6 Tips to Consider Before You Spend this Year’s Tax Return
Do you spend weeks each spring eagerly anticipating your income tax refund? When the money finally comes in, is it gone tomorrow? You’re not alone. Many consumers view tax refunds as unplanned bonuses, but it makes more sense to plan for that new chunk of change so it doesn’t go to waste.
“Making smart decisions with your money is a great way to reward yourself for all the hard work you did to earn it,” said Katherine Hutt, spokesperson for the Council of Better Business Bureaus. “It’s easy to get caught up in the excitement of unplanned or extra cash, but you’ll be glad you saved some of it for a rainy day when the time comes to use it.”
Whether or not you are in need of debt relief, a tax refund provides the opportunity to improve your financial situation. BBB and Clear Point Credit Counseling Solutions recommend the following tips to tax refund recipients:
Pay down your debt. Refund checks usually arrive when many consumers are still struggling with holiday bills. Use your refund for some much needed debt relief: pay off your credit card. If you have an outstanding balance on more than one credit card, you can either try to pay off the lowest balance card first (good for motivation) or direct the funds toward the card carrying the highest interest rate (wiser from financial perspective). Or, apply your refund toward other debts, like a car loan or a home equity loan.
Consider your financial goals. Are you trying to save for a down payment on a house or car? Do you hope to contribute to your child’s college tuition one day? Consider applying your tax refund toward these goals. If you don’t yet have a set of short-term and long-term financial goals, put one together. You’ll be more conscientious about how you spend your tax refund, or any other extra money that comes your way.
Save it for a rainy day. Why not give yourself an even bigger return on your tax refund by putting the money into a savings account–or an emergency savings account, CD or retirement fund? Your tax refund will continue to grow if you put it into savings or invest the money. Plus, it’s always helpful to have a savings account to draw from when a major car repair bill, medical emergency or other unexpected expense comes along. That way, you don’t have to borrow money and add to your debt-load.
Keep things in perspective. Working your way out of debt can seem like a daunting task. Perhaps you assume that a small tax refund check won’t make enough of a dent in your debt. Think again. Every little bit helps. Paying down debt takes time, but steadily increasing your monthly payments does have an impact. Just stay focused on the end goal. It may take years to pay off your debt, but your ultimate reward — being debt-free — will be well worth the effort.
If debt is a continuing problem, consider a credit counselor. Certified consumer credit counseling agencies can assist people who are facing financial challenges and are looking for debt relief. BBB has information on more than 2,000 Credit & Debt Counseling firms, including hundreds of Accredited Businesses. BBB Business Reviews are available for free at www.bbb.org/search.
Consider investing in your home or in others. Even if your finances are in good shape, your refund check provides the opportunity to improve your life or the lives of others. Use the money to spruce up your home or make it more energy-efficient. Improve your career opportunities by taking a class or training course. Use your refund to teach your older children how to handle money. Give them a portion of the refund and help them budget for school, clothing and entertainment expenses and savings. Finally, you may want to donate your tax refund to a charitable organization. You’ll help improve the lives of others, and your charitable gift may reduce next year’s tax burden. Check out BBB Wise Giving Alliance at www.bbb.org/charity for more information on trustworthy charities.
1099-C surprise: IRS tax follows canceled debt
Forgiven credit card debt may be taxable income
By Connie Prater
If you thought your money woes ended last year when you settled that credit card debt, think again.
Avoiding 1099-C tax problems
What you should know: Have you negotiated with a creditor to pay less than you owe on a credit card debt? The IRS considers forgiven or canceled debt as taxable income.
What to do: Experts advise consumers to seek tax advice before negotiating credit card debt settlements to avoid a “surprise” tax hit from cancellation of debt.
For many consumers with debt problems, after the debt collector leaves their lives, the taxman arrives.
Months after successfully resolving credit card debts, consumers have received 1099-C “cancellation of debt” tax notices in the mail. Why? The U.S. Internal Revenue Service considers forgiven or canceled debt as income. Creditors and debt collectors who agree to accept at least $600 less than the original balance are required by law to file 1099-C forms with the IRS and to send debtors notices as well. Taxpayers must report that “income” on their federal income tax returns.
“A lot of people don’t realize they have any tax issues at all when they are going through this,” says Alison Flores, a researcher at The Tax Institute at H&R Block, the nation’s largest tax preparation service. “They say ‘I’m really poor, I’m broke and I can’t pay my bills. How can you consider this income?'”
It is, according to the Internal Revenue Code. For example, a person with $10,000 in credit card debt who negotiates to pay only $6,000 of the balance would have $4,000 in forgiven debt income. That $4,000 must be reported as “other income” on Line 21 of the 1040 tax form. Depending on the amount of debt forgiven, the taxpayer’s income level, deductions and other factors, the consumer could face a sizable tax bill come mid-April.
Surprise tax problem
The problem: Many consumers have no clue what the 1099-C forms are, and some may be trashing the cancellation of debt notices because the forms are sent by creditors or debt collectors with whom they thought they no longer had business. Still others are not filing the 1099-Cs with their federal income tax returns — putting taxpayers at risk for IRS audits, penalties and fines. Consumer credit counselors and tax attorneys say few consumers are aware of the tax implications of settling to pay a lesser amount than they owe in credit card debt.
