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Group, PC Newsletter - March 2009 Since this newsletter was so well received last year, we are running it again with updates for current info. Interest and Penalties Due to a lack of space, I will restrict this discussion to interest and penalties on individual income taxes, although the rates and rules are similar for corporations and for payroll, estate and other taxes. Federal tax penalties and interest Failure to file: If you don’t file a return or extension by the filing deadline (April 15th for most of us), you are subject to a penalty for failure to file a timely tax return. This can be an expensive penalty. Beginning the day after your return is due, the penalty starts at 5% of the tax you owe. If you don’t pay within one month after your return is due, the penalty increases to 10% of what you owe. The third month you’re late, it goes up to 15% of the amount you owe. This continues until the fifth month, when the penalty becomes 25% of the tax you owe and stays there. NOTE: WHEN YOU’RE FILING A TIMELY RETURN, IRS ACCEPTS THE DATE MAILED. WHEN YOU’RE LATE, IRS WILL STOP THE CLOCK WHEN THEY RECEIVE THE RETURN AND PAYMENT. In other words, if you fail to extend your return and mail it with your payment to IRS on May 14th, they won’t receive it until sometime after May 15th (one month late). You will be charged a 10% failure to file penalty. Failure to pay: This penalty is minor compared to the one above. When you file an extension or tax return without payment, IRS will charge ½ of 1% (.5%) monthly penalty on your unpaid balance. Like the penalty above, this caps out at 25%, so if you’re 50 months late in paying, you’d max out this penalty. In case you need a little help with the math, this works out to a 6% annual penalty. Interest: In addition to the penalties listed above, IRS will charge interest on taxes due. IRS issues the rates quarterly; the current rate for underpayment interest is an annual rate of 4%. So if you file an extension or file a return without payment, you’ll be charged a 10% (6% penalty plus 4% interest) annual charge on your unpaid taxes. Do you notice that I keep saying things like “unpaid balance” and “penalty based on the amount you owe?” That’s right: if you don’t owe any taxes, there are no penalties or interest for late filing! The really nasty penalties Oregon state penalties and interest First of all, the interest rate is higher. It is now, and it has been as long as I’ve been paying attention to it. Oregon currently charges 6% annual interest on unpaid balances. Oregon updates this rate annually as opposed to IRS doing it quarterly. The second big difference is in the failure to pay area. If you extend your filing deadline and don’t pay, Oregon will charge you a 5% penalty. If you file more than three months after the due date or extension due date, Oregon will tack on another 20%, bringing the penalty to 25% of your unpaid tax. To avoid the 5% penalty, you must do all of the following: 1. File an extension. 2. Pay at least 90% of the tax that you should have paid by April 15th. 3. Pay the balance of the tax due when you file by the extension deadline, and 4. Pay the interest within 30 days of Oregon billing you. This is saying that, even if you don’t know how much tax you’re supposed to pay by April 15th, Oregon expects you to pay in 90% of whatever that number ends up being. They want you to pay in full before October 15th, and they want their interest bill paid within 30 days of their mailing it. Otherwise, they will charge an additional 5% penalty. OUCH! Last but definitely not least, if you don’t file an Oregon return for three consecutive years by the due date of the third return (or the extended due date if you filed an extension), THERE WILL BE A PENALTY OF 100% OF THE TAX YOU OWE FOR THOSE THREE YEARS! You thought no one could be worse than IRS? Think again. Underpayment of estimated taxes Multnomah County New penalties on business taxes New preparer penalties Conclusion Happy tax day! Victor & the staff at Epstein Group The information in this newsletter is for informational purposes. If you have questions or concerns about the information in this newsletter, give us a call. Or call another tax advisor if you must.
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