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Showing posts with label gifts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gifts. Show all posts

March 21, 2014

TAX RULES FOR CHILDREN WITH INVESTMENT INCOME

You normally must pay income tax on your investment income. That is also true for a child who must file a federal tax return. If a child can’t file his or her own return, their parent or guardian is normally responsible for filing their tax return.

Special tax rules apply to certain children with investment income. Those rules may affect the tax rate and the way you report the income.

Here are four facts from the IRS that you should know about your child’s investment income:

1. Investment income normally includes interest, dividends and capital gains. It also includes other unearned income, such as from a trust.

2. Special rules apply if your child's total investment income is more than $2,000. Your tax rate may apply to part of that income instead of your child's tax rate.

3. If your child's total interest and dividend income was less than $10,000 in 2013, you may be able to include the income on your tax return. If you make this choice, the child does not file a return. See Form 8814, Parents' Election to Report Child's Interest and Dividends. 

4. Children whose investment income was $10,000 or more in 2013 must file their own tax return. File Form 8615, Tax for Certain Children Who Have Investment Income, along with the child’s federal tax return.

Starting in 2013, a child whose tax is figured on Form 8615 may be subject to the Net Investment Income Tax. NIIT is a 3.8% tax on the lesser of either net investment income or the excess of the child's modified adjusted gross income that is over a threshold amount. Use Form 8960, Net Investment Income Tax, to figure this tax. For more on this topic, visit IRS.gov.

For more on this topic, see Publication 929, Tax Rules for Children and Dependents. Visit IRS.gov to get this booklet and IRS forms.

December 15, 2013

US EXPAT ARE STILL SUBJECT TO ESTATE & GIFT TAXES

Read below. As an expat you must include your assets everywhere in the world. Gifts include those made abroad.  Green card holders living abroad are not covered by these rules and will owe US estate taxes on US based assets exceeding $60,000 in total value.

http://www.timesdispatch.com/business/investment/time-to-check-the-list-for-financial-and-estate-planning/article_d9aa1b36-595b-5072-8360-5fe54d0dacab.html?mode=jqm

November 15, 2012

Why US Expats and Residents May want to give gifts or do Estate Planning Before Year End

It might be wise for everyone to consider making gifts before year end to their children or other loved ones and consider other estate planning strategies. Previously its was thought Congress might extend the currently generous annual gift tax exclusion and the lifetime estate and gift tax exemption which is until the end of 2012 over $5 million.  In 2013 the exclusion will go back to $1 million.

Nonresidents (not a US Citizen or permanent resident) only get a $60,000 exclusion with respect to estate taxes on their assets located in the US.

If Congress decides the funds are needed next year due to the "Fiscal Cliff" they may not extend the current exemptions and now is the time to act.  Read more in the following Forbes Article Will the Estate and Gift Tax Boomerang?

We can help you with revise or amend your living trust, wills, and successfully make last minute gifts to tax advantage of the current rules which may end 12/31/12. Email us at ddnelson@gmail.com. 


September 17, 2012

New 2013 IRS Figures Of Interest to all Nonresident and Expatriate Taxpayers

Some of the new figures for 2013 which will come into play if you are a US expatriate, nonresident, or have international tax concerns are as follows:

Unified estate and gift tax exclusion amount. Under the sunset provisions of EGTRRA, for gifts made and estates of decedents dying in 2013, due to a law change, the exclusion amount will be $1,000,000 (down from $5,120,000 for gifts made and estates of decedents dying in 2012).

Gift tax annual exclusion. For gifts made in 2013, the gift tax annual exclusion will be $14,000 (up from $13,000 for gifts made in 2012).

Increased annual exclusion for gifts to noncitizen spouses. For gifts made in 2013, the annual exclusion for gifts to noncitizen spouses will be $143,000 (up from $139,000 for 2012).

Reporting foreign gifts. If the value of the aggregate “foreign gifts” received by a U.S. person (other than an exempt Code Sec. 501(c) organization) exceeds a threshold amount, the U.S. person must report each “foreign gift” to IRS. (Code Sec. 6039F(a)) Different reporting thresholds apply for gifts received from (a) nonresident alien individuals or foreign estates, and (b) foreign partnerships or foreign corporations. For gifts from a nonresident alien individual or foreign estate, reporting is required only if the aggregate amount of gifts from that person exceeds $100,000 during the tax year. For gifts from foreign corporations and foreign partnerships, the reporting threshold amount will be $15,102 in 2013 (up from $14,723 for 2012).

Expatriation, Citizenship and Green Card Surrender. For 2013, an individual with “average annual net income tax” of more than $155,000 for the five tax years ending before the date of the loss of U.S. citizenship is a covered expatriate (up from $151,000 for 2012). Under a mark-to-market deemed sale rule, all property of a covered expatriate is treated as sold on the day before the expatriation date for its fair market value. However, for 2013, the amount that would otherwise be includible in the gross income of any individual under these mark-to-market rules is reduced by $668,000 (up from $651,000 for 2012).

Foreign earned income exclusion. The foreign earned income exclusion amount increases to $97,600 in 2013 (up from $95,100 in 2012).

August 14, 2012

IRS Requires Reporting of Foreign Gifts Received from Abroad

If you as a US Citizen, Green Card Holder, or even a resident of the US living here on a visa received  gifts of more than $100,000 (cumulative amounts per calendar year) in gifts or inheritances from a nonresident  foreign individual or gifts of $14,375 from a foreign corporation or partnership (cumulative amounts per calendar year), you must report these amounts to the IRS by filing Form 3520.  Failure to file this form can result in penalties up to  35% of the amount of the gift or inheritance.

The IRS does track large sums transferred from abroad to US residents and will often audit these individuals fail to report these transfers on their tax returns to try to determine if they are not paying US taxes on taxable income from abroad. It is best you have complete documentation for all amounts arriving from abroad which are not taxable  in the event you are audited If the transfer is a  gift or inheritance and fail to file Form 3520, the IRS may impose the penalty.

We have helped hundreds of taxpayers file Form 3520 and we can help you avoid these possible huge penalties and the cost of defending your position in the event you are audited on transfers of funds from abroad.

May 26, 2011

IRS NOW LOOKING AT COUNTY RECORDER RECORDS TO LOCATE REAL ESTATE GIFT TRANSFERS WHICH ARE NOT REPORTED ON FORM 709

The Wall Street Journal reports the IRS is now investigating real estate transfers to determine if proper Gift Tax Returns (form 709) are reported.  The IRS is getting real estate transfer records in many states. This new procedure could naturally be extended at any time to discover real estate sales which have not been reported on personal tax returns.

Gift tax returns must be filed when the value of the gift exceeds $13,000. Real estate sales must be reported if there is any gain or loss.

This new procedure will result in many additional audits.  If you need help filing a Form 709 for any gift exceeding $13,000 let us know. This rule applies to gifts made by US Citizens and Permanent Residences whether living in the US or abroad. It also applies regardless of the location of the property gifted or to whom it is gifted.