Tax-Savings Tips: August 2021
Don’t Miss Out on the Employee Retention Credit
It’s
hard to imagine that a small business does not qualify for some or all of the
employee retention credit (ERC).
And
remember, this is a tax credit—one of the very best things that tax law has to
offer. True, it’s not as valuable as some other tax credits, because you have
to reduce your payroll income tax deductions for the credits, but the ERC
certainly puts you ahead.
And
you can be looking at big bucks. The possible ERC is $5,000 per employee for
2020 and $28,000 per employee for 2021. That’s $33,000 per employee.
For
2020, you have two ways to qualify:
1.
You
had a gross receipts drop during a 2020 calendar quarter of more than 50
percent when compared to the same calendar quarter of 2019. The more than 50
percent test is the trigger for the ERC, and you automatically qualify for that
quarter and the following 2020 quarter.
2.
You
suffered from a federal, state, or local government order that fully or
partially suspended your operations (under this rule, you qualify for the ERC
on the days you suffered the full or partial suspension, even if you did not
lose any money).
For
2021, you have three ways to qualify:
1.
You
suffered a federal, state, or local government order that fully or partially
suspended your operations (under this rule, you qualify for the ERC on the days
you suffered the full or partial suspension, even if you did not lose any
money).
2.
Your
gross receipts for a 2021 calendar quarter are less than 80 percent of gross
receipts from the same quarter in calendar year 2019.
3.
As
an alternative to number 2 above, using the preceding quarter to your 2021
calendar quarter, your gross receipts are less than the comparable quarter in
2019.
You
can see by the rules that the government wants to help your small business.
Take advantage.
One
final note. You may not double-dip. Wages you use for the ERC may not be used
for the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP), family leave credit, or similar
COVID-19 programs.
Loophole: Harvest
Tax Losses on Bitcoin and Other Cryptocurrency
Here’s
something to know about cryptocurrencies.
Because
cryptocurrencies are classified as “property” rather than as securities, the
wash-sale rule does not apply if you sell a cryptocurrency holding for a loss
and acquire the same cryptocurrency before or after the loss sale.
You
just have a garden-variety short-term or long-term capital loss, depending on
your holding period. No wash-sale rule worries. This favorable federal income
tax treatment is consistent with the long-standing treatment of foreign
currency losses.
That’s
a good thing, because folks who actively trade cryptocurrencies know that
prices are volatile. And this volatility gives you two opportunities:
1.
profits
on the upswings
2.
loss
harvesting on the downswings
Let’s
take a look at the harvesting of losses:
·
On
day 1, Lucky pays $50,000 for a cryptocurrency.
·
On
day 50, Lucky sells the cryptocurrency for $35,000. He captures and deducts the
$15,000 loss ($50,000 - $35,000) on his tax return.
·
On
day 52, Lucky buys the same cryptocurrency for $35,000. His tax basis is
$35,000.
·
On
day 100, Lucky sells the cryptocurrency for $15,000. He captures and deducts
the $20,000 loss ($35,000 - $15,000) on his tax return.
·
On
day 103, Lucky buys the same cryptocurrency for $15,000.
·
On
day 365, the cryptocurrency is trading at $55,000. Lucky is happy.
Observations:
·
Assuming
Lucky had $35,000 in capital gains, Lucky deducted his $35,000 in
cryptocurrency capital losses. If he had no capital gains, he had a $3,000
deductible loss and carried the other $32,000 forward to next year.
·
On
day 365, Lucky has his cryptocurrency, which was his plan on day 1. He thought
it would go up in value. It did, from its original $50,000 to $55,000.
·
Lucky’s
tax basis in the cryptocurrency on day 365 is $15,000.
Here’s
what Lucky did:
1.
He
kept his cryptocurrency.
2.
He
banked $35,000 in losses.
Be
alert.
