extensions, expecting the taxpayer to be overpaid when the return is completed. That expected overpayment is meant to cover the first estimated tax payment due for the following year. Two reasons are offered for going this route:
It eliminates the need to prepare both an extension and an estimated tax voucher at the original due date, as well as allowing the taxpayer to make a single payment and
It provides some protection to the client from a failure to pay penalty and interest on the return being extended if it turns out there’s more income than expected (albeit at the potential cost of now incurring some underpayment of estimated tax penalty on the following year’s return).
Tax Advisers' Area 51 - Employee Retention Credit and Majority Shareholders
Area 51 is that mysterious area in the Nevada desert under the control of the United States Air Force. But it turns out that Area 51 is not the only mysterious 51 related to the United States federal government. Tax advisers have been exploring their own “area 51,” this time found at IRC Section 51(i)(1) that is cross-referenced for limiting the application of the employee retention credit.
Some parts of this 51 item are relatively clear. We know the employee retention credit (ERC) isn’t allowed for the various relatives of a control owner under CARES Act Section 2301(e) and its later updated versions. But what has become as obscure to some as Area 51 is whether this provision will work to also eliminate the ability of most shareholders owning more than 50% of the stock of a corporation to obtain the employee retention credit on their own wages.
Read MoreUpdated Guidance Issued for Employee Retention to Apply to Program Version that Runs from January to June 2021
The IRS released guidance on the version of the Employee Retention Credit (ERC) contained in the Taxpayer Certainty and Disaster Relief Act (TCDRA) of 2020 that is in effect for the first two quarters of 2021 in Notice 2021-23.[1]
As with Notice 2021-20, which was issued to cover the revised 2020 Employee Retention Credit, this Notice only updates the original Notice for issues related to the January-June 2021 version of the credit, and later guidance will be released governing new IRC §3134 that was added by the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 and will apply from July-December 2021.
Read MoreIRS Announces May Start of Automatic Refund Program for Unemployment Benefits
In News Release IR-2021-71[1] the IRS announced that it plans to begin issuing automatic refunds to taxpayers who filed returns that included 2020 unemployment compensation as taxable if the changes made by the American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) of 2021 make the unemployment not taxable in 2020.
Read MorePurchase of COVID-19 Personal Protective Equipment Treated as Deductible Medical Care by the IRS
In Announcement 2021-7,[1] the IRS has broadened the definition of amounts paid for medical care to include amounts paid for personal protective equipment (PPE).
Examples of PPE given in the Announcement are:
Masks;
Hand sanitizers and
Sanitizing wipes.[2]
If the items were acquired for the primary purpose of preventing the spread of COVID-19, they are referred to in the Announcement as COVID-19 PPE and treated as an amount paid for medical care under IRC §213(d).
Read MoreSenate Approves PPP Program Extension, Sends Bill on to the President for Signature
The U.S. Senate, by a vote of 92-7, passed the PPP Extension Act of 2021[1] in identical form to the bill passed earlier by the House, sending the bill on to the President for his signature.
The very short bill has the following provisions:
Applications for both first draw and second draw PPP loans will be accepted through May 31, 2021, resulting in a two-month extension beyond the original deadline enacted in December 2020 of March 31, 2021;[2]
The SBA will be allowed to approve and fund loans for applications submitted by the May 31 deadline through the end of June.[3]
IRS Makes a Significant Modification to Computation of ARPA Excludable Unemployment Compensation
As a tax adviser, you may have recently installed a tax software update to take into account the unemployment compensation exclusion for 2020 passed as part of the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 and found at IRC §85(c). Now it turns out that, due to an IRS change of heart on how to read IRC §85(c)(2)(B), your software may now be subjecting unemployment to tax the IRS has now decided is not to be subject to such tax.
On March 12, 2021, the IRS provided updated instructions on their website for preparing returns that have excludable unemployment compensation.[1] However, on March 23, 2021 the IRS made a significant change in those instructions.[2]
Originally the IRS instructions had taxpayers include the unemployment compensation in determining the modified AGI (reading “without regard to this section” in IRC §85(c)(2)(B) to mean without regard to the exclusion at IRC §85(c)) but now they have decided that means without regard to any unemployment compensation covered by §85.
Read MoreIRS Releases Instructions on Reporting ARPA Unemployment Exclusion
On March 12, 2021, the IRS provided updated instructions on their website for preparing returns that have excludable unemployment compensation.[1] The IRS notice and modified Form 1040 instructions read as follows:
If your modified adjusted gross income (AGI) is less than $150,000, the American Rescue Plan enacted on March 11, 2021, excludes from income up to $10,200 of unemployment compensation paid in 2020, which means you don’t have to pay tax on unemployment compensation of up to $10,200. If you are married, each spouse receiving unemployment compensation doesn’t have to pay tax on unemployment compensation of up to $10,200. Amounts over $10,200 for each individual are still taxable. If your modified AGI is $150,000 or more, you can’t exclude any unemployment compensation.
Read MoreWays and Means Chair Joins In Calling for the IRS to Push Back the April 15 Due Date
In a press release, Chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee Richard Neal (D-MA) has joined in the call for the IRS to extend the 2021 filing season past the scheduled April 15 deadline.[1] The call came in a joint press release with Oversight Subcommittee Chair Bill Pascrell, Jr. (D-NJ). Rep. Pascrell had previously been part of a letter from a number of Committee Democratic Party members calling for such relief, but which had not included the Committee Chairman.
Read MoreText of Revision to Taxation of Unemployment Compensation Posted to Congress.gov
The Senate version of the American Rescue Plan of 2021 added a special rule that applies to unemployment compensation for taxable years beginning in 2020. The taxpayer may exclude up to $10,200 of unemployment compensation from income if the adjusted gross income of the taxpayer (as computed under the rules for this provision) is less than $150,000. If a joint return is filed, then each spouse can exclude up to $10,200 of their own unemployment compensation—but note that the adjusted gross income cut-off does not go up for the married couple.[1]
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