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Note:  Any tax advice contained on this website is not intended or written to be used, and cannot be used, for the purpose of avoiding penalties that may be imposed under the Internal Revenue Code or applicable state or local tax law provisions.

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Fourth Quarter 2005 Tax Developments

Although hurricane-related legislation (the Gulf Opportunity Zone Act of 2005 and the Katrina Emergency tax Relief Act of 2005) dominated the tax news in the last quarter of 2005, there were many other important tax developments that may affect you, your family, your investments, and your livelihood. We've summarized the most important new developments below. Please contact us for more information about any of these developments and what steps you should implement to take advantage of favorable developments and to minimize the impact of those that are unfavorable.

New six-month automatic extension for most 2005 returns. The IRS has issued new regulations allowing most individuals and businesses to request a six-month automatic filing extension on a single form for 2005 returns. For example, an individual can get an automatic six-month extension to file an income tax return by submitting a timely, completed application for extension on Form 4868. No signature or explanation of why an extension is sought is required. Taxpayers must still estimate their tax due and pay that amount. Thus, by filing Form 4868, an individual whose 2005 return is due on Apr. 17, 2006 (April 15 falls on a weekend) will automatically have until Oct. 16, 2006 to file his 2005 return. Under prior rules, to get a six-month extension, you had to file one application for an initial four-month automatic extension, and then use a second one to ask for a a two-month discretionary extension.

2006 mileage rates announced. For 2006, the optional standard mileage rate is 44.5¢ per business mile. The 2006 rate for computing deductible medical or moving expenses is 18¢ a mile. A person who uses a vehicle in providing donated services to a charity for relief related to Hurricane Katrina during 2006 computes the charitable mileage deduction by using a standard mileage rate of 32¢ (rather than the usual charitable standard mileage rate of 14¢). Additionally, volunteers may be reimbursed by a charity for the cost of driving their cars for the charity's benefit in connection with providing donated services for Hurricane Katrina relief during 2006. These volunteers may exclude a reimbursement of up to 44.5¢ per mile.

New rules issued for domestic production activities deduction. For tax years beginning after 2004, taxpayers can deduct a percentage of income earned from production activities undertaken in the U.S. (including manufacturing, certain food production, software development, film and music production, construction and engineering and architectural services). The deduction is a percentage (e.g., 3% for tax years beginning in 2005 or 2006) of the smaller of (1) the qualified production activities income of the taxpayer for the tax year, or (2) taxable income (modified adjusted gross income, for individual taxpayers) without regard to the manufacturing deduction, for the tax year. An employer's deduction for domestic production activities can't exceed 50% of all employees' W-2 wages reported for the tax year.

New guidance from the IRS (in the form of proposed regulations on which taxpayers may rely) includes the following clarifications:

IRS eases up on some nonqualified deferred compensation rules. Effective generally for amounts deferred in tax years beginning after 2004, new tax rules apply to nonqualified deferred compensation (NQDC). Under the new rules, if certain conditions aren't met, all amounts deferred under a NQDC plan for all tax years may be currently includible in gross income by the plan participant. Recently, the IRS eased up on a number of the new NQDC rules, including the following:

Employer's annual federal return OK'd for many small businesses. The IRS announced that many small businesses will be able to file a Form 944, Employer's Annual Federal Tax Return, rather than Form 941, Employer's Quarterly Federal Tax Return. The simplified filing is limited to employers meeting certain eligibility requirements (e.g., estimated annual employment tax liability of $1,000 or less). Eligible employers will receive written notification from the IRS of their qualification for the new Form 944 Program. The IRS says that the new Form 944 program will significantly reduce tax filing burdens for nearly 950,000 small business owners because they will only have to file the new Form 944 once a year rather than filing Form 941 four times a year.

Final regulations explain Roth-IRA option for 401(k) plans. The IRS has issued final regulations explaining the post-2005 rule that permits 401(k) plans to allow participants to choose to have all or part of their elective deferrals treated as Roth-IRA contributions ("designated Roth contributions"). The final regulations carry a few surprises that will complicate designated Roth contributions and may make them less attractive to plan participants. For example, they say that the established ordering rules that apply to regular Roth IRA payouts do not apply when determining the tax character of distributions of designated Roth contributions. More significantly, the regulations say that designated Roth contributions are subject to the lifetime required minimum distribution (RMD) rules that apply to non-pension qualified plan payouts. By contrast, regular Roth IRAs are not subject to the lifetime RMD rules.

Sharp increase in IRS user fees. Starting on Feb. 1, 2006, select IRS user fees increase dramatically. Many of these increases are considerable. For example, a new $50,000 flat fee, instead of the previous $1,000 to $10,000 fee, applies for pre-filing agreements for corporate taxpayers. Advance Pricing Agreements, which had cost from $5,000 to $25,000, cost from $22,500 to $50,000. For employee plans, fees for opinion letters on prototype IRAs, SEPs, SIMPLE IRAs and Roth IRAs, which had been $125 to $2,570, range from $200 to $4,500. Requests for changes in accounting methods for businesses increase from $1,500 to $2,500. The fee for some private letter rulings increases from $7,500 to $10,000, but lower fees apply to taxpayers with gross income of less than $250,000 ($625) or with gross income of $250,000 to $1 million ($2,500).

(10/13/05)

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Last modified: May 17, 2006