Filing an Irs Tax Extension With Filelater – 5 Minutes Gives You 6 More Months to File

February 2nd, 2010

Welcome to yet another tax season.

With a matter of days remaining until the April 15 IRS income tax deadline, the stress level of Americans is on the rise. Prepare yourself for more angry drivers on the freeways, impatient customers in the lines of local coffee shops and grocery stores, and friends who don’t quite treat you like the friends they were only weeks ago.

Looking for a way to cut down on the April tax time blues? There’s a little known secret called an IRS tax extension (the technical term is an IRS Form 4868 – Application for Automatic Extension of Time To File U.S. Individual Income Tax Return), and a company called FileLater who can help. Of 130M United States federal income tax filers, about 10M filed for automated extensions last year, so you won’t be alone. And the IRS doesn’t ask (or care) why you file for an extension.

Almost every tax-paying American is automatically eligible to file an IRS tax extension, and it can be easy to do. In about 5 minutes, you can go to File Later’s website, answer a handful of relatively simple questions, and have your tax extension e-filed to the IRS for you. In a couple of days, you’ll get an email with IRS confirmation that your new tax deadline is October 15.

To file a tax extension online you’ll need to provide some basic personal information, and an estimate of your tax liability. Don’t have a clue if you owe or if you’ll be getting a refund? Don’t worry, the better tax extension filing services like FileLater will provide you with a simple calculator to make determining your tax liability easy.

If you’re in the minority of tax filers who will owe money to the IRS (rather than getting a refund) the IRS will still want their money by April 15 or you could be hit with a late payment penalty. Filing a tax extension will give you the extra 6 months to file your tax return, but it doesn’t give you extra time to pay the IRS. That means you either have to mail a check postmarked by April 15 to the IRS or provide bank information online for an automatic withdrawal. If you expect to get a refund, then there’s nothing to consider.

How to File a Tax Extension

February 2nd, 2010

If you are feeling the stress of the upcoming April 15 income tax deadline, you have another option – you can file a tax extension and delay your income tax deadline to October 15.

The IRS is willing to grant you the six month income tax extension without you having to come up with an excuse to extend. In fact, the IRS doesn’t even ask why you need to extend. As long as you properly submit your extension request by providing accurate information, the IRS will grant you the six month extension automatically.

The fastest way to file an extension is to file it online through a website run by an approved IRS e-file provider like FileLater.com. FileLater.com makes the process easy. You’ll be asked for your contact information and then taken through a few simple questions to determine if you want to make a tax payment along with your extension

Tax Extension Glossary

February 2nd, 2010

Let’s face it, when it comes to taxes it feels like there’s a whole new language to learn. In an effort to make tax extensions a little easier to understand, we’ve put together the follwing list of terms and definitions.

April 15 – We all probably know this one. April 15 is Tax Day. It is the day that your income taxes must be filed and paid to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). Although there is no way to extend the deadline to pay the taxes you owe, you can extend the amount of time you have to file your tax paperwork if you file a tax extension.

Calendar Year – The one-year period beginning January 1 and ending on December 31. For tax extension purposes, corporations that follow the calendar year have until March 15 to file their taxes.

e-File – In an effort to reduce the amount of paper used to submit tax forms, the IRS created the e-File system so that forms like Form 4868 and Form 7004 can be submitted to the goverment electronically.

Electronic Federal Tax Payment System (EFTPS) is one way to make tax payments if you don’t want to write a check or pay by credit card. It’s offered by the U.S. Department of the Treasury that allows taxpayers to make tax payments either online or via telephone.

Electronic Funds Withdrawal (EFW) is a way to electronically pay the IRS the taxes you owe (meaning, you don’t have to write and mail a check). The way it works is you provide your bank information (account number and routing number), an amount, and a withdrawal date when you use an authorized e-File provider. The IRS will then deduct that amount from your account on the date scheduled.

