So I get home and the wife says she’s got bad news: A letter from the IRS saying we owe $4,000 on our 2018 taxes.
Apparently, she sent all the right paperwork to our tax preparer, but when the preparer returned the completed forms she forgot to include one. My wife failed to check that and signed the return (and got me to sign off, trusting her) and sent it off.
So here we are. My wife is afraid I’m going to divorce her. (I’m not.)
Anyone have an experience like this? Do we have any recourse? That 4 Grand could buy a lot of Super Bowl swag. [Reply]
Originally Posted by rydogg58:
How is that even possible? Was the tax law change in effect 5 years ago when you sold and they are just now getting to your case to fuck you in the ass 5 years later?
I don’t remember exactly, but it must have been. We weren’t living in CO when we sold the house or filed taxes, and the house sale was the only income we were reporting. I think they changed the date of purchase needed to claim a certain exemption, and we originally did qualify but after the change were outside the window by like 6 weeks. [Reply]
Originally Posted by chinaski:
4k is NOTHING compared to what we have had to pay before. 37K was the most we have ever owed. That one HURT. Biggest return ever was 28k.
Yes, about 10 years ago had a 3600 tab for not paying capital gains on a stock sale. I called the lady in Philly and apologized, since it was my fault. She said “I never hear that so I’ll close your case. Have a nice day”. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Spott:
They will give you longer than what it says on the form. You will have to call them and wait on hold for a long time to speak with someone. You should be able to do some sort of amended return, but you will need to call them and let them know. After you do the amended return, it will probably them a little while to stop sending you the notices. The IRS is one big clusterfuck. They are seriously understaffed and none of the departments communicate with each other. We paid a CPA to do the taxes and he was the ones that eventually corrected the return. It will be a pain in the ass dealing with these bastards, but it sounds like you shouldn’t owe any money.
This is SPOTT on, they don't care. Here is a cautionary tale. We found out we owed $10,000.00 for a penalty on an IRA loan I took out to put a down payment on building our house. Long story short, you have the length of your house loan to pay it back without penalty but the company doesn't have to set up a payment plan with you. It's on you. Long story short we owe and they don't care.
1) DO NOT hire one of the tv companies offering to bail you out. They want $2000.00 up front for you to fill out endless paperwork so they can submit it to the Internal Renal Service so
a) That can stop IRS calls, letters etc...
b) You can be set up on payment plans over a few years. (we are paying 200.00 a month.
2) NOW, if your tax preparer is not some discount deal they have the same number and can make the IRS call for you asking for a stoppage on your case and a new file on that year.
3) If they cant do that go to an reputable preparer that can immediately make that call and file your new file on that year. Just call around and ask if they can do those two things.
4) Calm down, it's scary but will linger on for years. It's not the end of the world and life goes on.
Good luck from a family that's been there done that. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Mr. Wizard:
This is SPOTT on, they don't care. Here is a cautionary tale. We found out we owed $10,000.00 for a penalty on an IRA loan I took out to put a down payment on building our house. Long story short, you have the length of your house loan to pay it back without penalty but the company doesn't have to set up a payment plan with you. It's on you. Long story short we owe and they don't care.
1) DO NOT hire one of the tv companies offering to bail you out. They want $2000.00 up front for you to fill out endless paperwork so they can submit it to the Internal Renal Service so
a) That can stop IRS calls, letters etc...
b) You can be set up on payment plans over a few years. (we are paying 200.00 a month.
2) NOW, if your tax preparer is not some discount deal they have the same number and can make the IRS call for you asking for a stoppage on your case and a new file on that year.
3) If they cant do that go to an reputable preparer that can immediately make that call and file your new file on that year. Just call around and ask if they can do those two things.
4) Calm down, it's scary but will linger on for years. It's not the end of the world and life goes on.
Good luck from a family that's been there done that.
It was a pain in the butt when we did it. It took a lot of phone calls, waiting on hold for an hour to speak to someone and then being disconnected, speaking with multiple departments, etc. We only paid a small sum of interest to show that we were making payments, and we eventually got that back when filed the amended return. The CPA we used was basically worthless and we ended up doing all the leg work, even though it was completely his fuckup that caused the whole thing. [Reply]
I’d check with the tax preparer first to see if they will help and also confirm it’s taxes you legitimately owe. If it’s something you do owe and the interest and penalties are not much, probably not worth the headache to try something other than just pay and move on. Maybe the prepared will reimburse you for interest and penalties because of their error. [Reply]
Originally Posted by chinaski:
4k is NOTHING compared to what we have had to pay before. 37K was the most we have ever owed. That one HURT. Biggest return ever was 28k.
wow! A 1%'er on chiesplanet! Champagne wishes and caviar dreams! [Reply]
Originally Posted by Frazod:
I'd contact one of those tax relief companies (I hear a lot of commercials for a place called Optima, but have no experience with them), or a tax lawyer, or maybe both. Either should at least give you a free consultation to discuss options.
And blowjobs on demand from the wife until further notice.
Originally Posted by SuperBowl4:
wow! A 1%'er on chiesplanet! Champagne wishes and caviar dreams!
You have no idea how poor I actually am. Yes, I have investments and rental properties, and our assets on paper are fairly healthy, but very little of it is liquid.
Regardless, I won't be eating cat food when I retire. [Reply]