IRS Tax News

  • 13 Jan 2021 12:13 PM | Deleted user

    WASHINGTON — National Taxpayer Advocate Erin M. Collins today released her 2020 Annual Report to Congress, focusing on the unprecedented challenges taxpayers faced in filing their tax returns and receiving refunds and stimulus payments during a year consumed by the COVID-19 pandemic. The report also finds that a roughly 20% inflation-adjusted reduction in the IRS’s budget since fiscal year (FY) 2010 has left the agency with antiquated technology and inadequate staffing levels to meet taxpayers’ needs.

    As part of the report, Collins released the fourth edition of the National Taxpayer Advocate’s “Purple Book,” a compilation of 66 legislative recommendations designed to strengthen taxpayer rights and improve tax administration.

    “During 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic affected almost all facets of our lives, and U.S. tax administration was no exception,” Collins said in releasing the report. “Taxpayers could not meet in person with their tax return preparers. IRS personnel who open and process tax returns and answer the toll-free telephone lines had to follow social distancing guidelines and stay-at-home orders, limiting their ability to assist taxpayers. And Congress assigned the IRS the task of issuing two rounds of stimulus payments, stretching its resources even further.”

    The 2020 filing season and Economic Impact Payments

    The report says the IRS in most cases “can effectively handle whatever it can automate,” and as a result, most taxpayers were well served. As of Nov. 20, 2020, the IRS had received about 169 million individual income tax returns, including about 8.4 million that were filed solely to claim stimulus payments (referred to by the IRS as “economic impact payments” or “EIPs”). About 90% of returns were e-filed and therefore were not delayed by the pandemic. Similarly, the overwhelming majority of EIPs were issued by direct deposit or automated mailings and were successfully and timely transmitted.

    However, the report says millions of taxpayers experienced major problems, including the following:

    • Refund delays due to COVID-19 processing backlogs. About 16 million individual income taxpayers filed paper tax returns. Because the IRS could not fully staff its mail facilities, some taxpayers have waited six months or longer for the IRS to process their returns. Most taxpayers receive refunds, which in recent years have averaged more than $2,500. On Dec. 31, the IRS website indicated there were still 7.1 million unprocessed individual returns and 2.3 million unprocessed business returns as of Nov. 24.
    • Refund delays due to IRS fraud detection filters. The IRS passes all returns claiming refunds through a series of filters designed to detect fraudulent income or identity theft-based claims. These fraud detection filters in recent years have generated “false positive” rates substantially greater than 50% (meaning that most refund claims frozen by the filters are ultimately found to be legitimate). This problem was compounded in 2020 because the IRS notifies taxpayers of refund holds by written correspondence, and the IRS was delayed both in sending notices and in processing taxpayer responses. For about 25% of the returns flagged for income verification, refunds took longer than 56 days. For about 18% of the returns flagged for identity verification, refunds took longer than 120 days. 
    • EIP underpayments. In accordance with the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act, the IRS issued more than 160 million EIPs. However, millions of eligible individuals did not receive some or all of the EIPs for which they were eligible despite a statutory directive that the IRS issue the payments “as rapidly as possible.” Initially, the IRS took the position that it generally would not correct EIP mistakes in 2020. As the year progressed, the IRS agreed to fix some categories of EIP problems, mostly those it could fix via automation. Still, the IRS was unable to resolve many cases in 2020, requiring eligible individuals to wait until they file their 2020 tax returns in 2021 to receive their payments.
    • Late notices. During 2020, taxpayers were sent more than 20 million notices bearing dates that had passed and, in many cases, response or payment deadlines that also had passed. This happened because on two occasions during the year, IRS computers automatically generated notices that the IRS did not have the capacity to mail at the time. Rather than reprint the notices with new dates, the IRS decided to include “inserts” with about 1.8 million notices explaining that taxpayers would have additional time to respond. But the IRS failed to include these inserts with other notices that should have contained them and had to issue supplemental letters informing taxpayers of additional extensions. For affected taxpayers, this caused confusion and, in some cases, undue stress and concern. Among the late notices were collection notices and math error notices, where the failure to timely respond could mean loss of rights.
    • Lack of information about backlogs, notices, and other problems. The report says the IRS should have done a better job of keeping the public informed about COVID-19-related delays by creating a regularly updated “COVID-19 Dashboard” and issuing weekly news releases to ensure the information was widely disseminated. While the IRS did post limited information on IRS.gov during the latter part of the year, it was not well-promoted and it was not regularly updated. As mentioned above, for example, the IRS website on Dec. 31 contained an update posted on Dec. 1 that stated the numbers of unprocessed individual and business returns as of Nov. 24 were 7.1 million and 2.3 million, respectively, and that some unprocessed returns dated back to April 15. The report says the public will benefit if the IRS begins to update its backlog information weekly, and the IRS and TAS consequently will receive fewer calls from taxpayers reaching out solely to obtain that information.