“It’s truly something that consumers need to be aware of, as they are often blindsided by it,” says Gail Cunningham, spokeswoman for the National Foundation for Credit Counseling, a nationwide group of nonprofit credit counseling agencies. “Just when they think the debt monkey is off their back, here comes the IRS obligation.”
The number of “surprise” tax problems is growing as the amount of bad debt rises amid a nationwide credit crisis.
According to the IRS, the number of 1099-C cancellation of debt forms filed with the federal government by creditors and debt collectors nearly tripled between 2003 and 2009. The IRS received fewer than 1 million forms in 2003 and more than 2.673 million in 2009 The projected number for 2010 is 2.8 million (see chart). The IRS expects to get 3.1 million debt forgiveness forms by 2012. Part of the spike may be due to the rise in mortgage foreclosures, but a major portion of it is also attributed to credit card debt.
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Debt forgiveness leads to rise in 1099-C filings
Canceled and forgiven debt may be taxable income for
some consumers. According to the IRS, the number of taxpayers filing debt cancellation forms nearly tripled between 2003 and 2009. The IRS estimates the volume of filings will continue to climb into 2012, when they will hit a projected 3.11 million. Source: Internal Revenue Service, Analysis and Statistics, Office of Research, Forecasting and Service Analysis |
Negotiating with creditors, debt collectors and debt buyers to pay a fraction of the amount owed is a common practice in the industry, often accomplished through third-party agents such as consumer credit counselors or debt settlement specialists.
“Debt buyers are willing to negotiate a discount, sometimes at a very significant discount off the entire balance, to settle the debt,” says Barbara Sinsley, general counsel for the 600-member Debt Buyers Association (DBA International), a trade group of companies that buy and sell portfolios of debt from banks and other creditors.
Seek advice immediately
Consumers who receive the 1099-C cancellation of debt forms should immediately take them to a tax preparer or tax adviser, experts say.
“Make sure your tax preparer understands the rules related to these type of activities,” says Mark Steber, vice president of tax resources for Jackson Hewitt tax preparation service. “Ask to talk to an office manager. Tell them ‘I need to see someone who understands this type of situation.'”
Taxpayers may qualify for one of several exclusions that allow them to reduce taxable income from canceled debts. If the exclusions apply, they must file an IRS form 982 in addition to the 1099-C.
“Theoretically, you have income if you don’t meet one of the exceptions,” says Eric L. Green, a tax attorney with the Convicer & Percy law firm in Glastonbury, Conn.
The exclusions include debts discharged during bankruptcy and debts of consumers who are insolvent (meaning their liabilities exceed their assets) prior to the cancellation of debt. However, the exclusion applies only up to the amount by which consumers are insolvent. That means if $5,000 in debts were forgiven and liabilities exceeded assets by $2,000, then the $2,000 would be excluded as income. “The remaining $3,000 would be reported under other income,” says H&R Block’s Flores.
Debt resolution tax tips
* Consult with a tax adviser before finalizing debt settlement agreements to find out the potential tax implications. Ask for a tax preparer who is knowledgeable about 1099-Cs.
* Clarify with the creditor or debt collector the exact amount that will be declared on the 1099-C form.
* Be aware that the 1099-C is coming. Don’t throw it away. Take it to your tax preparer.
* If there is a dispute about the amount reported on the form, contact the creditor or debt collector immediately to resolve the matter. Ask for a corrected 1099-C form.
Homeowners who default on mortgage loans may also qualify for exclusion of their foreclosures under the Mortgage Forgiveness Debt Relief Act, which took effect Dec. 20, 2007, to help homeowners caught in the mortgage crisis. This provision applies to debt forgiven in calendar years 2007 through 2012.
Other exclusions are for certain farm debt, student loans and real property business debts.
Informing consumers
Much of the surprise element of the 1099-C cancellation of debt forms could be eliminated, say tax preparers, if all creditors and debt buyers routinely informed consumers that there could be tax ramifications when settling debts for discounted amounts.
At Wells Fargo, one of the nation’s five largest credit card issuers, all settlement-offer letters include disclosure of possible 1099-C implications, according to Lisa B. Westermann, assistant vice president of public relations for Wells Fargo Card Services. Other credit card issuers did not respond to requests for information about their policies.
“The bank doesn’t tell you,” says Green, the Connecticut tax attorney. “From the bank’s perspective, it’s not their job to give tax advice.”
Says Sinsley from the debt buyers group: “There is no current law that says that a debt buyer must disclose that a 1099-C would be forthcoming after the settlement of debt.”
She says debt buyers have been sued for the unlicensed practice of law after giving consumers advice on resolving their debts. It’s something she advises her members to avoid. “A debt buyer is not the consumer’s financial planner,” she says. “Everybody’s financial situation should be discussed with a tax adviser.”
