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February 2012

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Internal Revenue Service: Tax Tip: Tax Law Changes: 2011 Federal Returns

 

Dear Friend,

 

 

Before you file your 2011 federal income tax return in 2012, you should be aware of a few important tax changes that took effect in 2011. Check www.IRS.gov before you file for updates on any new legislation that may affect your tax return.

 

Due date of return. File your federal tax return by April 17, 2012. The due date is April 17, instead of April 15, because April 15 is a Sunday and April 16 is the Emancipation Day holiday in the District of Columbia.

 

New forms. In most cases, you must report your capital gains and losses on the new Form 8949, Sales and Other Dispositions of Capital Assets. Then, you report certain totals from that form on Schedule D (Form 1040). If you had foreign financial assets in 2011, you may have to file the new Form 8938, Statement of Foreign Financial Assets, with your return.

 

Standard mileage rates. The 2011 rates for mileage are different for January 1 through June 30 than for July 1 through December 31. For business use of your car, you can deduct 51 cents a mile for miles driven the first half of the year and 55 ½ cents for the second half. Medical and moving mileage are both 19 cents per mile for the early half of the year and 23 ½ cents in the latter half.

 

Standard deduction and exemptions increased.

  • The standard deduction increased for some taxpayers who do not itemize deductions on IRS Schedule A (Form 1040). The amount depends on your filing status.
  • The amount you can deduct for each exemption has increased $50 to $3,700 for 2011.

 Self-employed health insurance deduction. This deduction is no longer allowed on Schedule SE (Form 1040), but you can still take it on Form 1040, line 29.

 

Alternative minimum tax (AMT) exemption amount increased. The AMT exemption amount has increased to $48,450 ($74,450 if married filing jointly or a qualifying widow(er); $37,225 if married filing separately).

 

Health savings accounts (HSAs) and Archer MSAs. The additional tax on distributions from HSAs and Archer MSAs not used for qualified medical expenses increased to 20 percent. Beginning in 2011, only prescribed drugs or insulin are qualified medical expenses.

 

Roth IRAs. If you converted or rolled over an amount from a traditional IRA to a Roth IRA or designated Roth in 2010 and did not elect to report the taxable amount on your 2010 return, you generally must report half of it on your 2011 return and the rest on your 2012 return.

 

Alternative motor vehicle credit. You can claim the alternative motor vehicle credit for a 2011 purchase only if the vehicle is a new fuel cell motor vehicle.

 

First-time homebuyer credit. The credit expired for most taxpayers for 2011. Some military personnel and members of the intelligence community can still claim the credit in 2011 for qualified purchases.

 

Health coverage tax credit. Recent legislation changed the amount of this credit, which pays qualified health insurance premiums for eligible individuals and their families. Participants who received the 65 percent tax credit in any month from March to December 2011 may claim an additional 7.5 percent retroactive credit when they file their 2011 tax return.

Mailing a return. The IRS changed the filing location for several areas. If you're mailing a paper return, see the Form 1040 instructions for the correct address. Detailed information on these changes can be found on the IRS website - www.irs.gov.

Internal Revenue Service ~ Smartphone App: Tax Refund

 

 

WASHINGTON - The Internal Revenue Service announced today the availability of IRS2Go 2.0 , an expanded version of its smartphone application designed to provide taxpayers easier access to practical tools and information.

 

The new app, available on the Apple and Android platforms, adds a new YouTube feature, news feed and tax transcript service in addition to existing tools, such as checking on the status of a tax refund.

 

"The new smartphone app provides an easy way for people to get helpful information about their taxes," said IRS Commissioner Doug Shulman. "IRS2Go reflects a wider commitment at the IRS to find innovative ways to serve taxpayers in a rapidly changing world."

 

The IRS released the first version of IRS2Go in 2011, and had more than 350,000 downloads. The phone app offers taxpayers a number of safe and secure ways to access information and keep current on practical tax information. The 2.0 version of the phone app includes three new tools:

  • Watch Us. People can view IRS YouTube videos on their smartphones. The videos provide short, informative features on a variety of tax topics. The channel ranks as the fourth most viewed channel among more than 125 federal government YouTube channels. IRS also has YouTube channels available in multilingual and American Sign Language.
  • Get the Latest News. With this tool, users can have the latest IRS news releases delivered to their phones as it becomes available.
  • Get My Tax Record. Taxpayers can now order their tax return transcript from the IRS2Go app. The transcript will be delivered via the U.S. Postal Service to their address of record.