    Inadequate funding is the source of many (not all) taxpayer problems

    By statute, the National Taxpayer Advocate is required to identify the ten most serious problems encountered by taxpayers in their dealings with the IRS. In her preface to the report, Collins wrote: “If this year’s Most Serious Problems are read in combination, one overriding theme emerges: To improve taxpayer service, the IRS needs more resources to hire employees and more resources to modernize its information technology (IT) systems.”

    Among the Most Serious Problems are the following:

    • Insufficient employee hiring and retention. Since FY 2010, the IRS workforce has shrunk by approximately 20%, about even with the inflation-adjusted reduction in the IRS budget. Inadequate funding combined with weaknesses in hiring and retention strategies have created an insufficient and disproportionately aging workforce, with an estimated 26% of IRS employees eligible to retire during FY 2021. The report says insufficient experienced staffing in the IRS’s Human Capital Office and hiring restrictions outside its control have left the IRS ill-equipped to handle the agency’s hiring needs. TAS recommends the IRS hire additional human resource specialists to meet hiring needs, restructure internal hiring processes to reduce cycle times, and renegotiate the hiring process with the National Treasury Employees Union to allow for up to 50% of all hiring announcements to be filled externally.
    • Inadequate telephone and in-person taxpayer service. In FY 2020, the IRS received more than 100 million calls on its toll-free telephone lines. IRS employees answered only about 24 million. Taxpayers who got through waited an average of 18 minutes on hold. In recent years, the IRS has been serving fewer taxpayers in its Taxpayer Assistance Centers (TACs), and the COVID-19 pandemic exacerbated that trend. The number of taxpayers the IRS has served face-to-face has declined from 4.4 million five years ago in FY 2016, to 2.3 million in FY 2019, to 1.0 million in FY 2020. To improve telephone and TAC services, TAS recommends that the IRS prioritize the expansion of “customer callback” technology and give taxpayers the option of receiving face-to-face service through videoconferencing.
    • Limited functionality of online taxpayer accounts. The report says online taxpayer accounts are plagued by limited functionality. For example, taxpayers generally cannot view images of past tax returns, most IRS notices, or proposed assessments; file documents; or update their addresses or the names of authorized representatives. The inability to conduct transactions online is frustrating for taxpayers who have been conducting comparable transactions with financial institutions for more than two decades and increases the number of telephone calls and pieces of correspondence the IRS receives. TAS recommends the IRS expedite the expansion of online taxpayer accounts.
    • Antiquated information technology. The IRS continues to operate the two oldest major IT systems still in use in the federal government, dating to the early 1960s. The IRS also operates about 60 case management systems that generally are not interoperable. The report says obsolete systems limit the functionality of taxpayer accounts, prevent taxpayers from obtaining full details about the status of their cases, and impede the IRS’s ability to select the best cases for compliance actions.

    Other Most Serious Problems include inadequate digital communication options; limitations on the ability of some taxpayers to e-file their tax returns; challenges in the correspondence examination process; inappropriate imposition of foreign information reporting penalties; delays in the processing of amended tax returns; and refund delays attributable to refund fraud filters.

    The report says a common link among these taxpayer problems is inadequate funding to allow the IRS to administer the tax system as well as it could. “The IRS is the accounts receivable department of the federal government,” Collins wrote. “In FY 2020, it collected about $3.5 trillion on a budget of about $11.51 billion, producing a remarkable return on investment of more than 300:1. For this reason, it is economically irrational to underfund the IRS.”

    The report says the IRS needs more funding to hire enough customer service representatives to answer taxpayer telephone calls and significant additional funding to modernize its IT systems. The IRS has developed a roadmap known as the “Integrated Modernization Business Plan” that would replace legacy systems with modern technology systems and enable the agency to provide improved service to taxpayers and deliver long-term budget efficiencies. The IRS has estimated it will require between $2.3 billion and $2.7 billion in additional funding over the next six years to implement this plan. Yet in FY 2020, the Business Systems Modernization account was funded at only $180 million. The funding level has been raised to $223 million in FY 2021, but the report calls that amount “a drop in the bucket compared to the IRS’s IT funding needs.”

