MN dhawk Posted November 28, 2017 Report Posted November 28, 2017 A client gives me two IRS notices at once for the same 2015 missing dividend income. The IRS tax calculation did not take into account that the dividend was qualified. Should I respond to both notices or just the latter one? Is there any chance of avoiding the substantial tax understatement penalty due to lots of business travel and never having had it before? Any thoughts? Quote
SaraEA Posted November 29, 2017 Report Posted November 29, 2017 You can request a first-time penalty abatement if your client has a clean record of timely tax payments for the past three years. This is an administrative waiver and is granted automatically if you ask--no excuses needed. I'd respond to just one notice. Don't want to confuse the IRS; they're obviously already confused. Quote
Abby Normal Posted November 29, 2017 Report Posted November 29, 2017 18 hours ago, SaraEA said: past three years Pretty sure it's two years. Quote
Jack from Ohio Posted November 29, 2017 Report Posted November 29, 2017 1 hour ago, Abby Normal said: Pretty sure it's two years. It is three years. Quote
Possi Posted December 11, 2017 Report Posted December 11, 2017 On 11/28/2017 at 9:30 PM, SaraEA said: You can request a first-time penalty abatement if your client has a clean record of timely tax payments for the past three years. This is an administrative waiver and is granted automatically if you ask--no excuses needed. I'd respond to just one notice. Don't want to confuse the IRS; they're obviously already confused. Sara, I missed a 1099 in my client's paperwork. Her penalty alone is over $650 (which is my responsibility, of course). My question is this; when she sends her response with the 843 I'm filling out for first time abatement, should she send the taxes owed WITH OR WITHOUT the penalty payment? Quote
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