The free IRS2Go app will continue giving taxpayers access to the tools offered last year:

  • Get Your Refund Status. Taxpayers can check the status of their federal tax refund through the phone app with a few basic pieces of information. An updated refund status is available about three days after the IRS acknowledges receipt of an e-filed return, or four weeks after mailing a paper return.
  • Get Tax Updates. Phone app users enter their e-mail address to automatically receive simple, straightforward tips and reminders to help with tax planning and preparation. Tax Tips are issued daily during the filing season and periodically throughout the rest of the year.
  • Follow the IRS. Taxpayers can sign up to follow the IRS Twitter newsfeed, @IRSnews , which provides easy-to-use information, including updates on tax law changes and important IRS programs.

Apple users can update or download the free IRS2Go application by visiting the Apple App Store. Android users can visit the Android Marketplace to download the free IRS2Go app.

  

For more information on IRS2Go and other products and services through social media channels, visit www.IRS.gov

IRS YouTube Video: IRS2Go 2.0

 

 

Signs Your Pension Plan Is in Trouble

 

If your pension plan is underfunded, you could be at risk of losing some of your benefits. That isn't news. But did you know that your pension can be at risk even if the plan is relatively healthy?

 

Something as seemingly innocuous as having a lump-sum payout provision, or even having a religious affiliation, could mean your benefits are vulnerable. Here are some red flags to look for, and some ways to protect yourself.

 

Your pension is healthy, but your employer isn't.

 

Two years ago, the musicians at the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra got a rude shock when management, concerned about endowment losses, told the symphony board they should freeze the musicians' pensions.

 

Sound familiar? This is happening in workplaces around the nation, but in many cases managers who want to freeze pension plans are choosing financial assumptions that make the pension look like a bigger burden than it actually is.

 

The musicians hired an actuary, who challenged the assumptions that management was using and determined the pension wasn't that costly after all. As a result, management backed off.

 

"You have to push back," says Dave Gaudry, a viola player on the musicians' negotiating committee. "Don't believe what anybody says."

 

Your plan offers lump-sum payouts.

 

Many plans allow departing workers to take their pension benefits as a one-time payout instead of a monthly payment in retirement. It doesn't necessarily hurt the plan if a lot of people take their money out at once. All things being equal, when the plan pays out $100 million in lump sums, the obligation also falls by $100 million, so it's a wash.

 

It's a different story, though, if the company offers early retirement or separation incentives paid with plan assets, as opposed to using general corporate funds. If that is the case, a pension plan can quickly become underwater.

 

And this can affect your own ability to take a lump sum later on. If the plan's funding falls below 80%, federal law limits lump sums to 50% of the benefit. If the funding falls below 60%, lump sums are prohibited and the plan is automatically frozen, meaning your pension stops rising.

 

So keep a close eye on your plan's health if your employer begins a big downsizing push that includes enhanced pension payouts.

 

Your company changes hands.

 

Your pension plan might be fat and happy, but if another company takes over your employer-and your pension-it can legally use the assets in your plan to top off an underfunded plan of its own. This strategy, though legal, is one of the quickest ways for your pension to go from healthy to distressed.

 

Similarly, if your company spins off or sells your division, plan for the worst. Many companies spin off underperforming divisions, loading them up with retirees but without adequate assets to pay their promised benefits. Most retirees of Delphi, General Motors's auto-parts spinoff, lost between 20% and 40% of their pensions when their plan was terminated in bankruptcy.

 

When Motorola was planning to spin off its mobile-device business in 2010, it planned to leave its pension plan, covering 87,000 people, behind in the old business. The Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp.-the quasifederal agency that insures pension plans-raised concerns, and early last year the company agreed to put $100 million into the plan over five years. A Motorola spokeswoman says the contribution was on top of the normal funding requirement.

 

Your employer gets religion.

 

Over the past decade, more than 100 employers-including hospitals, schools, nursing homes, universities, clinics and religious charities-have been claiming their pension plans are actually "church plans," a largely unregulated pension category that generally covers clergy and lay employees of churches, synagogues, mosques and other houses of worship.

Church plans are exempt from federal pension rules, including those that require employers to fund the plans and insure them with the PBGC. This puts participants at tremendous risk.

 

Employees at Augsburg Fortress, a publisher in Minneapolis that sells books published for the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, lost 30% to 60% of their pensions when the publisher, which claimed the pension was a church plan, terminated it in 2010. Augsburg didn't respond to requests for comment.

 

Last fall, the Internal Revenue Service said employers must notify their employees and retirees if they are seeking church-plan status. But the rule isn't retroactive, so if your plan has converted already, your employer doesn't have to notify you. If you are worried, ask your plan administrator if your pension is protected by the PBGC.

 

What if you are a priest, pastor, rabbi or other employee and are in a genuine church plan? Pray for the best, because your employer isn't required to fund the plan, disclose much about its health or purchase insurance.

Issue: 27

2011 Tax Law Changes: Federal Return
Smartphone App
Signs Your Pension Plan is in Trouble

 

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