    The report points out that the IRS recently developed comprehensive multi-year plans to improve taxpayer services and modernize its IT systems, as required by the Taxpayer First Act. Included in the plans are initiatives TAS has been proposing for several years, “including customer callback, robust online accounts, a focus on resolving taxpayer issues at the earliest possible time, and the use of digital tools to improve service.” Collins wrote that the plans, if implemented, “will be a game-changer for taxpayers,” but noted they are dependent on funding.

    National Taxpayer Advocate “Purple Book” of legislative recommendations

    The National Taxpayer Advocate’s 2021 Purple Book proposes 66 legislative recommendations for consideration by Congress. Among them are the following:

    • Authorize the IRS to establish minimum standards for tax return preparers. Most taxpayers hire tax return preparers to complete their returns, and visits to preparers by Government Accountability Office and Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration auditors posing as taxpayers, as well as IRS compliance studies, have found preparers make significant errors that both harm taxpayers and reduce tax compliance. Nearly ten years ago, the IRS sought to implement minimum preparer standards, including requiring otherwise non-credentialed preparers to pass a basic competency test, but a federal court concluded the IRS could not do so without statutory authorization. TAS recommends Congress provide that authorization.
    • Expand the U.S. Tax Court’s jurisdiction to hear refund cases. Under current law, taxpayers who owe tax and wish to litigate a dispute with the IRS must go to the U.S. Tax Court, while taxpayers who have paid their tax and are seeking a refund must file suit in a U.S. district court or the U.S. Court of Federal Claims. TAS recommends that all taxpayers be given the option to litigate their tax disputes in the U.S. Tax Court.
    • Restructure the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) to make it simpler for taxpayers and reduce improper payments. TAS has long advocated for dividing the EITC into two separate credits: (i) a refundable worker credit based on each individual worker’s earned income, irrespective of the presence of a qualifying child, and (ii) a refundable child credit that would reflect the costs of caring for one or more children. For wage earners, claims for the worker credit could be verified with nearly 100% accuracy by matching income information on tax returns against income information on Forms W 2, thereby reducing the improper payments rate on those claims to nearly zero. The portion of the EITC that varies based on family size would be combined with the child tax credit into a single family credit.
    • Increase the annual award cap for Low Income Taxpayer Clinics (LITCs). When the LITC matching grant program was established as part of the IRS Restructuring and Reform Act of 1998, Internal Revenue Code (IRC) § 7526 limited annual grants to no more than $100,000 per clinic. The cap was not indexed for inflation, and as a result, the per-clinic grant maximum is worth much less today. In light of the significant value LITCs provide, TAS recommends that Congress increase the per-clinic cap to $150,000 and index it to rise with inflation.
    • Require taxpayer consent before allowing IRS Counsel or Compliance personnel to participate in IRS Independent Office of Appeals conferences. Historically, the IRS’s Counsel and Compliance functions provided input into Appeals conferences via taxpayer case files and, if a case was particularly large or complex, at a pre-conference. However, they generally did not attend Appeals conferences with taxpayers. In October 2016, Appeals revised its rules to allow Appeals Officers to include personnel from Counsel and Compliance in taxpayer conferences as a matter of routine. The report says this change undermines Congress’s intent to “reassure taxpayers of the independence” of Appeals. TAS recommends that Congress require Appeals to obtain advance taxpayer consent before including Counsel or Compliance personnel in any conference between Appeals and a taxpayer.
    • Clarify that taxpayers may raise innocent spouse relief as a defense in collection proceedings and bankruptcy cases. Congress has enacted rules to relieve “innocent spouses” from joint and several liability in certain circumstances. If the IRS denies a taxpayer’s request for innocent spouse relief, the taxpayer generally may seek review of the adverse determination in the Tax Court. However, the Tax Court does not have jurisdiction over collection suits arising under IRC §§ 7402 or 7403, or over bankruptcy proceedings arising under Title 11 of the U.S. Code. Courts have reached inconsistent decisions about whether taxpayers may raise innocent spouse relief as a defense in those categories of cases, undermining the innocent spouse protections and potentially resulting in differing treatment of similarly situated taxpayers. TAS recommends Congress clarify that taxpayers may raise innocent spouse claims in all such proceedings.
    • Clarify that the National Taxpayer Advocate may hire independent legal counsel. IRC § 7803(c) requires the National Taxpayer Advocate to operate independently of the IRS in key respects. To help ensure this independence, the conference committee report accompanying the IRS Restructuring and Reform Act of 1998 stated: “The conferees intend that the National Taxpayer Advocate be able to hire and consult counsel as appropriate.” This is similar to the statutory authority Congress has granted inspectors general to ensure their independence. Until 2015, the National Taxpayer Advocate was able to hire attorneys to advise her, advocate for taxpayers, and write key sections of her two statutorily mandated reports to Congress. But the Treasury Department at that time began to enforce a policy that requires all attorney-advisors in the Department to report to the General Counsel absent a statutory exception. To enable the National Taxpayer Advocate to continue to advocate for taxpayers effectively and independently, TAS recommends that Congress authorize the Advocate to hire attorney-advisors that report directly to her.

