In my  28 years as a CPA, I've been asked countless times by clients "will this  send up a red flag to the IRS?", "what are my chances of being  audited?", "do you think I'll get caught?".  Just about time that I  think that I've heard it all somebody comes up with, what I call,the "I  know a guy, who has a nephew that knows a guy that owns a business and  he has a friend that once took an H&R Block course, and he  said....."  I'm sure I'll have enough to write a book by the time that I  retire.  There's all kinds if crazy ideas out there that have  absolutely no merit at all.  Here's 10 practical, common sense ways to  help you avoid an audit:
 - Choose your tax professional carefully - Beware of  that person in your neighborhood that hammers a sign in the ground that  reads "Tax Returns Prepared Here".  CPAs and Enrolled Agents must  possess and maintain a knowledge standard to keep their licensing.  Your  neighbor with his sign in the front yard is only required to sign the  return as a paid-preparer.  Effective May 1, 2011, these people are on  their way out.  IRS has revised their regulations to require that all  paid preparers are CPAs, Attorneys or Enrolled Agents.  The IRS also  holds these professionals to a higher standard of ethical behavior.
- Report your income honestly.  The IRS has stepped up their efforts with their Information Matching Program  to check the income that taxpayers report.  Common forms of income are  reported to the IRS electronically by the payer.  Wages, interest,  dividends, state income tax refunds, investment sale proceeds, IRA  distributions, pension distributions, Social Security and the like are  all reported electronically.  The IRS is able to match these records  within just a few months after you file to determine if you reported all  your income.  That dreaded IRS letter could be in your mailbox's before  the tulips pop out of the ground in the spring.
- Answer the questions.  The number one reason that I  see self-prepared returns come into my office is because the taxpayer  did not answer all of the questions completely or check the right  boxes.  The conversation usually starts something like this "I was  trying to save some money by doing my own return and following what the  H&R Block guy did last year".  I try to hold the big grin from  coming across my space but, I know something that the he or she doesn't  know.  This person is likely to become what I call a "client-for-life".   That's always good for me.
- Don't become a target.  Many taxpayers believe that  claiming a certain type of deduction will increase their odds for being  audited.  Many others believe that if you file your return early, you  have a greater chance of being audited.  There are all kinds of  misnomers floating around about this issue.  The truth is that the IRS  uses a very sophisticated statistical profiling model which provides  them with statistical probability of finding tax cheats.   When your tax  return triggers one or more of these statistical pointers, it is likely  that you'll get audited.  Best advice I can give is be honest.  Keep  good documentation about your expenses and always, always use a tax  professional to be sure that you report deductions accurately.  And by  all means, please do not listen to your neighbor.  He's an idiot.
- Don't make it up as you go along.  Just because you  "think" something "should be" deductible or excludable from income,  don't make it necessarily so; or at least that is the way the song  goes.  The IRS and state revenue authorities have excellent resources  available on the Internet.  If you decide to go it alone, use all the  resources that you have available to you.  All IRS forms and  instructions are downloadable in PDF format.  All of these forms are  searchable using the free version of Acrobat.  There is no excuse for  not being informed.  Even if you decide to use a tax professional (which  you should), I always enjoy working with an informed client.
- The devil is in the details.  Trying to go cheap  and quick is never good.  If you try to use the old "paper and pencil"  approach, there is a good chance that you will make an arithmetic error  that will bring unwanted attention to your return.  It also means that  you return has to be processed manually by a key punch operator which  means it will take longer to get your refund; hopefully you're getting  at refund.  Incorrect Social Security Numbers for the taxpayer, spouse  or dependents are another top reason why your refund will get delayed if  you choose to go the old-fashioned route.  Using a tax professional  that provides electronic filing will catch these errors before the  return even makes it to the IRS.  When using this methodology, we can  warn a client about pending problems.  The most common problem we see is  related to divorced parents.  Frequently, the divorce decree provides  that the parents will divide the tax deductions for children or  alternate their deduction from year to year.  Inevitably, one parent, in  the rush for the big refund that they so desperately need (this is a  future blog topic) will file the tax return claiming the dependency  deduction to which they are not entitled.  This is a mess you just don't  want to deal with.
- Color inside the lines.  Please do not write little  notes to the IRS in the margins of your return to explain some reason  or logic that you are using to justify a deduction or explain some  reason why you are doing what you are doing.  All this does is attract  unwanted attention to the return.  Don't do it.  It doesn't help.  You  don't want to get a letter in your mailbox where the return address is  from the nearest IRS service center.  Just don't do it no matter how  strongly you feel is warranted.  In the immortal words of Forrest Gump,  "that's all I got to say about that".
- Update your status.  The IRS has made good on their  promise to audit more sole-proprietorships than they ever have.  Sole  proprietors reporting revenue greater than $100,000 increase their  propensity to be audited more than 10 times the average.  Now is the  time to extol the virtues of being incorporated.  Statistical  probability of audit of a corporate return is substantially less than  any other type of return.  It may also be a good time to look at the  Social Security savings from electing S-Corp status.  You'll be able to  offer your client a multitude of retirement investment vehicles to  deposit the money they won't be sending to the Social Security  Administration.  It is not my intent to open up the debate as to whether  or not Social Security is bankrupt (and it is bankrupt, most people  just do not know it) or whether or not so Social Security will be around  when we retire.  That'll be a topic for another article all of its  own.  Be careful before you recommend this approach.  Always consult a  tax professional before making choices like this one.
- Beware of gossip.  The IRS and state revenue  authorities share information electronically.  If the IRS picks you up  on an error or unreported income, it won't take long before they share  this information with your state revenue agency.  You can usually expect  a letter from the state requesting additional tax, penalties and  interest within six months of the bad news from IRS.  The same process  works in reverse; so, do not think you can get away with it from that  from that angle either.  The best defense is a good offense; so it has  been said.  Anytime we assist a client with this type of issue, we  proactively prepare an amended return for the state or federal  government as the situation requires.  The moral of the story is: get to  them before they get to you.
- Be a Boy Scout.  "Always Prepared" is their motto.   Always, always keep your documentation.  More importantly, always keep  GOOD documentation.  If you are unfortunate enough to be the lucky  recipient of an audit, deductions that lack documentation or are poorly  documented will be disallowed.  The documentation is always your best  defense in an audit.  Have you ever been stopped by law enforcement  officer because you were speeding?  You probably didn't think you were  going that fast or that driving a few miles over the posted speed limit  was not enough to warrant a citation.  Like me, you have probably always  thought they just had to "make their quota".  As much as law  enforcement officials will deny that quotas exist, they do.  I have it  on good authority from a high-ranking official (that happens to be my  client), now retired, from the State Police that officers are given a  specific number of citations they are expected to write especially at  certain times of the year like holidays.  IRS auditors are no  different.  Whether they are evaluated, formally or informally, by the  amount of taxes they collect is irrelevant.  It's impossible for any  supervisor or manager to overlook the productivity of a person in this  position.  So, human nature being what it is, whether you like it or  not, they get evaluated by what they produce.
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 J.T. Hicks & Co., PA Certified Public Accountants 470 S. Main St Brewer, ME 04412 (207) 990-3127     Notice:  always consult a tax professional before implementing any tax reduction strategy. 
 IRS CIRCULAR 230 DISCLOSURE: Tax advice contained in   this communication  (including any attachments) is neither intended nor   written to be used, and  cannot be used, to avoid penalties under the   Internal Revenue Code or to  promote, market or recommend to anyone a   transaction or matter addressed in this  communication.    © 2011 J.T. Hicks & Co., P.A.
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