I had a statement from the client with interest and property taxes paid. The taxes were quite high. In looking into it it turns out to be special assessments included with the actual taxes which I would ordinarily deduct. Do you all take the figure on the statemen as fact or attempt to get the actual property tax statement?
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Originally posted by Lion View PostFor many towns, I can find the detailed bills online to see if sewer usage or other non-property tax items were billed and paid with property tax. If paid directly, my clients include their copy of the bill that shows the detail.Always cite your source for support to defend your opinion
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My town stamps the bill with the date, time, amount, tax bill ref #, etc, basically running a cash register receipt right on the bill itself as the taxpayer's receipt. For my clients who mailed a check to the town, I've trained them to write the date, amount, and check # on the bill when they write the check. Some even staple a check copy to the bill. I can look up their payment history online for some area towns, but not all; so the better I can train them the easier it is for me.
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When you get the detail, you will deduct the taxes that he paid. Penalties and interest are not deductible for a personal home. Neither are usage fees (sewer usage and water usage are common around here). Assessments can be a lot of things, so get their detail. A capital item would add to basis. But, I've seen things labeled assessments that were actually something like water usage prorated based on how many bedrooms in a condo unit, so find out what the assessment was for. Ask your client questions.
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Originally posted by Lion View PostWhen you get the detail, you will deduct the taxes that he paid. Penalties and interest are not deductible for a personal home. Neither are usage fees (sewer usage and water usage are common around here). Assessments can be a lot of things, so get their detail. A capital item would add to basis. But, I've seen things labeled assessments that were actually something like water usage prorated based on how many bedrooms in a condo unit, so find out what the assessment was for. Ask your client questions.
Client should provide documentation.Always cite your source for support to defend your opinion
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Originally posted by zeros View PostI had a statement from the client with interest and property taxes paid. The taxes were quite high. In looking into it it turns out to be special assessments included with the actual taxes which I would ordinarily deduct. Do you all take the figure on the statemen as fact or attempt to get the actual property tax statement?
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Ask = answer
My goodness. This should be simple and less than a minute for the answer.
CLIENT To tax assessor:
Question: please provide me a printout of my 2015 real estate taxes paid separate from any assessments and a printout of any special assessments fees (non tax) separate from R/E tax
Tax assessor to client: here is your info
Client to tax assessor: thank you. Did not know it would be that simple and take less than a minute!! My preparer said it would be very involved.
Client to preparer: Here is the printout of info you wanted. That should take $100 off my bill.
Preparer to client: still cost you a $100 more because of the research and writing and review of post replies I had to do for a difficult issue.Last edited by TAXNJ; 04-20-2016, 12:11 PM.Always cite your source for support to defend your opinion
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