House Passes New Late-Filing Penalties
To Offset Tax Cuts for Military, Firefighters
The House on Nov. 6 overwhelmingly passed a $2.1 billion package of tax cuts for military personnel, veterans, and firefighters by a vote of 410-0, approving a variety of increases in penalties for businesses that fail to file their tax returns on time. The Heroes Earnings Assistance and Relief Tax Act of 2007 (H.R. 3997) is expected to pass the Senate as well.
Penalties to Rise
The tax cuts will be paid for with new penalties for failure to file S corporation or partnership returns. S corporations failing to file their tax returns or to provide the required information would be subject to a $100 per shareholder penalty for each month in which the failure continues, up to a maximum of 12 months.
Partnerships would see penalties rise from $50 per partner for each month (or fraction of a month) that the failure to file continues, up to a maximum of five months, to $100 per partner, per month, for up to 12 months.
Businesses or individuals that are required to file information returns would see late-filing penalties grow from a minimum of $15 per return to $25 per return for returns filed less than 30 days late. The maximum penalty for such "first tier" violations would grow from $75,000 per year to $200,000 per year. Penalties for the latest filers would increase to a maximum of $600,000 per year. The final increase would be an increase in the minimum penalty for failure to file an individual tax return. The minimum penalty for a failure to file a tax return within 60 days of the due date would rise to the lesser of $225 or 100 percent of the amount of tax required to be shown on the return.
The Joint Committee on Taxation estimates that the new penalties for S corporations would raise $967 million in new revenue over 10 years, and penalties against partnerships are expected to raise $654 million. The higher penalties on information returns would raise $280 million from 2008 to 2017; the increase in the minimum penalty would boost federal revenues by $296 million.
To Offset Tax Cuts for Military, Firefighters
The House on Nov. 6 overwhelmingly passed a $2.1 billion package of tax cuts for military personnel, veterans, and firefighters by a vote of 410-0, approving a variety of increases in penalties for businesses that fail to file their tax returns on time. The Heroes Earnings Assistance and Relief Tax Act of 2007 (H.R. 3997) is expected to pass the Senate as well.
Penalties to Rise
The tax cuts will be paid for with new penalties for failure to file S corporation or partnership returns. S corporations failing to file their tax returns or to provide the required information would be subject to a $100 per shareholder penalty for each month in which the failure continues, up to a maximum of 12 months.
Partnerships would see penalties rise from $50 per partner for each month (or fraction of a month) that the failure to file continues, up to a maximum of five months, to $100 per partner, per month, for up to 12 months.
Businesses or individuals that are required to file information returns would see late-filing penalties grow from a minimum of $15 per return to $25 per return for returns filed less than 30 days late. The maximum penalty for such "first tier" violations would grow from $75,000 per year to $200,000 per year. Penalties for the latest filers would increase to a maximum of $600,000 per year. The final increase would be an increase in the minimum penalty for failure to file an individual tax return. The minimum penalty for a failure to file a tax return within 60 days of the due date would rise to the lesser of $225 or 100 percent of the amount of tax required to be shown on the return.
The Joint Committee on Taxation estimates that the new penalties for S corporations would raise $967 million in new revenue over 10 years, and penalties against partnerships are expected to raise $654 million. The higher penalties on information returns would raise $280 million from 2008 to 2017; the increase in the minimum penalty would boost federal revenues by $296 million.
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