Showing posts with label save money in your taxes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label save money in your taxes. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 30, 2014

Save money in your tax and IRS Audit.

Tuesday, September 2, 2014

Claim a tax credir for your child


Can Your Claim a Tax Credit for Sending Your Child to Summer Camp?
By Tom Copeland. Posted with permission.
YMCA_Child_Care_Tax_CreditFamily child care providers often don't think about the potential for claiming tax credits involving their own children.

But, you can claim the federal child care tax credit if you send your own child to a summer camp (soccer camp, YWCA camp, etc.), if you meet these tests:

  • Your child attends the camp while you are working
  • You child is under age 13
  • If you have a spouse, your spouse must either be working, looking for work, or disabled while your child is at camp
  • If you are married, you must file a joint tax return, unless you are legally separated or if you and your spouse live apart
You may also qualify for this child care tax credit if you send your child to another child care program (preschool, etc.) while you are working. You cannot claim this credit if the person providing care is your dependent or a spouse or another child of your own who is under age 19. You can claim this credit if you send your child to another child care provider at any time during the year.

You cannot claim this tax credit if your child stays overnight at the summer camp or if you pay someone to do summer school tutoring for your child.

Keep all your receipts for summer camp or child care expenses. Get the name, address and Social Security number or employer identification number of the care provider.

You can claim this as a child care tax credit on your personal tax return (Form 1040). This is not a business expense. For more information, see IRS Publication 503 Child and Dependent Care Expenses. You can call the IRS at 800-829-3676 to have it mailed to you.

Tom Copeland - www.tomcopelandblog.com

Image credit: www.ppymca.org

Tuesday, July 9, 2013

When you sell your home: the tax.

 Will You Owe Taxes When You Sell Your Home?

By Tom Copeland. Published with permission.
Henry-Carly_post-4_photo-1A family child care provider faces two potential taxes when she sells her home. One you can probably avoid and another you cannot.

Tax on the Profit

First the good news. You can avoid taxes on the profit on the sale of your home if the profit is less than $250,000 and you are single, or $500,000 if you are married. (Note: legally married same sex couples can now take advantage of this tax break.)

So, if you are single and bought your home for $150,000 and sell it for $400,100, you will owe taxes on $100 ($400,100 - $150,000 = $250,100) because the amount above the $250,000 exclusion is $100.

If you are married, you would owe no taxes on the profit because it's less than $500,000.
As you can see, most family child care providers will not owe any tax on the profit on the sale of their home.

Tax on the Depreciation

This second tax is not avoidable. You will owe taxes on the amount of depreciation you were entitled to claim on your home since May 1997.

This is true even if you didn't claim home depreciation on your tax return!

Let's look at an example. Rosalie Ryder purchased her home in 2000 for $200,000. Her Time-Space Percentage is 40% each year. She entitled to claim a depreciation deduction each year of about $2,500 ($200,000 x 40% = $80,000 divided by 39 year deprecation rule = $2,500).

Rosalie does child care in her home until she sells it on December 31, 2013. She used her home for her business for 13 years. She will owe taxes on the amount of depreciation she was entittle to claim for the past 13 years, or $32,500 (13 x $2,500 = $32,500).

What if Rosalie didn't claim house depreciation for some or all of these years?

She would still owe taxes on $32,500! The IRS rule says that if you are entitled to depreciate your home, you will owe taxes on this depreciation even if you didn't claim it. Therefore, always depreciate your home!

Don't let someone tell you, "Don't depreciate your home because you will have to pay more taxes when you sell your home." Since you will have to pay these taxes anyway, there is no reason to give up the tax benefit of claiming depreciation. You will always come out ahead financially when you depreciate your home because the taxes on the depreciation will be less than the tax benefit of claiming the depreciation.

You will owe this tax even if you stop doing child care for years before selling your home.
You will pay either a tax rate of 10%, 15% or 25% on the house depreciation. (The tax rate will be based on your tax bracket in the year you sell your home.)

So, Rosalie will either owe $3,250, $4,875 or $8,125 in taxes. Remember, she will owe these taxes even if she didn't depreciate her home.
Note: I've simplified the above example to exclude the value of land, home improvements, and expenses associated with the sale of the home. See my annual Family Child Care Tax Workbook and Organizer for the chapter "Selling Your Home."

Other Issues

If you show a loss for your business in one year, you won't be entitled to claim house depreciation for that year. Therefore, you won't owe tax on home depreciation for that year.
If you are single and live with someone else who owns the home, you aren't entitled to claim house depreciation and therefore won't owe any taxes on it when the home is sold. If you are married and your spouse (including legally married same sex couples) owns the home, you are still entitled to claim house depreciation and so would owe this tax.

If you haven't been claiming depreciation on your home, you can recapture all previously unclaimed depreciation by filing IRS Form 3115 Application for Change in Accounting Method. If Rosalie had not depreciated her home between 2000 and 2013, she can claim $32,500 of previously unclaimed depreciation using Form 3115 by filing it with her 2013 tax return.


Conclusion: if you are thinking about selling your home, talk with a tax professional who can advise you about the tax consequences of home depreciation.

I've written two other articles about home depreciation:
"Should You Depreciate Your Home?"

Tom Copeland - www.tomcopelandblog.com

Image credit:thebigorangepress.com
2012 Tax WorkbookFor more information about how to depreciate your home and the tax consequences of selling your home, see my annual Family Child Care Tax Workbook and Organizer.