    Other issues

    The report also contains a final assessment of the extended 2020 filing season, a taxpayer rights assessment that presents performance measures and other relevant data, a summary of key TAS systemic advocacy accomplishments, a discussion of the ten federal tax issues most frequently litigated during the preceding year, and a description of TAS’s case advocacy operations during FY 2020. It also includes a research study that finds the IRS Collection function can and should implement an algorithm to identify taxpayers at high risk of economic hardship and spare them from entering into installment agreements they cannot afford.

    Please visit https://www.taxpayeradvocate.irs.gov/AnnualReport2020 for more information.

    In addition, TAS has recently released an Online Digital Roadmap Tool that will assist taxpayers with navigating the complexity of the tax system. By entering a notice or letter number, taxpayers can determine where they are on the roadmap, why they received the notice or letter, what rights they have, what they must do next, and where they can get additional help.

    Related items: 

    About the Taxpayer Advocate Service

    TAS is an independent organization within the IRS that helps taxpayers and protects taxpayer rights. Your local advocate’s number is available in your local directory and at https://taxpayeradvocate.irs.gov/contact-us. You may also call TAS toll-free at 877-777-4778. TAS can help if you need assistance resolving an IRS problem, if your problem is causing financial difficulty, or if you believe an IRS system or procedure isn’t working as it should. And our service is free. For more information about TAS and your rights under the Taxpayer Bill of Rights, go to https://taxpayeradvocate.irs.gov. You can get updates on tax topics at facebook.com/YourVoiceAtIRS, Twitter.com/YourVoiceatIRS, and YouTube.com/TASNTA


  • 12 Jan 2021 3:11 PM | Deleted user

    WASHINGTON – The Internal Revenue Service today assured taxpayers and tax professionals that updates to key federal tax forms and instructions are complete and will be available when Americans begin filing their tax returns.

    Most individual taxpayers file IRS Form 1040 or Form 1040-SR once they receive Forms W-2 and other earnings information from their employers and payers. IRS has incorporated recent changes to the tax laws into the forms and instructions, and shared the updates with its partners who develop the software used by individuals and tax professionals to prepare and file their returns. Forms 1040 and 1040-SR and the associated instructions are available now on IRS.gov and are being printed for taxpayers who need a hard copy.

    Economic Impact Payments are an advance payment of the Recovery Rebate Credit. Important updates include the Recovery Rebate Credit worksheet on page 59 of the 1040/1040-SR instructions. Anyone who didn’t receive the full amount of both Economic Impact Payments should include the amounts they received, before any offsets, when they file. Anyone who received the full amount for both Economic Impact Payments should not include any information about the advance payments when they file their tax return.

    Also new this year is the option to use prior year income amounts when computing the Earned Income Tax Credit and the Additional Child Tax Credit. 

    The IRS has not yet announced a start date for the 2021 filing season. IRS Free File will open in mid-January when participating providers begin accepting returns. The IRS Free File providers will accept completed tax returns and hold them until they can be filed electronically with the IRS. 

    Latest Economic Impact Payments are automatic for eligible taxpayers

    This month, the Treasury Department and the IRS are sending the second round of Economic Impact Payments to millions of Americans as part of the implementation of the Coronavirus Response and Relief Supplemental Appropriations Act.

    Taxpayers don’t need to take any action to receive these payments. Economic Impact Payments are automatic for eligible taxpayers who filed a 2019 tax return and those who receive Social Security retirement, survivor or disability benefits (SSDI), Railroad Retirement benefits, Supplemental Security Income (SSI) and Veterans Affairs beneficiaries who didn’t file a tax return.

