The Oklahoman

Oklahoma tax lawyer exposed (In a good way)

- By Maverick Rork BrandInsig­ht contributo­r This article is sponsored by Travis W. Watkins Tax Resolution & Accounting Firm.

Travis W. Watkins Tax Resolution & Accounting Firm's principal, Travis Watkins, recently offered some advice for taxpayers in IRS trouble. These tips from Watkins may prevent an IRS problem before it begins.

1. Don't extend your filing and payment deadlines if you can help it. If you want to avoid tax problems, file your returns on time. I often hear small business owners complain, though, that they must extend their personal filing date for one reason or another. Perhaps they are waiting on K-1 partnershi­p income statements. Sometimes, this is just out of their control. However, your deadline to pay cannot be extended. How are you going to know how much to pay on April 15 if you don't prepare those taxes (or a pro forma of your return)? A lot of these small business owners that extend are the very ones that have the ability to control when the K-1 gets filed in the first place, if you're a partnershi­p or company of one or a few. You can control when you send out the K-1 to yourself and this is just the best practice. Don't prolong the inevitable! You're just racking up crippling penalties and interest and essentiall­y lining the government's pockets by waiting.

2. You can do some things yourself when it comes to IRS paper audits. The IRS routinely sends out paper notices to taxpayers that say, “explain to us why your return doesn't match what third parties have told the IRS that they have paid you this year.” If you have minor mistakes or things that need to be “shored up” with the IRS, such as a simple reporting error, then you can certainly discuss those things with the IRS. However, if you've underrepor­ted 20 percent or more of your income, now you're starting to look at significan­t penalties and fraud concerns start to emerge. That would be a good time to hire a tax profession­al to talk to the IRS on your behalf.

3. If you can pay back what you owe the IRS within 120 days, you may not need a tax resolution specialist to assist you with a formal payment plan. You can call the IRS in those situations and obtain a reprieve of 120 days to pay your taxes. They will do that routinely if you can convince them that you have a windfall coming or a third party is going to assist you in paying off that debt soon. If you haven't been in tax trouble before, you can call them up and just tell them, “please give me 120 days to pay this.” Now, that doesn't stop penalties and interest from running and it doesn't necessaril­y stop the IRS from filing a lien. However, all things considered, you don't need a tax profession­al to do this.

4. If you owe the IRS less than $10,000, you're probably not getting a good “bang for your buck” by hiring a tax resolution firm. This is mainly because tax resolution outfits, mine included, charge taxpayers an industry-standard 10 percent of what a taxpayer owes as a resolution fee. Most tax resolution firms are also going to set a “floor” on that fee, a $2,500 fee, for instance. So, if you owe $10,000 and you're paying $2,500 or more to a specialist, then it's not a feasible, nor a logical situation. If you're in that situation, there's a plethora of things on the IRS' website and free YouTube videos on my channel to assist you.

5. You may be a candidate for the IRS' First-Time Penalty Abatement Program, so you can make that request on your own. If you have a good track record of filing and paying on time, let's say for five years, then you may be able to call the IRS yourself and ask them for this First Time Penalty Abatement. If you just had one tax year “hiccup,” the IRS will often forgive that one year of penalties and associated interest. They never forgive straight interest on these things, unfortunat­ely. Here's a tip. I said that if you've been good, they may do that for you “as of right,” without having to explain a whole lot of circumstan­ces of why you got into trouble in the first place. However, even if you haven't been good, you can call up the IRS and get that one year first-time penalty abatement, and it goes through sometimes.

6. Don't hire a tax profession­al if you can pay your IRS debt, but you just simply don't want to do so. Tax resolution is not tax evasion. There is a lot of misinforma­tion out there that the U.S. is a “voluntary tax system” and paying taxes is somehow illegal. Don't fall for it! If you're a tax protester, then you may not need a tax profession­al. You may need a criminal lawyer because these arguments incite the wrath of the IRS. More importantl­y, these arguments just don't hold water.

7. Finally, if you have the time and guts to call the IRS' collection officials, you may not need a tax profession­al. At our office, even when calling on the taxpayer profession­al priority hotline, we may wait hours to talk to the person that we want to talk to at the IRS. Most taxpayers don't have that kind of time. Most importantl­y, if you have the ability when under pressure to ask the IRS for more (more time to file or pay, for instance), then that may be a situation where you may feel comfortabl­e on your own.

The IRS' reputation for intimidati­on is well documented, though. We stand in the taxpayer's shoes and negotiate on their behalf, which can lessen that intimidati­on factor. We can, in many circumstan­ces, buy you some more time.

Watkins adds that all these solutions can be time consuming. Also, not everyone wants to square off with the IRS. If you want his firm to help you craft a customized solution to your IRS problem and negotiate on your behalf, give Travis W. Watkins Tax Resolution & Accounting Firm today at 405-543-1683.

Travis Watkins is an Oklahoma City Tax Attorney who limits his practice to helping taxpayers end IRS problems. In 2018, his firm, Travis W. Watkins Tax Resolution & Accounting Firm was awarded The Oklahoman's Reader's Choice Award for Best Taxation Firm. Watkins has earned the designatio­n Certified Tax Resolution Specialist from the American Society of Tax Problem Solvers, a national notfor-profit organizati­on dedicated to helping taxpayers solve IRS problems. As a special offer to The Oklahoman readers you can get a free copy of Watkins' book, “The Ultimate Survival Guide to IRS Problems” by calling toll free 866-399-1432 and leaving a message 24/7. Watkins can also be reached immediatel­y at 405-543-1683.

 ?? [PROVIDED] ?? When a tax lawyer tells you that you may not need him, take heed.
[PROVIDED] When a tax lawyer tells you that you may not need him, take heed.

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