income tax fundamentals 2023 41st edition by geral
Written for
Income Tax Fundamentals
Income Tax Fundamentals
Seller
Follow
leonardmuriithi061
Reviews received
Content preview
Income Tax Fundamentals 2023 41st Edition By Gerald
Whittenburg, Steven Gill
Internal Revenue Code - aka Federal Tax Law - ANSWER Primary source of all tax
law
Treasury Regulations - ANSWER Source for all tax law
Revenue Rulings/Revenue Procedures - ANSWER Administrative interpretation,
may be cited as a precedent
Congressional Committee Reports - ANSWER May not be cited as a precedent
Private Letter Rulings - ANSWER Apply to a specific taxpayer in a particular
situation
Judicial Sources - ANSWER Court decisions interpret law and/or facts
Step Transaction - ANSWER Ignore the individual transactions and tax the ultimate
transaction
Sham Transaction - ANSWER Lacks a business purpose and economic substance
will be ignored for tax purposes
(ex: selling xyz to abc, when both xyz and abc are owned by the same person)
Substance over Form - ANSWER The substance of a transaction and not merely its
form governs its tax consequences
(Ex, president of xyz company takes a loan for himself, with no written agreement.
he never intends to pay back the loan or to take a salary. The loan "salary" is taxed
to the president
Assignment of Income - ANSWER Income is taxed to "the tree that grows the fruit",
even if assigned to someone else
(ex: owner of xyz directs that all income be paid to his son, but owner reports no
income. The income is taxed to the owner)
Hobby Loss - ANSWER Income is reportable.
Any activity generating income for 3 of 5 years is a business not a hobby. For
horses, profit is needed only 2 of 7 years
Who MUST File??? - ANSWER Individuals (US Citizens)
Dependents
Children under 24 (kiddie tax rules)
Self Employed
Aliens
Self Employment Earnings - ANSWER Must file if in excess of $400
,Amended Returns - ANSWER 1040X
Estates and Trusts - ANSWER 1041
Who can represent a taxpayer before the IRS - ANSWER attorney
CPA
enrolled agent
enrolled actuary
and any other person permitted to represent a client before the IRS
CFP Certificant not classified as an audit rep
Tax Penalty - Frivolous Return - ANSWER $5,000
Omits info necessary to determine taxpayer's tax liabiliity
Negligence - ANSWER An accuracy penalty. Due to negligence or disregard of
rules. Penalty is 20% of underpayment attributed to negligence
Fraud - ANSWER The intent to cheat the government by deliberately understating
tax liability.
Penalty is 75% of the tax underpayment that is attributable to fraud
Failure to pay - ANSWER .5% per month, max of 25%
Failure to file - ANSWER 5 % of the tax due each month with a max of 25%`
To avoid tax penalties, pay: - ANSWER 90% of the CURRENT year's tax liability
OR
100% of the prior year's liability
OR
110% if the prior year's AGI exceeded $150,000
Head of Household - ANSWER Maintains principal residence
Provide more than 50% of child's support
Qualifying Widow(er) - ANSWER Must maintain home for a dependent child
Must not remarry
Can file as MFJ in the year of death and two years after
Flow Chart for Taxes - ANSWER Gross Income
(less adjustments/above the line)
AGI
(less deductions/below the line)
Taxable Income
(time appropriate tax rates)
Taxable Calculation
(less credits plus other taxes)
, Tax Liability
(less quarterly payment and withholding)
New Tax Due/Refund
Income Items Included on 1040 - ANSWER Ordinary Dividends (Sch 6)
Taxable Interest (Sch 6)
Business income/losses (Sch C)
Capital gains/losses (Sch D)
Real Estate (Sch E)
Punitive Damages
Wages/Salaries/Tips
IRA Distributions
Pensions/Annuities
Items EXCLUDED from Gross Income - ANSWER Gifts
Inheritances
Child Support
Municipal Bond Income
Workers Comp Payments
Compensatory Damages
Student Loans - ANSWER up to $2,500 of student loan interest can be deducted
from income (above the line)
Tax Treatment of Scholarships - ANSWER Tuition and Books are EXCLUDED from
income
Room and Board IS Taxable Income
If Scholarship is paid to the child, it's their income.
EX: Full scholarship for $20,000. $12,000 for tuition, $1,000 for books, remainder for
room and board. Taxable income to child is: $7,000.
Investment Interest Deduction - ANSWER Investment interest is interest paid on
indebtedness for property help for investment (ex: margin account interest)
Max deduction allowed for investment is limited to Net Investment Income.
Re: Margin Interest Deduction - ANSWER Can ONLY deduct up to net investment
income amount
Investment Income is: - ANSWER Interest
Dividends
Royalties
Short Term Gains
Buying Tax-Exempt Bonds on Margin - ANSWER NO DEDUCTION IS
PERMITTED FOR INTEREST PAID ON DEBT INCURRED TO PURCHASE TAX-
EXEMPT BONDS
The benefits of buying summaries with Stuvia:
Guaranteed quality through customer reviews
Stuvia customers have reviewed more than 700,000 summaries. This how you know that you are buying the best documents.
Quick and easy check-out
You can quickly pay through credit card for the summaries. There is no membership needed.
Focus on what matters
Your fellow students write the study notes themselves, which is why the documents are always reliable and up-to-date. This ensures you quickly get to the core!
Frequently asked questions
What do I get when I buy this document?
You get a PDF, available immediately after your purchase. The purchased document is accessible anytime, anywhere and indefinitely through your profile.
Satisfaction guarantee: how does it work?
Our satisfaction guarantee ensures that you always find a study document that suits you well. You fill out a form, and our customer service team takes care of the rest.
Who am I buying these notes from?
Stuvia is a marketplace, so you are not buying this document from us, but from seller leonardmuriithi061. Stuvia facilitates payment to the seller.
Will I be stuck with a subscription?
No, you only buy these notes for £14.65. You're not tied to anything after your purchase.