Tuesday, January 21, 2014

ES USTED UN JARDINERO Y NECESITA HACER SU DECLARACIÓN?


ES USTED UN JARDINERO Y NECESITA HACER SU DECLARACIÓN?
                       
Yo soy la persona que busca.  Tengo 15 años preparando impuestos.  Pase el curso RTRP  que el IRS puso en practica el año pasado.

Es usted un pequeño negocio o un negocio grande, como negocio, usted quiere reportar todas las deduciones que la ley le permite.  Yo le puedo ayudar con su declaración y ayudarle con todas la deduciones permitidas por el IRS.

Vamos a ver cuales deduciones podemos usar:

·        Puso anuncios en el periodico, compro tarjetas de presentación, entrego volantes,?
·        Le pagó a alguien? A una persona que le fue ayudar para un trabajo grande? ( no empleado)
·        Tiene empleados? Les pagó seguro medico, lee esta proporcionado plan de retiro?
·        Esta pagando renta o intereses en la propiedad, impuestos sobre la propiedad?
·        Esta usando a un contador o pagando a su preparador de impuestos?
·        Cuales fueron los gastos de oficina? Compro estampillas postales para mandar las facturas a sus clientes.
·        Sus maquinas necesitan reparaciónes? Necesita maquinas nuevas? Necesitan mantenimiento?
·        Le falta mercancia? Como otra maquina de cortar cesped? Tijeras?
·        Pagó sus impuestos? Su licencia de negocio?
·        La millas que uso de su casa a la casa de los clientes? Las tiene documentadas?
·        Usa su cellular para el negocio?

Aqui tiene algunas ideas utiles para que prepare su documentacion y asi la tenga lista cuando vaya a hacer su declaración de impuestos.

Mi oficina esta abierta todo el año para ayudarlo.  Necesita hacer una declaración de años anteriores or necesita hacer una correción a la que ya hizo.  Con gusto le puedo ayudar.

Lupe Ruiz
1680 Broadway Ave Ste D
Chula Vista Ca 91911
619-425-9388 o 619-843-3148


ARE YOU A GARDENER AND NEED YOUR INCOME TAXES PREPARED?


ARE YOU A GARDENER AND NEED YOUR INCOME TAXES PREPARED? 

I am the person to help you preparer your income taxes.  I have been a income tax preparer for over 15 years.  I passed the RTRP course that the IRS had implemented last year.

As a small or big business person, you want as many deductions as you are able to have.  I will be able to help you based on the requirements from the IRS. 

Let’s see what deductions you can use:

  • Are you spending money on advertising, reordering your business card, sending out flyers, placing advertising in newspapers?
  • Are you paying someone else? To help you do some heavy work? (not your employee)
  • Do you have employees? Are you paying them health insurance, pensions (401K), workman’s compensation?
  • Are you paying rent or have a mortgage and paying mortgage interest and  property taxes?
  • Do you have a bookkeeper or tax preparer?
  • How about office expenses? Such as postage stamps to send your invoices?
  • How about your machines needing repairs? Do they need maintenance? Do you need to purchase new machinery?
  • How about supplies?  Gasoline for the mowers, new sheers, weed eater.
  • Paying taxes and licenses fees  to the city where you live. 
  • How about all those miles that your are going back and forth to give service to your customer?  Do you have a log and have recorded all your miles?
  • Do you use your cell phone to service your customers?

Here are some of the helpful ways to get your taxes documentation ready so that you get the most out of your income tax declaration.

My office is open year round to help you with all your needs.  Need to fill late or amend your income tax.  I will be glad to look over your previous tax year to get the most out of it.

Lupe Ruiz
1680 Broadway Ave Ste D
Chula Vista Ca 91911
619-425-9388 or 619-843-3148