    These second round of payments follow the successful delivery of more than $270 billion in CARES Act Economic Impact Payments to about 160 million Americans in 2020.
     
    Eligible individuals who did not receive an Economic Impact Payment  – either the first or the second payment – can claim a Recovery Rebate Credit when they file their 2020 taxes this year. The IRS urges taxpayers who didn’t receive an advance payment to review the eligibility criteria when they file their 2020 taxes; many people, including recent college graduates, may be eligible for a credit.

    Eligible individuals who didn’t receive the full amount of both Economic Impact Payments should claim the missing amount as a credit. Anyone who did receive the full amount for both Economic Impact Payments should not include any information about their payment when they file their taxes – they’ve already received the full amount of the Recovery Rebate Credit as advance payments.

    For the latest IRS forms and instructions, visit the IRS website at www.irs.gov/forms.

    Please visit IRS.gov for the latest information about the Economic Impact Payments and filing your 2020 tax return.

  • 12 Jan 2021 2:30 PM | Deleted user

    IRS YouTube Video:
    Get an Identity Protection PIN - English | Spanish

    WASHINGTON – The Internal Revenue Service today expanded the Identity Protection PIN Opt-In Program to all taxpayers who can verify their identities.

    The Identity Protection PIN (IP PIN) is a six-digit code known only to the taxpayer and to the IRS. It helps prevent identity thieves from filing fraudulent tax returns using a taxpayers’ personally identifiable information.

    “This is a way to, in essence, lock your tax account, and the IP PIN serves as the key to opening that account,” said IRS Commissioner Chuck Rettig. “Electronic returns that do not contain the correct IP PIN will be rejected, and paper returns will go through additional scrutiny for fraud.”

    The IRS launched the IP PIN program nearly a decade ago to protect confirmed identity theft victims from ongoing tax-related fraud. In recent years, the IRS expanded the program to specific states where taxpayers could voluntarily opt into the IP PIN program. Now, the voluntary program is going nationwide.

    About the IP PIN Opt-In Program
    Here are a few key things to know about the IP PIN Opt-In program:

    • This is a voluntary program.
    • You must pass a rigorous identity verification process.
    • Spouses and dependents are eligible for an IP PIN if they can verify their identities.
    • An IP PIN is valid for a calendar year.
    • You must obtain a new IP PIN each filing season.
    • The online IP PIN tool is offline between November and mid-January each year.
    • Correct IP PINs must be entered on electronic and paper tax returns to avoid rejections and delays.
    • Never share your IP PIN with anyone but your trusted tax provider. The IRS will never call, text or email requesting your IP PIN. Beware of scams to steal your IP PIN.
    • There currently is no opt-out option but the IRS is working on one for 2022.

    How to get an IP PIN
    Taxpayers who want an IP PIN for 2021 should go to IRS.gov/IPPIN and use the Get an IP PIN tool. This online process will require taxpayers to verify their identities using the Secure Access authentication process if they do not already have an IRS account. See IRS.gov/SecureAccess for what information you need to be successful. There is no need to file a Form 14039, an Identity Theft Affidavit, to opt into the program

    Once taxpayers have authenticated their identities, their 2021 IP PIN immediately will be revealed to them. Once in the program, this PIN must be used when prompted by electronic tax returns or entered by hand near the signature line on paper tax returns.

    All taxpayers are encouraged to first use the online IP PIN tool to obtain their IP PIN. Taxpayers who cannot verify their identities online do have options.

    Taxpayers whose adjusted gross income is $72,000 or less may complete Form 15227, Application for an Identity Protection Personal Identification Number, and mail or fax to the IRS. An IRS customer service representative will contact the taxpayer and verify their identities by phone. Taxpayers should have their prior year tax return at hand for the verification process.

    Taxpayers who verify their identities through this process will have an IP PIN mailed to them the following tax year. This is for security reasons. Once in the program, the IP PIN will be mailed to these taxpayers each year.

    Taxpayers who cannot verify their identities online or by phone and who are ineligible for file Form 15227 can contact the IRS and make an appointment at a Taxpayer Assistance Center to verify their identities in person. Taxpayers should bring two forms of identification, including one government-issued picture identification.

    Taxpayers who verify their identities through the in-person process will have an IP PIN mailed to them within three weeks. Once in the program, the IP PIN will be mailed to these taxpayers each year.

