Friday November 20, 2009 4:56 PM ET
SmartMoney
Published March 20, 2009  |  A A A
SmartMoney Magazine by Jason Kephart (Author Archive)

10 Things the IRS Won't Tell You

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1. “Like it or not, you may need help with your taxes.”

When Cindy Hockenberry and her husband sent in a tax-penalty payment in 2007, they knew there was a chance their math might not jibe with the IRS’s. When that turned out to be true and the amount was much higher than expected, they decided to dispute it. Fortunately for them, Hockenberry’s a pro. As tax research coordinator at the National Association of Tax Professionals, she spotted a glitch in the IRS’s calculation; after visiting the local IRS office, the agency admitted its mistake and lowered the penalty. “There’s no way the average taxpayer would have noticed,” she says.

As recently as 2000, less than half of all taxpayers were using a preparer. Today 80 percent use software or a tax pro, “because they’re scared of making a mistake,” says Nina Olson, the National Taxpayer Advocate. “That’s a sign the system’s too complex.” A pro may not be necessary for basic returns that include just a W-2 and, say, mortgage interest; in those cases, TurboTax will do. However, if you’ve made a lot of market moves or run a side business, consider a preparer. (You can find one at www.natptax.com; expect to pay $150 to $200 per return.)

All illustrations by Ryan Heshka.

1,001 Things They Won't Tell You

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User Comments
Posted by: Taxpayer_Owner
Sure Ms. Olson has talked about the IRS's shortcomings, ruffled a few feathers, and wrote some tough reports. Unfortunately, Ms. Olson has not been able to get very much accomplished in her seven years on the job other then create a high employee turnover rate. She tried to simplify the tax code by creating a standard definition of a child. When all was said and done, she only made matters worse. So much worse, the law had to be amended.

Ms. Olson also destroyed the very program in the IRS that was set up to assist taxpayers. Before Ms. Olson, if you needed help with a tax problem that was not dealt with satisfactorily through normal channels the IRS would transfer your case over to a group that had the experience in your particular issue and the authority to fix your problem on the spot. Ms. Olson has forsaken this logic. Now if you need help and your case is transferred over to her program it will most likely be assigned to someone that is not experienced or even prop...(Read more of this comment)
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Comments From Around the Web
Posted by: Pat on Blueprint for Financial Prosperity

Yeah. I’ve never encountered the IRS since I’ve never left the Vault.

Posted by: joshua on Blueprint for Financial Prosperity

All I got out of this was Fallout 3 is greatness.

Posted by: thomas on Blueprint for Financial Prosperity

I would wet myself twice if I got a letter from the IRS.

Posted by: savvy on Blueprint for Financial Prosperity

We got one of these last year in reference to our 2006 return. It turns out I had reported the wrong W-2 income (used 2005 instead of 2006, not sure how I did that). Once I figured out the problem, I responded to the IRS with a copy of the correct W-2 as well as what I thought I owed. They agreed and because it was an honest mistake and I responded promptly (and paid the agreed amount), they waived the penalties. Note that, generally speaking, anything that affects your federal return will probably affect your state return as well. I filed an amended state return and got back a whopping $8

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