Monday, May 13, 2013

Tax tips and record keeping

Seven Record Keeping and Tax Tips for the New Provider
By Tom Copeland. Posted wih permission
Family child care providers are self-employed taxpayers who must report their business income and expenses to the IRS. It is important to become familiar with all of the IRS requirements for filing your taxes. To help you prepare for this, here are seven record keeping and tax tips to help you as you start your new profession. By following these tips you will be better able to organize your records, claim the maximum legal deductions, and reduce your taxes.
1. Receipts
Keep receipts for every business expense. Your goal should be to have receipts for every penny of your expenses. Because most of the costs to clean, maintain and repair your home can be partially deducted as a business expense (light bulbs, toilet paper, garbage bags, snow shovel, etc.), collect receipts whenever you go to the drugstore, hardware store, etc. Record on your calendar when, you go on field trips or travel because of business. A canceled check may not be as acceptable to the IRS as a store receipt.
2. When can expenses be deducted?
You must report all income from caring for children even if you do not meet or have not completed local regulation requirements. You should begin deducting business expenses as soon as you begin caring for your first child, even if you do not meet local regulations. The only expenses you cannot deduct if you do not meet local regulations are expenses connected with your house (utilities, house insurance, property taxes, mortgage interest, house depreciation and house repairs).
3. Food Expenses
Because food costs will probably be your single biggest expense, you should begin keeping careful track of the number of meals you serve each day, including meals that are not reimbursed by the Food Program. Multiply these meal counts by the standard meal allowance rate to claim food expenses without having to keep any food receipts.
4. Monthly Review
Do not wait until the end of the year to collect your receipts and other records. Conduct a monthly review to make sure you have everything in order. Keep your records in one place. Use envelopes to store receipts by category of expense. Make sure receipts are labeled and can be read. If you forgot to get a receipt or if you could not get one (parking meter, garage sale, etc.), make one of your own to remind you of the expense.
5. Estimated Tax
You may have to pay some federal income tax before the end of the year. To find out if you must pay estimated tax, estimate your income and expenses through the end of the year. If you will owe $1,000 or more in taxes, you may have to pay in quarterly installments due April 15, June 15, September 15 and January 15. There are a number of exceptions to this rule. See IRS Publication 505 Tax Withholding and Estimated Tax.
6. Employees
If you hire someone as a substitute or helper in your business, you should treat this person as an employee, which means you must withhold social security and income taxes for the employee and pay employers’ social security taxes throughout the year. Many providers treat helpers as independent contractors and do not withhold taxes, but this practice is wrong. Only someone who is in the business of providing substitute care or is doing a special service for you (cleaning, puppet show, music lesson) could be considered an independent contractor.
7. Household Inventory
Your house and items in your house that are used at all in your business are being worn out at a faster rate than if you were not doing family child care. As a result, you can deduct or depreciate a portion of the cost of these items as business expenses. Conduct a thorough room by room inventory and list every item (furniture, appliances, lawn mower, etc.) in your house. Consult the Redleaf Press Inventory-Keeper for a room-by-room listing of items.
This handout was produced by Think Small (www.thinksmall.org).
For additional family child care business publications, contact Think Small's publishing division, Redleaf Press, at 800-423-8309 or visit
www.redleafpress.org.

"Become a member of the National Association for Family Child Care at
www.nafcc.org and receive monthly business e-newsletters, discounts on books by Tom Copeland, IRS audit help, and much more."


www.tomcopelandblog.com

Monday, November 19, 2012

Home improvement

What is a Home Improvement?

By Tom Copeland.  Published with permission

5876557_origFamily child care providers are entitled to deduct expenses that are "ordinary and necessary" for their business. Because you are offering a home-based learning environment for children, it's reasonable to deduct many expenses associated with your house.
This includes expenses associated with cleaning, maintaining and repairing your home. It also includes home improvements.
Home improvements are expenses for the permanent improvement or modification of your home that increase its value or prolongs its useful life.
Examples of home improvements include: attic fan, awnings, carport, central air conditioning, central security alarm system, deck, furnace, garage, new room addition, porch, remodel kitchen/bathroom/playroom/bedroom/living room, replacement windows, and tile/wood flooring.
Home improvements must be depreciated over 39 years. A house repair can be deducted in one year. House repairs include: painting, wallpapering, replacing broken roof shingles, deck staining, floor sanding, furnace cleaning, plumbing/electrical repairs, and replacing broken glass.
Home improvements you made before your business began should be added to the value of the home and depreciated as one. Home improvements you make after your business begins should be depreciated separately.
I recommend that all child care providers depreciate their home improvements. You can use my Family Child Care Inventory-Keeper to help you record these improvements. Although the deduction for home improvements may be small each year, they will add up over time. See my article, "How to Conduct a Household Inventory to Save Money."
Let's look at an example: In 2012 you add a deck to the back of your home that costs $4,000. Since the deck is used by both your family and your business, you must multiply the cost by your Time-Space Percentage. If you Time-Space Percentage is 40%, the business portion of the deck is $1,600 ($4,000 x 40% = $1,600). $1,600 depreciated over 39 years results in a $41 deduction each year for 39 years. If you don't stay in business for the next 39 years (!) you won't get any depreciation after you are closed.
If you made home improvements either before or after you went into business that you have not yet depreciated, it's not too late to claim this depreciation. Use IRS Form 3115 when filing your 2012 tax return. See my article, "How to Claim Previously Unclaimed Depreciation."

www.tomcopelandblog.com