    No change for confirmed identity theft victims
    Taxpayers who are confirmed identity theft victims or who have filed an identity theft affidavit because of suspected stolen identity refund fraud will automatically receive an IP PIN via mail once their cases are resolved. Current tax-related identity theft victims who have been receiving IP PINs via mail will experience no change.

    See IRS.gov/IPPIN for additional details.

    The IRS also encourages tax professionals and employers to share information with taxpayers about the availability of the IP PIN. Tax professionals and employers can print or email Publication 5367 or share IRS social media/e-poster products. 
  • 11 Jan 2021 3:11 PM | Deleted user

    WASHINGTON − The Internal Revenue Service is seeking qualified applicants for nomination to the Electronic Tax Administration Advisory Committee.
     
    The ETAAC provides an organized public forum for discussion of electronic tax administration issues − such as prevention of identity theft and refund fraud − in support of the overriding goal that paperless filing should be the preferred and most convenient method of filing tax and information returns. ETAAC members work closely with the Security Summit, a joint effort of the IRS, state tax administrators and tax industry to fight electronic fraud.

    The IRS is looking for qualified individuals who will serve three-year terms beginning in September 2021. Applicants should have experience in such areas as state tax administration, cybersecurity and information security, tax software development, tax preparation, payroll and tax financial product processing, systems management and improvement and implementation of customer service initiatives.

    The IRS also encourages representatives from consumer groups with an interest in tax issues to apply. Applications will be accepted through March 1, 2021.

    Nominations of qualified individuals may be made by letter and received from organizations or the individuals themselves. Applicants should complete the ETAAC application and include a short statement of interest and a resume. Applicants should describe and document their qualifications, past and current affiliations, and involvement with cybersecurity and electronic tax administration.

    In addition, applicants must successfully complete a tax compliance check, practitioner background check and FBI criminal background check.

    ETAAC is a Federal Advisory Committee established by the Internal Revenue Service Restructuring and Reform Act of 1998.

    Questions about the ETAAC and the application process can be e-mailed to publicliaison@irs.gov.

  • 11 Jan 2021 1:28 PM | Deleted user

    WASHINGTON – The IRS today sent the Taxpayer First Act Report to Congress, a comprehensive set of recommendations that will reimagine the taxpayer experience, enhance employee training and restructure the organization to increase collaboration and innovation.

    The IRS will continue conversations with key stakeholders and congressional committees to secure funding and begin to work toward implementation of these recommendations over the next several years.

    “The way we interact with taxpayers and the tax community, the way that we train our employees and the way we structure our organizational structure are important foundations for our future success,” said IRS Commissioner Chuck Rettig. “Guided by the law, we will fundamentally change the way we operate, building upon our strengths, with additional focus on areas to improve the important service we provide to our great country.”

    The Taxpayer First Act, signed into law in July 2019, was designed to improve taxpayer service and ensure the IRS continues to enforce the tax law in a fair and impartial manner. The report to Congress includes three integrated sets of recommendations required by the law, including:

    • A taxpayer experience strategy that focuses on creating a proactive, convenient, seamless, personalized and effective interaction with taxpayers and the tax professional community;
    • A comprehensive training strategy, a multi-faceted approach to empowering the workforce and equipping them with the skills and tools they need to advance their careers, provide high-quality service to taxpayers and enhance the taxpayer experience, and
    • A recommended organizational design that will increase collaboration, coordinate strategic implementation of large-scale initiatives, enhance innovation, strengthen communications and prioritize taxpayer rights, all with the aim of improving the taxpayer experience.

    The IRS will begin work to implement several of the recommendations in the report as early as 2021, building upon work already underway to expand digital services, reach underserved communities and improve proactive outreach.

    “Over the next 10 years, taxpayers will find expanded options for information and services and an increasingly better experience across all of their interactions with the IRS,” Rettig said.

    The report to Congress is available on IRS.gov.

  • 07 Jan 2021 3:46 PM | Deleted user

    WASHINGTON – Starting this week, the Treasury Department and the Internal Revenue Service are sending approximately 8 million second Economic Impact Payments (EIPs) by prepaid debit card. 

    These EIP Cards follow the millions of payments already made by direct deposit and the ongoing mailing of paper checks that are delivering the second round of Economic Impact Payments as rapidly as possible. 

    For those who don’t receive a direct deposit, they should watch their mail for either a paper check or a prepaid debit card. To speed delivery of the payments to reach as many people as soon as possible the Treasury’s Bureau of Fiscal Service is sending payments out by prepaid debit card. 

