In this article, we are going to dive into the nuts and bolts of how to really prepare for a 1099 Independent Contractor Audit and potential misclassification issues.
Brotman Law
4 Frequently Asked Questions about California State Taxes
As a tax attorney, I get asked a lot of questions everyday regarding – you guessed it – the rather specialized world of California taxation. To be sure, some questions are asked more frequently than others. In light of this, I’ve given some thought to four frequently asked questions and hope that my answers provide you with the information that you’re interested in.
IRS Prioritizes More Delinquent, High-Income Taxpayers
Imagine yourself working as an IRS agent. Your department is in charge of identifying delinquent, high-income taxpayers who gross $200,000 or more per year in your state.
Know about Tax Debt before Filing for Bankruptcy
Filing for bankruptcy may feel like accidentally stepping off a cliff – it’s not something most people can mentally prepare themselves for in advance.
Establishing Residency or Domicile in California Can Be Taxing
Robert Wood, tax expert and frequent contributor to Forbes.com, wrote that “many would-be former Californians have unrealistic expectations about establishing residency in a new state. They may have a hard time distancing themselves from California, and they may not plan on California tax authorities pursuing them.”
Can Internal Revenue Code Section 1202 Benefit You?
There is a generous tax benefit that only select taxpayers qualify for. Not well known, it is called ‘‘qualified small business stock,’’ or QSBS for short, and is found in Section 1202 of the Internal Revenue Code. Titled the “Partial Exclusion for Gain from Certain Small Business Stock,” it allows taxpayers to exclude gain from certain stock.
California FTB Knocking Harder on Business Doors
We are now more than a year removed from the first reported COVID-19 case in the United States. Since then, government-forced shutdowns have rocked hundreds of thousands of businesses. When the catastrophic news hit, most business owners made the health and safety of themselves and their employees priority one.
Offers in Compromise, The IRS and COVID-19
Back taxes can be a sore subject – one that never makes anyone smile – except perhaps in the movies. In the first season of the The Kominsky Method, an American comedy-drama on Netflix, an aging but still debonair Michael Douglas plays a once successful actor now Hollywood acting coach named Sandy Kominsky, who finds himself neck-deep in tax debt.
The State of FTB Tax Collections for Individuals
“Whether you agree that raising taxes during an economic recession is bad for the economy or not, state and local governments should be doing everything in their power to bid Congress to provide more direct aid. This would minimize the need for tax increases or spending cuts,” wrote Michael Mazerov in Tax Notes.