Thursday, December 26, 2013

2014 Tax Season to Open Jan. 31; e-file and Free File Can Speed Refunds IR-2013-100, Dec. 18, 2013 WASHINGTON — The Internal Revenue Service today announced plans to open the 2014 filing season on Jan. 31 and encouraged taxpayers to use e-file or Free File as the fastest way to receive refunds. The new opening date for individuals to file their 2013 tax returns will allow the IRS adequate time to program and test its tax processing systems. The annual process for updating IRS systems saw significant delays in October following the 16-day federal government closure. “Our teams have been working hard throughout the fall to prepare for the upcoming tax season,” IRS Acting Commissioner Danny Werfel said. “The late January opening gives us enough time to get things right with our programming, testing and systems validation. It’s a complex process, and our bottom-line goal is to provide a smooth filing and refund process for the nation’s taxpayers.” The government closure meant the IRS had to change the original opening date from Jan. 21 to Jan. 31, 2014. The 2014 date is one day later than the 2013 filing season opening, which started on Jan. 30, 2013, following January tax law changes made by Congress on Jan. 1 under the American Taxpayer Relief Act (ATRA). The extensive set of ATRA tax changes affected many 2012 tax returns, which led to the late January opening. The IRS noted that several options are available to help taxpayers prepare for the 2014 tax season and get their refunds as easily as possible. New year-end tax planning information has been added to IRS.gov this week. In addition, many software companies are expected to begin accepting tax returns in January and hold those returns until the IRS systems open on Jan. 31. More details will be available in January. The IRS cautioned that it will not process any tax returns before Jan. 31, so there is no advantage to filing on paper before the opening date. Taxpayers will receive their tax refunds much faster by using e-file or Free File with the direct deposit option. The April 15 tax deadline is set by statute and will remain in place. However, the IRS reminds taxpayers that anyone can request an automatic six-month extension to file their tax return. The request is easily done with Form 4868, which can be filed electronically or on paper. IRS systems, applications and databases must be updated annually to reflect tax law updates, business process changes and programming updates in time for the start of the filing season. The October closure came during the peak period for preparing IRS systems for the 2014 filing season. Programming, testing and deployment of more than 50 IRS systems is needed to handle processing of nearly 150 million tax returns. Updating these core systems is a complex, year-round process with the majority of the work beginning in the fall of each year. About 90 percent of IRS operations were closed during the shutdown, with some major work streams closed entirely during this period, putting the IRS nearly three weeks behind its tight timetable for being ready to start the 2014 filing season. There are additional training, programming and testing demands on IRS systems this year in order to provide additional refund fraud and identity theft detection and prevention. Related Item: · Forms and Publications · The IRS will begin accepting 2013 business tax returns on Jan. 13, 2014. Follow the IRS on New Media Subscribe to IRS Newswire Page Last Reviewed or Updated: 20-Dec-2013



2014 Tax Season to Open Jan. 31; e-file and Free File Can Speed Refunds

IR-2013-100, Dec. 18, 2013
WASHINGTON — The Internal Revenue Service today announced plans to open the 2014 filing season on Jan. 31 and encouraged taxpayers to use e-file or Free File as the fastest way to receive refunds.
The new opening date for individuals to file their 2013 tax returns will allow the IRS adequate time to program and test its tax processing systems. The annual process for updating IRS systems saw significant delays in October following the 16-day federal government closure.
“Our teams have been working hard throughout the fall to prepare for the upcoming tax season,” IRS Acting Commissioner Danny Werfel said. “The late January opening gives us enough time to get things right with our programming, testing and systems validation. It’s a complex process, and our bottom-line goal is to provide a smooth filing and refund process for the nation’s taxpayers.”
The government closure meant the IRS had to change the original opening date from Jan. 21 to Jan. 31, 2014. The 2014 date is one day later than the 2013 filing season opening, which started on Jan. 30, 2013, following January tax law changes made by Congress on Jan. 1 under the American Taxpayer Relief Act (ATRA). The extensive set of ATRA tax changes affected many 2012 tax returns, which led to the late January opening.
The IRS noted that several options are available to help taxpayers prepare for the 2014 tax season and get their refunds as easily as possible. New year-end tax planning information has been added to IRS.gov this week.
In addition, many software companies are expected to begin accepting tax returns in January and hold those returns until the IRS systems open on Jan. 31. More details will be available in January.
The IRS cautioned that it will not process any tax returns before Jan. 31, so there is no advantage to filing on paper before the opening date. Taxpayers will receive their tax refunds much faster by using e-file or Free File with the direct deposit option.
The April 15 tax deadline is set by statute and will remain in place. However, the IRS reminds taxpayers that anyone can request an automatic six-month extension to file their tax return. The request is easily done with Form 4868, which can be filed electronically or on paper.
IRS systems, applications and databases must be updated annually to reflect tax law updates, business process changes and programming updates in time for the start of the filing season.
The October closure came during the peak period for preparing IRS systems for the 2014 filing season. Programming, testing and deployment of more than 50 IRS systems is needed to handle processing of nearly 150 million tax returns. Updating these core systems is a complex, year-round process with the majority of the work beginning in the fall of each year.
About 90 percent of IRS operations were closed during the shutdown, with some major work streams closed entirely during this period, putting the IRS nearly three weeks behind its tight timetable for being ready to start the 2014 filing season. There are additional training, programming and testing demands on IRS systems this year in order to provide additional refund fraud and identity theft detection and prevention.
Related Item: 
Page Last Reviewed or Updated: 20-Dec-2013