Nine short tips on penalties for late tax filing & paying

1. THE failure-to-file penalty is generally more than the failure-to-pay penalty. If you cannot pay all the taxes you owe, file anyway to prevent the more costly failure-to-file penalty.

2. The failure-to-file penalty is 5% per month of the unpaid taxes, not to exceed 25%.

3. The failure-to-pay penalty is only ½% per month, not to exceed 25%. Compared to the failure- to-file penalty, this is small. You really should file on time.

4. You will not have to pay a failure-to-file penalty if you can show that you failed to file on time because of reasonable cause and not because of willful neglect.

5. If you filed an extension and you paid at least 90% of your actual tax liability by the due date, you will not be faced with a failure-to-pay penalty.

6. If both the failure-to-file penalty and the failure-to-pay penalty apply in any month, the 5% failure-to-file penalty is reduced by the failure-to-pay penalty, meaning the maximum combined penalty tops at 5%.

7. Request a payment plan. Use form 9465.

8. IRS may ask you to provide financial information (Form 433-A for individuals or Form 433-B for businesses) if you owe over a certain amount or if you have some issues such as delinquencies in paying or filing.

9. M advice: If you can’t pay, file. Reduce your penalties by filing on time and saving the bigger late filing penalty.

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Victor Santos Sy graduated Cum Laude from UE with a BBA and from Indiana State University with an MBA. Vic worked with SyCip, Gorres, Velayo (SGV – Andersen Consulting) and Ernst & Young before establishing Sy Accountancy Corporation in Pasadena, California.

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He has 50 years of experience in defending taxpayers audited by the IRS, FTB, EDD, BOE and other governmental agencies. He is publishing a book on his expertise – “HOW TO AVOID OR SURVIVE IRS AUDITS.” Our readers may inquire about the book or email tax questions at [email protected].

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