Did You Receive a Dreaded IRS Letter?

 In Blog, Educational Issues, Featured, Tax Preparation, Tax Problems

 You will receive a dreaded IRS letter when the IRS thinks it has found an issue with your tax return.  Most commonly, you will be sent a CP2000 notice by mail.  Please note that the IRS will never call or e-mail you initially about a tax delinquency.  This is a trick used by scammers that has become quite prevalent.

Most commonly, these notices will include a proposed tax due and any interest or penalties.  The notice will include an explanation of the examination process and how you can respond.

These automated notices are sent out year-round and are quite common.  As the IRS tries to close the tax gap, it has become more aggressive in its collection efforts.  In addition, with some taxpayers using low-quality tax mills or do-it-yourself software, there has been an increase in the number of notices sent over the years because of preparer error.  A missed check box here, a misunderstanding of a credit there, overlooked income—it all adds up.  One of the largest tax software providers for self-preparers even needed to hire a huge new workforce to help its users deal with the increase in notices caused by novice taxpayers trying to do their own tax returns.

This automated process starts when the IRS matches what you reported on your tax return to data reported by third parties. When this information does not agree, the automated collection effort begins.

DON’T PANIC! – These notices often include errors.  But you do need to realize that not responding by the 30-day deadline can have significant repercussions. The first thing to determine is which type of notice you have received.  A CP2000 notice is quite different than many of the other CP notices that deal with identify theft, audit correspondence, earned income credit and much more.  Also realize that a CP2000 notice includes a proposed, and almost always unfavorable, change to your tax return, and it is giving you an opportunity to dispute the proposed change.  Procrastinating or ignoring the notice will only cause the IRS to ratchet up its collection efforts and make it increasingly difficult to dispute the proposed adjustment.

Sometimes the IRS will be correct.  You may have overlooked a capital gain, income from a second job, etc.  Quite frequently, the IRS is wrong simply because its software isn’t sophisticated enough to pick up all the information on your attached schedules.

If you’re a Bressler & Company client, the first thing you should do is contact us at 559.924.1225 as quickly as possible so we can review the notice to determine whether it is correct or not.  Then we will contact the IRS for you and handle all communication with them until the issue is resolved saving you not only a lot of headaches, but a lot of time as well because we will represent you with the IRS at any meetings that are scheduled so you don’t have to take time out from your day or work to do so.

If you are not one of our clients, we are can certainly help you too.  Just give us a call at 559.924.1225.  But don’t procrastinate!  Time is your enemy here.  Call us as soon as possible!

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