If you anticipate claiming large deductions, there is nothing wrong with that as long as you have the receipts to prove it. If your tax deductions exceed the average amount of deductions for your income level, then you may get audited. Additionally, if you have an excessive amount of itemized deductions, you may fall into a high-risk category therefore raising your chances of getting audited. While the formula used is secret, we do know that a large amount of Itemized Deductions places you in the higher probability category.
When you file your return with the IRS, a secret computer score, known as the Discriminate Information Function (DIF), is immediately used to determine whether additional taxes, fees, penalties or fines could be collected. If the DIF score returns high, you are more likely to receive an audit.
An area that most taxpayers don’t even think about as being a high-risk error in reporting, that may get them audited, is the failure to report alimony as income. When a former spouse pays the alimony, they claim it on their taxes. Likewise, you should also claim it as income. Failure to do so will result in a high-risk score, and we know what that means by now. Since the other party generally reports it, catching such errors is relatively easy.
The IRS doesn’t usually just pick taxpayers to audit. Since the IRS has little resources and to boot, they are understaffed, choosing returns that will yield the highest rate of return in the way of fines and penalties is essential. The IRS has budgets and expenses, like any other business; therefore they must cover their expenses without passing the costs of doing so on. There is a fine balance between not allowing people to get away with underpayments, which would bankrupt our system, but on the other hand not spend the taxpayer’s money frivolously. This is why the IRS has the computer system and formula available to them, to ensure that they are auditing cheating taxpayers where money is available. While it may not be ideal, an audit may be scary, and it certainly isn’t pleasant, if the IRS did not put in place checks and balances imagine what that would do to our taxes. Our individual taxes would continue to rise until the system would entirely break, leaving the taxpayers without the common things everyday that we take advantage of paid for by tax dollars. No one would be afraid of the repercussions of being dishonest on their tax returns, and very little would pay.
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Sunday, August 2, 2009
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