Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

IRS needs proof that ext was filed, what?

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    #31
    Interesting point. I find that cutting the carbon paper in 2" wide strips and lining it up just under the numbers column works just fine. It's more environmentally friendly and I'm saving a ton of money - have you seen what carbon paper costs these days?
    "The only function of economic forecasting is to make astrology look respectful" - John Kenneth Galbraith

    Comment


      #32
      Some Form 8878 info

      Originally posted by Black Bart View Post

      ...... but since I'm soon gonna be forced into your electronic corral, could you elaborate on that form 8878 you mentioned? What's it good for and when does it have to be used, etc.? Thanks much.

      It's a very close cousin to the Form 8879.

      In simple terms, it is prepared along with Form 4868 in situations only where a payment is due along with the filing extension. Among other things, it authorizes the IRS to debit the selected bank account for the extension payment you have chosen. (It also can be used for all those Forms 2350 you file.... )

      You should be able to find a copy/instructions on the IRS web site.

      Most preparer software will handle the completion/filing of Form 4868 as well as Form 8878 when it is also needed. As noted earlier, there is a (electronic) paper trail for all extension filing as well as the bank debit information.

      I've used electronic Form 4868s for many clients, with no problems. For the few that also had to send money (including myself! ), the Form 8878 and debit worked fine.

      One minor difference: For any extension payment (unlike regular tax balances due) the only debit date is 04/15/201*. My guess is the IRS coffers swell mightily the morning of 04/16.

      Hope this helps.

      FE

      Comment


        #33
        About cutting up

        Originally posted by JohnH View Post
        Interesting point. I find that cutting the carbon paper in 2" wide strips and lining it up just under the numbers column works just fine. It's more environmentally friendly and I'm saving a ton of money - have you seen what carbon paper costs these days?
        Agreed - I've also noted a significant increase in overhead costs for the White Out I keep applying to my computer monitor.

        And I DO miss those old mimeograph fumes.........

        FE

        Comment


          #34
          Thanks for the info, FE

          Originally posted by FEDUKE404 View Post
          It's (8878) a very close cousin to the Form 8879. In simple terms, it is prepared along with Form 4868 in situations only where a payment is due along with the filing extension. Among other things, it authorizes the IRS to debit the selected bank account for the extension payment you have chosen. (It also can be used for all those Forms 2350 you file.... ). You should be able to find a copy/instructions on the IRS web site. Most preparer software will handle the completion/filing of Form 4868 as well as Form 8878 when it is also needed. As noted earlier, there is a (electronic) paper trail for all extension filing as well as the bank debit information. I've used electronic Form 4868s for many clients, with no problems. For the few that also had to send money (including myself! ), the Form 8878 and debit worked fine. One minor difference: For any extension payment (unlike regular tax balances due) the only debit date is 04/15/201*. My guess is the IRS coffers swell mightily the morning of 04/16. Hope this helps.

          FE
          I'll go quietly and electronically now. Gosh , this sure is simpler than writin' a check* and droppin' an envelope in the mail, isn't it? While I promise to do right and make 8878s hereinafter, I'm obliged to confess that I've sent in lotsa clients' 4868s with money and without asking a single soul for permission (reckon there's any retroactive penalties on that?)

          Regards, Bart

          *Checks were paper bank drafts once widely used to pay bills.

          Comment


            #35
            Originally posted by Black Bart View Post
            Shoot, an overweight lawyer here got a letter from a female divorce client in Chicago who forgot his name and addressed it to "Big Fat Lawyer At Possum Holler." They delivered it to him. Boy, was he upset!
            Wouldn't you be upset if someone called you a lawyer?

            Comment


              #36
              Hey, BB

              Hey, Black Bart, you may not be goin quickly into that dark night electronically, but you are the King of quote, copy, and paste.

              Davc, good one. Really good...
              Last edited by RitaB; 09-02-2010, 01:04 PM.
              If you loan someone $20 and never see them again, it was probably worth it.

              Comment


                #37
                Thanks Rita,

                Originally posted by RitaB View Post
                Hey, Black Bart, you may not be goin quickly into that dark night electronically, but you are the King of quote, copy, and paste.

                Davc, good one. Really good...
                Now if I could just figure out how to stop the screen from defaulting upon opening to "threaded" mode instead of "linear."

                Comment


                  #38
                  In the mode...

                  Originally posted by Black Bart View Post
                  Now if I could just figure out how to stop the screen from defaulting upon opening to "threaded" mode instead of "linear."
                  Try NOT logging out.....

                  Comment


                    #39
                    Hey Veritas,

                    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                    Originally posted by Black Bart
                    Shoot, an overweight lawyer here got a letter from a female divorce client in Chicago who forgot his name and addressed it to "Big Fat Lawyer At Possum Holler." They delivered it to him. Boy, was he upset!
                    Originally posted by Davc
                    Wouldn't you be upset if someone called you a lawyer?
                    Originally posted by Veritas
                    Lol. I wish I lived in Possum Holler.
                    Davc's funny joke about my joke (and my nagging wife) prompts a few editorial corrections (don't want you to immigrate to PH and be disappointed). The tales I tell are real events; but for dramatic effect I occasionally take a tad of what I call artistic license and what my wife calls stretchin' it. Therefore I must clarify that, although our excellent USPS service is exactly as previously stated, the above-quoted "lawyer" incident (while a "real" experience that happened to my best friend's father) occurred in...ahem...1959. And, I forgot, but the name of the state was also on the envelope; and the origin may or may not have been Chicago (don't remember for sure), but it was from "up North" somerwhere.

