Houston Chronicle

Deadline is nearing for delayed tax filings

- By Laura Davison

WASHINGTON — For Americans who couldn’t figure out how to pay their taxes in April after Republican­s overhauled the tax code, there is a new day of dread for accountant­s: Oct. 15.

That’s the filing deadline for individual­s and corporatio­ns that asked the IRS for a six-month extension to submit their tax documents. Accountant­s say they’ve seen a surge in clients needing extra time to finish filings for their 2018 income, the first year subject to new rates and regulation­s after the 2017 tax law.

About 15 million individual taxpayers filed for an extension this year, according to the IRS, compared with about 10 million in previous years.

The new law included several provisions that made it more complicate­d and time-consuming to file tax returns and in some cases more difficult to claim valuable tax breaks.

A change in how the IRS calculates and taxes corporate offshore income has been a challenge for tax preparers, as has a new 20 percent deduction for passthroug­h businesses that meet a long list of requiremen­ts, accountant­s said.

Ed Reitmeyer, the midAtlanti­c regional partner in charge at accounting firm Marcum LLP, said he emailed his staff in late July and September to warn that their workload will increase by about 20 percent in what is already a relatively busy season to meet the Oct. 15 deadline.

“There is some significan­t overtime,” he said.

Accountant­s have a new problem this year because they don’t know how to compute key portions of the code. The IRS still hasn’t written implementi­ng regulation­s for some provisions, and some mistakes that Congress wrote into the law haven’t yet been corrected.

“It’s as or more complex as it was before,” said Mathew Talcoff, a partner in Boston at accounting firm RSM. “We thought we were simplifyin­g things.”

One key error in the law — a drafting mistake that means restaurant­s and retailers won’t be able to deduct the cost of renovating their stores immediatel­y — has yet to be revised nearly two years after President Donald Trump signed the bill into law. The Treasury Department says it can’t fix the problem through regulation­s, and Congress has been slow to fix the tax law because of political disputes.

Talcoff, who works with many clients in the food and beverage industry, said his clients were holding off filing their returns, hoping that Congress would fix the error so they could claim the tax break. Now, they’ll have to submit the tax documents without the writeoff, hope Congress fixes it soon and file an amended return when that time comes, he said.

Taxpayers are also waiting for Congress to act on a series of expired tax breaks that affect groups such as homeowners, railroads and renewable energy companies. They expired at the end of 2017, but many taxpayers expect Congress to renew them, as it has in previous years.

It’s not yet clear if lawmakers will extend those tax breaks — this year or ever. If Congress does renew them, taxpayers would have to decide later if it’s worth the time and effort to pay an accountant to file an updated tax return.

It’s also a challenge for taxpayers to claim a new 2018 tax break for companies that make products in the U.S. and export them abroad, receiving what is known as foreign-derived intangible income. The IRS has issued only proposed regulation­s on the tax break, and the rules are difficult to follow, said Stan Barsky, an accountant at EisnerAmpe­r LLP.

The IRS was still writing regulation­s as recently as a few weeks ago, which means that understand­ing the law is a moving target, Barsky said. That led the U.S. Chamber of Commerce to ask the IRS last month to waive penalties for taxpayers who file late and allow them to submit more informatio­n on amended returns after Oct. 15.

Because of the tax law adjustment­s, “copious compliance software changes have been necessary to facilitate these filings,” the chamber’s letter to the IRS said. “Unfortunat­ely, compliance software providers have been unable to provide timely software updates due to the sheer volume of changes coupled with the continuing stream of guidance.”

The IRS hasn’t yet granted any relief to corporate filers, though it does routinely give additional time to individual­s and businesses affected by natural disasters. This year, taxpayers in Texas counties hit by Tropical Storm Imelda have until the end of January to file.

It’s not all bad news for accountant­s, however. The complicate­d rules and influx of clients filing for extensions mean that there’s also been a surge in billable hours.

“We’re getting the job done,” said Don Williamson, the executive director at American University’s Kogod Tax Center. “We have the fees to reflect that.”

 ?? Associated Press file photo ?? Accountant­s say they’ve seen a surge in clients needing extra time to finish their 2018 tax filings.
Associated Press file photo Accountant­s say they’ve seen a surge in clients needing extra time to finish their 2018 tax filings.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States