Losses from crypto-related securities, such as Coinbase, can fall under the
wash-sale rule because the rule applies to losses from assets classified as
securities for federal income tax purposes. For now, cryptocurrencies
themselves are not classified as securities.
Planning
point.
If you want to harvest losses, make sure you hold a cryptocurrency and not a
security.
Don’t Make a Big
Mistake by Filing Your Tax Return Late
Three
bad things happen when you file your tax return late.
What’s Late?
You
can extend your tax return and file during the period of extension; that’s not
a late-filed return.
The
late-filed return is filed after the last extension expired. That’s what causes
the three bad things to happen.
Bad Thing 1
The
IRS notices that you filed late or not at all.
Of
course, the “I didn’t file at all” people receive the IRS’s “come on down and
bring your tax records” letter. In general, the meeting with the IRS about
non-filed tax returns does not go well.
For
the late filers, the big problem is exposure to an IRS audit. Say you’re in the
group that the IRS audits about 3 percent of the time, but you file your tax
return late. Your chances of an IRS audit increase significantly, perhaps to 50
percent or higher.
Simply
stated, bad thing 1 is this: file late and increase your odds of saying “Hello,
IRS examiner.”
Bad Thing 2
When
you file late, you trigger the big 5 percent a month, not to exceed 25 percent
of the tax-due penalty.
Here,
the bad news is 5 percent a month. The good news (if you want to call it that)
is this penalty maxes out at 25 percent.
Bad Thing 3
Of
course, if you owe the “failure to file” penalty, you likely also owe the
penalty for “failure to pay.” The failure-to-pay penalty equals 0.5 percent a
month, not to exceed 25 percent of the tax due.
The
penalty for failure to pay offsets the penalty for failure to file such that
the 5 percent is the maximum penalty during the first five months when both
penalties apply.
But
once those five months are over, the penalty for failure to pay continues to
apply. Thus, you can owe 47.5 percent of the tax due by not filing and not
paying (25 percent plus 0.5 percent for the additional 45 months it takes to
get to the maximum failure-to-pay penalty of 25 percent).
The Principal Residence Gain Exclusion Break
The
$250,000 ($500,000, if married) home sale gain exclusion break is one of the
great tax-saving opportunities.
Unmarried
homeowners can potentially exclude gains up to $250,000, and married homeowners
can potentially exclude up to $500,000. You as the seller need not complete any
special tax form to take advantage.
To
take full advantage of the principal residence gain exclusion break, you must
pass two tests: the ownership test and the use test.
·
To
pass the ownership test, you must have owned the home for at least two
years out of the five-year period ending on the sale date.
·
To
pass the use test, you must have used the home as your principal
residence for at least two years out of the five-year period ending on the sale
date.
Key
point.
These two tests are completely independent. In other words, periods of
ownership and use need not overlap.
If
you’re married and you and your spouse file your tax returns separately, you
can potentially qualify for two separate $250,000 exclusions.
If
you’re married and file jointly, you qualify for the $500,000 joint-filer
exclusion if
·
either
you pass or your spouse passes the ownership test for the property and
·
both
you and your spouse pass the use test.
When
you file jointly, it’s also possible for both you and your spouse to
individually pass the ownership and use tests for two separate residences. In
that case, you and your spouse would qualify for two separate $250,000
exclusions.
Each
spouse’s eligibility for the $250,000 exclusion is determined separately, as if
you were unmarried. For this purpose, a spouse is considered to individually
own a property for any period the property is actually owned by either spouse.
The
other big qualification rule for the home sale gain exclusion privilege goes
like this: the exclusion is generally available only when you have not excluded
an earlier gain within the two-year period ending on the date of the later
sale. In other words, you generally cannot recycle the gain exclusion privilege
until two years have passed since you last used it.
You can claim the larger $500,000 joint-filer exclusion only if neither you nor your spouse took advantage of it for an earlier sale within the two-year period. If one spouse claimed the exclusion within the two-year window but the other spouse did not, the ex
Comments
Post a Comment