Tax Attorney Offers Small Businesses and the Self-Employed Tips To Avoid An IRS Audit

Edward Gonzalez, a tax attorney with IRS experience, offers the following tips to avoid an audit, especially for self-employed individuals and business owners, who tend to be favorite enforcement targets of the IRS.

The Internal Revenue Service reported last week that IRS audits were up 11% for the year. "Frankly, it's not real surprising," says Edward Gonzalez, a tax attorney in Washington, DC.

"It's during hard times that taxpayers feel the pinch and are more likely to cut corners and try to pay a little less into the public fisc," he notes. "Likewise, as tax revenue goes down, the government will look for more income by increasing audits, publicizing that fact, and thereby scare more taxpayers into compliance."

A tax expert with 22 years in law practice, he says that law firms like his specializing in financial matters expect to have more than the usual number of cases in the near future as more unlucky taxpayers get caught in the taxman's web.

The tax attorney, who has IRS experience, offers the following tips to avoid an audit, especially for self-employed individuals and business owners, who tend to be favorite enforcement targets for IRS:

1. Be scrupulously honest. Report all income, even when you don't get a 1099 or W-2. Deposit all cash, religiously, into the business account. Don't take cash, bypass depositing it into an account, and use it to pay expenses. If the agent sees a lot of this, it'll make the case easier for unreported income. Remember: The burden of proof is on the taxpayer. Ignorance and sloppiness are not an adequate defense. Regarding deductions, don't try to reach. Always ask yourself: Is this a defensible position? Am I clearly entitled to the deduction? Here's an expression one hears often: "Pigs get fat, hogs get slaughtered." I'm told it was first uttered by a judge -- in a tax case.

2. Speaking of deductions, beware of "constructive dividends." This is a favorite of the IRS. Small business owners often use the corporate account to pay for personal goods or services, such a car used for the personal errands of the owner, non-business meals, vacations, home improvements, and so on. IRS and the state tax agents know it, and look for it. If it's personal, report it in your personal income tax return or reimburse the company and make sure to give it only the correct tax treatment as compensation, or dividend, in consultation with your accountant. This is often one of the charges in a tax criminal case.

3. Use a reputable tax preparer. Tax is very complicated. Furthermore, the law changes every year. The person preparing your return should have credentials (education and experience). Mistakes, including math errors, in one part of the tax return increase the odds that the whole return will be audited. Don't pick someone because they promise to get you the biggest refund or the lowest tax bill. That's a red flag signaling a fraudster. You don't want to be questioned by the IRS when they investigate this scammer's entire client list.

4. Keep good records. Of course this is something you should have done throughout the year, but you can still heed this advice for the coming year. Keep your receipts, especially for expenses you deduct. You will be asked for them on audit. Remember: To deduct actual mileage you must keep a "contemporaneous" log, i.e. at the time of the trip, not a reconstruction weeks afterward. L ikewise, you want to have invoices for an payments you make. (Otherwise, on audit, how do you prove the deduction you took for office supplies wasn't just money you pocketed? Bring the paid bills from Staples.) Meticulously deposit all your income into an account and pay your bills out of that account or designated credit cards. If you're self-employed, or have a side-line business in addition to your employment, do NOT commingle income and expenses of your business with your personal. Keep and use separate accounts, ATM cards, and credit cards for your personal transactions and your business transactions. One of the biggest problems we face as tax practitioners working with small businesses is the lack of good record-keeping. Just keeping "books" makes such a difference for business planning and profits, as well as defending an IRS audit.

5. Keep regular books if you have a business. It's good business practice, too, to keep books during the year. Many get into tax trouble because they didn't pay estimated taxes during the year and so don't have the cash (or available credit) to pay when they file the tax return for the year. Had they paid estimated taxes during the year, this would have been avoided. From a business point of view, they would also had a better idea of profitability had they taken into account tax "accrual" expenses building up during the year. So many contractors under-bid because they don't take taxes into account, and end up subsidizing the buyer with the tax liability they will later face!

The tax attorney wishes the best for all taxpayers but wraps up his advice with the warning to seek competent and experienced counsel if they do run afoul of the IRS or state tax authority. His firm, the Law Office of Edward Gonzalez, PC , located in Washington, DC, serves clients in northern Virginia, suburban Maryland, as well as nationally. Get more information on solving tax problems at his firm's website: http://www.money-law.com/index.html.


Bio:
Edward Gonzalez, Esq., principal of the Law Office of Edward Gonzalez, PC, focuses his law practice on financial matters for individuals and small businesses. He obtained his agency experience working for the Internal Revenue Service from 1988 to 1993.
His legal study was pursued at Georgetown University Law Center where he was awarded a law degree in 1988, as well as a master's degree in tax law in 1991. Besides his legal training he has coursework in accounting, corporate finance and has successfully completed all education requirements for a stockbroker's license.
He has been in private practice since 1993 handling cases in the state courts of Virginia and Maryland, the District of Columbia, and the federal and bankruptcy courts for the District of Columbia, Eastern District of Virginia and District of Maryland, and the US Tax Court.

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