                    So there, my conscience is clear -- didn't want you to go postal from nostalgia for the "old days/ways." Our postal people are great, but the system's a little nutty -- local delivery letters are mailed here, then trucked off 20 miles, and later brought right back here again. Also, we formerly sent bulk mail to name, street, and "City" without spelling out the city, state, and zip code. No more; I tried last year -- they sent 'em back to me. Also a clerk tells me the handy address "General Delivery" was discontinued three years ago (news to me -- I've been using it since and no problems). Our guys here are very good about delivering badly-addressed mail, but I'd guess that my "lawyer letter" would never even clear the sending post office using such an address nowadays.

                    Anyway, we're somewhat insulated here in the mythical Possum Holler/ Podunk Junction/ Rubesburg/ Dogpatch (I'm in there somewhere) backwoods of rural Arkansas, but the Mayberry aura is fading...I'd like to move to Oregon, stand in line at the post office, and pay no sales tax (ours is 6%).

                    Comment


                      #40
                      --> The tales I tell are real events; but for dramatic effect I occasionally take a tad of what I call artistic license and what my wife calls stretchin' it. <---

                      Or as my father-in-law used to say, "I ain't calling him a liar, but sometimes he's been known to play fast & loose with the truth."
                      "The only function of economic forecasting is to make astrology look respectful" - John Kenneth Galbraith

                      Comment


                        #41
                        Gettin' your licks in

                        Originally posted by Black Bart
                        Now if I could just figure out how to stop the screen from defaulting upon opening to "threaded" mode instead of "linear."
                        Originally posted by FEDUKE404

                        Try NOT logging out.....
                        ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                        Originally posted by Black Bart
                        ...The tales I tell are real events; but for dramatic effect I occasionally take a tad of what I call artistic license and what my wife calls stretchin' it...
                        Originally posted by JohnH View Post
                        Or as my father-in-law used to say, "I ain't calling him a liar, but sometimes he's been known to play fast & loose with the truth."
                        Posting around you two boys is like being on the receiving end of tag team wrestlers.

                        Comment


                          #42
                          Snail Mail...? Are you kidding?

                          Originally posted by gkaiseril View Post
                          If you use snail mail, then the client should get a proof of mailing and attach it to the client's printed copy of the extension.

                          If e-filed, as noted, you will have a confirmation of acceptance by the IRS and the log could even show what type of form was filed.

                          The e-File acceptance and reject logs let you know the exact status of your client returns. Yes the is some additional work in tracking this data, but if there is a problem with the client's return, you will know about it and can address it before the client gets an unreadable notice from the IRS in 16 weeks. Think of this as providing better client service and a reason your service fee is cost justified by a better level of service provided by the local currency exchange or hair dresser down the street.
                          I was told a long time ago that proof of mailing something to the IRS is just that proof that you mailed SOMETHING to them. It does not dictate or prove what was in the envelope, if anything. I was like WHAT!?

                          So - anyone else ever hear that??

                          BTW: I'm back!! Not that you missed me.! 8-)
                          Matthew Jones
                          Tax Preparation
                          Computer Consultant


                          Tax Season is here!
                          Make sure everything is working, extra ink or toner is available, Advil in top drawer!

                          Comment


                            #43
                            Glad you are back

                            We did miss you, at least I for one missed you

                            Sandy

                            Comment


                              #44
                              Proof of mailing

                              Originally posted by MAJ View Post
                              I was told a long time ago that proof of mailing something to the IRS is just that proof that you mailed SOMETHING to them. It does not dictate or prove what was in the envelope, if anything. I was like WHAT!?

                              So - anyone else ever hear that?
                              Yes, I have heard that for a long time and it's true. Years ago I read of a CPA who advised having a notary public witness and acknowledge that extensions were placed in the certfied/registered envelope; his theory being that such would constitute legal proof. While I don't know of anybody actually going to such extremes, I always worried that if IRS really pushed a big penalty, we really could't prove it was an extension that was mailed -- even if sent certified. However, JohnH's post was reassuring:

                              Originally posted by JohnH
                              ... I've seen probably a dozen instances...client received a notice that the return or extension was late filed...we had a certified mail sticker with return receipt to show IRS. In every instance they accepted that as proof and removed the penalties without question. Even had one last year with a corp audit and several thousand dollars in penalties at stake. Once we produced the certified mail sticker and return receipt card, the penalties were immediately removed. Nobody ever questioned what was or was not in the envelope. I do write on the sticker and also on the Return Receipt Card a notation about what's inside, and I photocopy both before mailing.
                              All this is moot of course, if EF extensions are filed. I think I'll switch to that next time and stop worrying about it.

                              Originally posted by MAJ
                              BTW: I'm back!! Not that you missed me.! 8-
                              Agree with S T -- you were missed (good, knowledgeable tech-guys always are). Where've you been, anyway?

                              Comment

                              Working...
                              X