    IRS and Treasury urge eligible people who don’t receive a direct deposit to watch their mail carefully during this period. The prepaid debit card, called the Economic Impact Payment card, is sponsored by the Bureau of the Fiscal Service and is issued by Treasury’s financial agent, MetaBank®, N.A. The IRS does not determine who receives a prepaid debit card. 

    Taxpayers should note that the form of payment for the second mailed EIP may be different than the first mailed EIP. Some people who received a paper check last time might receive a prepaid debit card this time, and some people who received a prepaid debit card last time may receive a paper check. 

    More information about these cards is available at EIPcard.com.

    EIP Cards are safe, convenient and secure. EIP Card recipients can make purchases online or in stores anywhere Visa® Debit Cards are accepted. They can get cash from domestic in-network ATMs, transfer funds to a personal bank account and obtain a replacement EIP Card if needed without incurring any fees. They can also check their card balance online, through a mobile app or by phone without incurring fees. The EIP Card provides consumer protections including certain protections against fraud, loss and other errors. 

    EIP Cards are being sent in a white envelope that prominently displays the U.S. Department of the Treasury seal. The EIP Card has the Visa name on the front of the Card and the issuing bank name, MetaBank®, N.A. on the back of the card. Each mailing will include instructions on how to securely activate and use the EIP Card. 

    EIP Debit Card Image

     

    EIP Envelope Image

     

    EIP Cards are being issued to eligible recipients across all 50 states and the District of Columbia. Residents of the western part of the United States are generally more likely to receive an EIP Card. 

    The swift issuance of this second round of payments follows the successful delivery of more than $270 billion in CARES Act Economic Impact Payments earlier this year. To check the status of a payment, visit IRS.gov/GetMyPayment. For more information about Economic Impact Payments visit IRS.gov/EIP.

  • 06 Jan 2021 2:32 PM | Deleted user

    WASHINGTON – Today the Treasury Department and Internal Revenue Service issued final regulations regarding the credit for qualified carbon oxide captured using carbon capture equipment placed in service on or after Feb. 9, 2018.

    The final regulations help businesses understand how the credit for qualified carbon oxide sequestration may benefit those claiming two carbon capture credit amounts, which are:

    • Up to $50 per metric ton of qualified carbon oxide for permanent sequestration; and
    • Up to $35 per metric ton of qualified carbon oxide for Enhanced Oil or Natural Gas Recovery purposes. 

    Neither of these new credit amounts, contained in the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018, is subject to a limitation on the number of metric tons of qualified carbon oxide captured. The law also expanded carbon capture to include “qualified carbon oxide,” a broader term than “qualified carbon dioxide.” Prior to the change in law, carbon capture was limited to a total of 75,000,000 metric tons of qualified carbon dioxide.

    These final regulations provide rules to determine:

    • Adequate security measures for the geological storage of qualified carbon oxide;
    • Exceptions to the general rule for determining to whom the credit is attributable;
    • Procedures for a taxpayer to make an election to allow third-party taxpayers to claim the credit;
    • The definition of carbon capture equipment; and
    • Standards for measuring utilization of qualified carbon oxide.

    In addition, the final regulations allow smaller carbon capture facilities to be aggregated into one project for purposes of claiming the credit when certain factors are present, such as common ownership and location. The final regulations also provide guidance on recapture, including introducing a recapture period of three years. Under these rules, credits must be repaid if carbon oxide leaks into the atmosphere during a three-year period after the initial storage or injection.

    The Treasury Department and IRS received written and electronic comments responding to the proposed regulations. A public hearing on the proposed regulations was held on Aug. 26, 2020. Copies of written comments and the list of speakers at the public hearing are available at Regulations.gov.

  • 06 Jan 2021 12:40 PM | Deleted user

    Revenue Ruling 2021-02 obsoletes Notice 2020-32 and Rev. Rul. 2020-27 due to the enactment of the COVID-related Tax Relief Act of 2020 (Act).  The Act retroactively amends the CARES Act to provide that no amount is included in the gross income of a Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) participant by reason of forgiveness of a PPP loan, and no deduction is denied, no tax attribute is reduced, and no basis increase is denied, by reason of the exclusion from gross income.  Accordingly, the holdings in Notice 2020-32 and Rev. Rul. 2020-27 are no longer determinative with regard to the treatment of certain expenses paid with PPP loan proceeds.

    Revenue Ruling 2021-02 will be in IRB:  2021-04, dated January 25, 2021.