Knowing the amount of forgiven debt to be reported to the IRS would help consumers plan ahead, Sinsley says. “When they are negotiating the settlement of the debt, the consumer can discuss with their tax adviser what consequences there would be in exchange for the settlement of the debt,” she says. “If the consumer is settling a debt, and they know the settlement is X and the forgiveness is Y, they can go to their tax preparer and say, ‘If I do this, what is my tax impact?'”
The IRS has released numerous publications and bulletins about 1099-Cs, IRS spokeswoman Theresa Branscome says. However, many of those publications have focused on mortgage forgiveness rather than credit card debt.
Check the figures
Another tip from tax preparers: Make sure that the amount of canceled debt listed on the 1099-C form is accurate.
“Make sure that you agree with the numbers,” says Steber from Jackson Hewitt. “They can include interest on the debt that hasn’t been paid for a while.” If there is a discrepancy, Steber says, “you better go back and talk to them now and find out what it is.”
Another potential problem: receiving a 1099-C before the debt is actually paid off. According to Lauren Saunders, managing attorney for the National Consumer Law Center, creditors have sent cancellation of debt forms to consumers at the point that the credit card issuers charged off the debt and sold it to debt buyers. “The consumer is potentially liable both for taxes on supposedly forgiven debt while continuing to be liable for the debt,” Saunders says. “We’ve had calls about that situation. Seems like you can’t have it both ways: Either you forgive it or sell it but not both.”
Consumers who receive 1099-Cs in error may request that creditors or debt buyers send corrected forms to the IRS, but the situation leads to confusion and complications for consumers, according to the law center.
Several tax advisers called the 1099-C requirements unfair to consumers trying to overcome mountains of debt. Others say the tax rule is further proof that there is no free ride and consumers who borrow money must be prepared to live up to their financial obligations.
The bottom line on 1099-Cs, says tax attorney Green: “Be aware and prepare for it. When you receive that form, go immediately to a tax adviser. Don’t ignore it. That has real dollars and cents consequences.”
AICCCA’s Tax Time 2-step
Emancipation Day in the District of Columbia will be celebrated on April 15 this year, giving Americans across the nation reason to dance as that means the income tax filing deadline has been extended to April 18. However, the day is still quickly approaching so the Association of Independent Consumer Credit Counseling Agencies encourages consumers who have yet to prepare for tax day to start planning and saving now.
“The first step for consumers who anticipate owing taxes is to learn the amount of their liability,” said Dave Jones, president, AICCCA. “The next step is determining what they will need to do in order to pay their tax bill.”
AICCCA offers consumers a tax time 2-step program leading up to and beyond April 18:
2 Steps to take now:
Determine your liability. The sooner you have this information the better. Sit down soon to either calculate your taxes or have your taxes reviewed by a tax professional. If you’re still using a paper 1040 form, consider tax software that will help you identify all qualified deductions.
Establish a weekly savings target. If you owe money, take a hard look at your budget and see if you can squeeze out money for taxes. Start by eliminating expensive meals, vacations and other discretionary expenses. Afterwards, look for ways to save on necessities like food, utilities and clothing. Inquire about overtime opportunities at work. Take a second job until your tax bill is paid. Hold a garage sale and sell those items you no longer need to apply the money to your tax bill.
2 Steps to take on tax day:
File on time. Filing later than April 18 will cost you in IRS-imposed penalties for late filing. Putting off filing because you don’t have the money to pay will only increase the amount you will ultimately owe if you fail to file on time. If you need more time, the IRS does accept extensions on filing through April 18. Keep in mind that a filing extension is not a payment extension. You will likely have to make at least a partial payment on April 18.
Research your credit options carefully. If you find you must borrow some or all of the tax due, be sure to compare interest rates and terms to find the option that is right for you. These include a bank loan, an IRS installment plan and an IRS approved credit card. You’ll pay interest on a bank loan, a processing fee and interest on an IRS installment plan and convenience fees plus interest to credit card companies. If you decide to use a credit card, be sure to have a plan to pay off the card as soon as possible.
2 Steps for the rest of the year:
Review W4 withholdings. Whether you receive a tax refund or must send a tax payment, you should review your W4 form annually. If you receive a large tax refund every year, you are effectively giving Uncle Sam an annual interest free loan. Earn interest income on that money yourself by increasing the number of withholdings. On the other hand, if you consistently owe taxes, you should lower the number of withholdings or have your employer take an additional amount each pay period for taxes if you already claim zero on your W4.
Ask for help. If you are at a loss as to how you will pay your taxes or would like help budgeting so you will not be in the same position next year, contact an AICCCA member office at 866-703-8787 or http://www.aiccca.org for help.
Founded in 1993, Association of Independent Consumer Credit Counseling Agencies (AICCCA) is a national membership organization, established to promote quality and consistent delivery of credit counseling services. AICCCA and its members are focused on improved creditor relations, efficient processes and advanced technology to best serve clients and creditors. AICCCA members are independent nonprofit agencies that advocate for debtors, counsel millions of consumers annually nationwide and provide debt management services to consumers with excessive unsecured debt. For more information or to contact an AICCCA member office call 866-703-TRUSTAICCCA (866-703-8787) or visit http://www.aiccca.org/.
ONE END OF YEAR SURPRISE TOO MANY
Considering Debt Settlement?
