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Photo: Anna Nekrashevich
Too many deductions taken are the most common self-employed audit red flags. The IRS will examine whether you are running a legitimate business and making a profit or just making a bit of money from your hobby.
Rank 5-14 25-34 1 Accidents (1,174) Accidents (23,486) 2 Cancer (576) Suicide (6,340) 3 Suicide (451) Homicide (5,344) 4 Homicide (340) Heart...
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Producers, also known as autotrophs, make their own food. They make up the first level of every food chain. Autotrophs are usually plants or one-...
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Contestants can purchase and bring a net, snare wire, longbow and arrows, a catapult and ball bearings, fishing line, or a foraging bag. Beyond...
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How Rhoshandiatellyneshiaunneveshenk Koyaanisquatsiuth Williams Got Her Name. Basically, her mother had two main reasons for naming her the longest...
Read More »The IRS knows this and IRS audit red flags may be raised for businesses that are outliers, either with margins that are too low or too high. For your own edifice on what traditional margins are for your industry, there are many sources online that will tell you. Let me show you how margins can work against you on your tax return. Say I own Convenience Store A. I file a tax return indicating that I made a 10% percent profit from the store after my expenses. No problem there. Now let’s say that Convenience Stores B, C, D, E, F, and G all file tax returns showing a 30-35% profit. That is quite a step up from 10% profit. There are several possible explanations here. I could be a bad businessperson. My revenue might be the same as these stores, but perhaps I am not keeping my expenses or my cost of goods sold in check. Consequently, I could have the same expenses and show less revenue because of a loss of business. Both of those are perfectly logical explanations. However, if I am not keeping up with my competitors, I am likely not going to stay in business for very long. I could also be skimming cash from the registers and underreporting income (decreasing my revenue) or inflating my cost of goods sold (reducing taxable profit) or inflating my operating expenses (also reducing taxable profit). In contrast, if I start showing 75% profit, I am either the world’s greatest convenience store operator or there is a serious impropriety with my business. My point is that you operate in the audit danger zone if you are outside the generally accepted range for businesses that are similar to yours. Tax cheaters will often try and bury deductions into other expense categories to not make them stand out or will make sure there is no paper record of them taking money out of the cash register. However, if they go too far outside the lines, it is probable that they will raise some IRS audit red flags and their margins that will eventually catch up to them.
The short answer is yes, bar soaps can expire. Like most cosmetic products, soap bars have a recommended shelf life even if they don't have an...
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Establish a regular time to declutter, preferably once every week or two weeks. Get rid of anything not used in the last year. Throw away, recycle,...
Read More »However, make sure (especially in this instance) to save all documentation relating to any stock trades or the sales of that asset – especially how you valued it. This will make or break you should you have to undergo an IRS audit.
Having a will and probate are two entirely separate things. Yes, they both relate to events that happen after death. The difference is that a will...
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Reheating chicken is not advisable more generally because it has a higher density of protein than red meat - when reheated, proteins break down...
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These early humans probably had pale skin, much like humans' closest living relative, the chimpanzee, which is white under its fur. Around 1.2...
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By 2050, we could all be living to 120, but how? As hard as it is to believe, just 150 years ago the average lifespan was 40 years. Yes, what we'd...
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