  • 06 Jan 2021 12:40 PM | Deleted user

    WASHINGTON – The Treasury Department and the Internal Revenue Service issued guidance today allowing deductions for the payments of eligible expenses when such payments would result (or be expected to result) in the forgiveness of a loan (covered loan) under the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP).

    Today’s guidance, Revenue Ruling 2021-02, reflects changes to law contained in the COVID-related Tax Relief Act of 2020, enacted as part of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021 (Act), Public Law 116-260, which was signed into law on Dec. 27, 2020.

    The COVID-related Tax Relief Act of 2020 amended the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act (CARES Act) to say that no deduction is denied, no tax attribute is reduced, and no basis increase is denied by reason of the exclusion from gross income of the forgiveness of an eligible recipient’s covered loan. This change applies for taxable years ending after March 27, 2020.

    Revenue Ruling 2021-02 obsoletes Notice 2020-32 and Revenue Ruling 2020-27. This obsoleted guidance disallowed deductions for the payment of eligible expenses when the payments resulted (or could be expected to result) in forgiveness of a covered loan.

    For more information about this, the COVID-related Tax Relief Act of 2020, and other tax changes, visit IRS.gov.

  • 06 Jan 2021 7:51 AM | Deleted user

    WASHINGTON − The Internal Revenue Service today released its 2020 annual report describing the agency’s work delivering taxpayer service and compliance efforts during COVID-19 while spotlighting actions taken by IRS employees to help people during the challenging year.

    Internal Revenue Service Progress Update / Fiscal Year 2020 – Putting Taxpayers First” outlines how the agency overcame difficulties during the pandemic to deliver Economic Impact Payments in record time. At the same time, IRS employees made adjustments to complete a successful filing season despite office closures and the latest tax deadline ever.

    “The COVID-19 pandemic presented some of the greatest challenges to the IRS in its history, both in terms of being able to carry out our mission and in protecting the health and safety of taxpayers and our own workforce,” IRS Commissioner Chuck Rettig wrote in the report’s opening message and addressed in his A Closer Look column. “IRS employees responded admirably by quickly facilitating financial assistance to millions of deserving and needy Americans.”

    The 44-page report also highlights accomplishments around the agency’s six strategic goals and identifies ongoing modernization efforts. This year’s edition also discusses work related to implementing the Taxpayer First Act.

    “Even with all the challenges, we believe we have made great strides during Fiscal Year 2020, but we want to do more,” Rettig said.

    Retting explained that each year the IRS collects more than $3 trillion in taxes and generates approximately 96% of the funding that supports the federal government’s operations.

    “My experiences as Commissioner have strengthened my belief that a fully functioning IRS is critical to the success of our nation,” he said. “When citizens can perform their civic duty each year by preparing and filing their taxes and paying only what they should, they help fund critical aspects of the United States ranging from schools and roads to Social Security payments and the nation’s military.”

    The document lays out numerous examples of how IRS employees helped taxpayers, including:

    • Expanded information and assistance available to taxpayers in additional languages and underserved communities to help deliver Economic Impact Payments and other services.
    • Adjusted agency processes through the People First Initiative to help people and businesses encountering payment and other challenges during the pandemic.
    • Offered an electronic filing option for amended tax returns with the new Form 1040-X, marking a major milestone to help taxpayers and the tax community.
    • Served their communities outside official duties through charitable donations and service projects.

    The report also illustrates ways IRS employees worked to maintain the tax system through a strong, visible and robust tax enforcement presence. The IRS enhanced its criminal investigation and civil enforcement efforts with an expanded use of data analytics and artificial intelligence across all lanes from selection to examination.

    The new Progress Update also highlights IRS work partnering on landmark criminal investigative cases that brought down child pornography, drug and terrorist organizations.

    The agency continued to step up its pursuit of those who promote and make use of abusive tax shelters, including syndicated conservation easements, where it saw successful Tax Court litigation and the completion of the first settlement initiative.

    The report also explains the IRS’ Integrated Business Modernization Plan, the roadmap guiding agency efforts to offer best-in-class service people are accustomed to receiving from an online retailer or financial institution.

    “As we move into the future, the name of the game for the IRS will continue to be innovation, creativity and service to the people of our country to make their world better,” Rettig said. “Given all we’ve accomplished together in 2020 and all we’re working to achieve, we believe the future looks bright for the IRS, the tax system and our nation.”

    The resource document complements other documents, including the annual IRS Data Book.

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