After years of itemizing for a client, he finally gets his interest down and goes with the standard deduction. Sometime spending some time with deductions and finally realizes he can no longer go long form. Do you charge him less ? Just wondering.... Happens alot.
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Itemizing to Standard Deductions
Collapse
X
-
I charge
If they bring me the info, I put it on Sch A and print it whether they take the Standard Deduction or not. I charge, but I'm well known for being reasonable, and no one complains. I used to try to explain, but they never understand. This is easier to me. And you wouldn't believe the times people have come to me, from another preparer, saying, "He wouldn't let me take my mortgage interest." No, you just couldn't itemize, and you would know that if you looked at your return, which you don't, so here's you a Schedule A, and we're all happy.
Actually, I would rather DO the Schedule A and NOT charge, than NOT do the Schedule A and run the risk of somebody thinking I didn't "let them" take a deduction.Last edited by RitaB; 02-13-2015, 09:24 PM.If you loan someone $20 and never see them again, it was probably worth it.
Comment
-
Rita, this reminds me of a conversation with a client a few days ago. He and his son came to my office to drop off the son's tax info. The son told me it's OK to talk to dad about the return if I need to. He had received a couple of W-2 forms working as a pizza delivery guy and he had saved a lot of gas receipts. No mileage log, just a stack of gas receipts. No other deductions.
I ran into the dad last weekend and mentioned that I'd mailed the return to the son at their home address. Dad asked (skeptically) if the stack of receipts made any difference. I explained to him that there was no mileage log, but I had done a rough calculation based on the gas purchases and had determined that his mileage, especially after the 2% haircut, wouldn't have exceeded the standard deduction.
Dad looked at me for a minute, then said "Don't get into that with him. If he asks about the gas, just tell him it's all been figured in there."Last edited by JohnH; 02-13-2015, 04:51 PM."The only function of economic forecasting is to make astrology look respectful" - John Kenneth Galbraith
Comment
-
It's the oposite in NC. The state law changed this year, and we have a whole new ball game. Our standard deduction is higher than the Federal, plus NC no longer allows some Federal deductions or they place limits on them. I haven't been able to envision a situation in which a taxpayer would claim standard deduction on the Fed but itemize on the state on a NC return any longer."The only function of economic forecasting is to make astrology look respectful" - John Kenneth Galbraith
Comment
-
Originally posted by zerosDefault Itemizing to Standard Deductions
After years of itemizing for a client, he finally gets his interest down and goes with the standard deduction. Sometime spending some time with deductions and finally realizes he can no longer go long form. Do you charge him less ? Just wondering.... Happens alot.
Many problems are how to get old-timers to stop trying to itemize - you can't just up and pronounce to a salt-of-the-earth type that he can't take off medical, church, and taxes 'cause they've heard all their lives that you can. They'll say "Well, Billy Joe said Block takes off all their doctor bills, etc., etc., etc." You're wasting your time explaining about the 7/10% med haircut and/or a large fed standard deduction, so, for those, I just say "Leave the stuff, we'll go through it, and take off all we can" and they're satisfied. For the sharper tacks, you explain about the 12,400 standard and that there's also a state low-income table to kill off the itemized stuff -- they understand and thereafter pay a "short form" fee.Last edited by Black Bart; 02-14-2015, 10:18 AM.
Comment
-
Rather than telling clients they "can't" itemize, I explain to them how they are getting a great deal. I tell them that the people who itemize only get a deduction for the amount they spend whereas the non-itemizers get a bump-up over and above what they actually spent on the "big 4". They are almost always happy hearing that.
Comment
-
Originally posted by kathyc2 View PostRather than telling clients they "can't" itemize, I explain to them how they are getting a great deal. I tell them that the people who itemize only get a deduction for the amount they spend whereas the non-itemizers get a bump-up over and above what they actually spent on the "big 4". They are almost always happy hearing that.
Comment
Disclaimer
Collapse
This message board allows participants to freely exchange ideas and opinions on areas concerning taxes. The comments posted are the opinions of participants and not that of Tax Materials, Inc. We make no claim as to the accuracy of the information and will not be held liable for any damages caused by using such information. Tax Materials, Inc. reserves the right to delete or modify inappropriate postings.
Comment