Fiscal Year – Not every corporation follows the calendar year (January 1 – December 31). Those that do not are considered Fiscal Year filers. For corporate tax fiscal year filers, the returns are due 2 ½ months after the end of the fiscal year.

Form 1040 is the standard IRS form that individual taxpayers use to file their annual income tax returns.The due date for the 1040 is April 15.

Form 1040A is a simplified version of the 1040 for individual income tax. To be eligible to use From 1040A, a person must fulfill certain requirements such as not itemizing deductions, not owning a business and having a taxable income of less than $100,000.

Form 1040-EZ is an alternative to the IRS Form 1040 that offers a faster and easier way to file taxes, meant for taxpayers with tax situations that are viewed as less comlicated. In order to be eligible to use this form, a person must have a taxable income of less than $100,000, interest income of $1,500 or less, possess no dependents, and fulfill other requirements set by the IRS.

Form 1040NR and Form 1040NR-EZ – Form 1040NR is also known as U.S. Nonresident Alien Income Tax Return. Out of the two forms, it is also known as the long version. Form 1040NR-EZ is the tax return form most frequently used by nonresident aliens in United States. If you were a nonresident alien during the previous year, who had any U.S. source of income, you must file your tax return on one of these two forms.If you qualify for either form and want to file a tax extension, simply check Box 9 on the form.

Form 4868 is the name of the form that a taxpayer in the United States should fill out and submit to the IRS if they want to receive an automatic extra 6 months to file their taxes. A tax extension does not extend the amount of time a taxpayer has to pay taxes they owe. If you owe, you still must make your payments by April 15 or face potential tax penaties and fees.

Form 7004 is the required form necessary if a businesses wants to receive an extension of time to file their taxes. Like Form 4868, this form does not grant extra time to pay any taxes owed at the deadline (which for businesses is March 15). Businesses required to use Form 7004 to extend their tax deadline include C-Corporations, S-Corporations, multi-member LLCs, partnerships, trusts, and estates. To save time and paperwork, e-File Form 7004 directly to the IRS.

Individual Taxpayer Identification Numbers (ITINs) – If you are a nonresident or resident alien and you do not have and are not eligible to get an Social Security Number, you must apply for an ITIN. Although an ITIN is not required to file Form 4868, you will need one to file your income tax return. For details on how to apply for an ITIN, see Form W-7 and its instructions. Allow 8–10 weeks for the IRS to notify you of your ITIN. If you already have an ITIN, enter it wherever your SSN is requested. If you are applying for an ITIN on Form W-7, enter “ITIN TO BE REQUESTED” wherever your SSN is requested.

Late Filing Penalty is usually charged if your return is filed after the due date (including extensions). The penalty is usually 5% of the amount due for each month or part of a month your return is late. The maximum penalty is 25%. If your return is more than 60 days late, the minimum penalty is $135 or the balance of the tax due on your return, whichever is smaller.

Late Payment Penalty is usually 1⁄2 of 1% of any tax (other than estimated tax) not paid by the regular due date. It is charged for each month or part of a month the tax is unpaid. The maximum penalty is 25%.

October 15 is the new deadline to file your taxes if you have successfuly filed a tax extension.

Out of Country – If, on the regular due date of your tax return you are out of the country and a U.S. citizen or resident, you are allowed 2 extra months to file your return and pay any amount due without requesting an extension. For a calendar year return, this is June 15. If you need an additional 4 months to file your return (extending your due date to October 15) file Form 4868 and check the box on line 8.

March 15 is the deadline for coporations to file their taxes.

Social Security Number is an identification number given to all Americans. Besides your name and address, it is one of only a few pieces of information required to file a tax extension.

Substantial Presence Test – According to the IRS, you are considered a U.S. resident if you meet the substantial presence test for 2008. You meet this test if you were physically present in the United States for at least:
1. 31 days during 2008, and
2. 183 days during the period 2008, 2007, and 2006, counting all the days of physical presence in 2008, but only 1/3 the number of days of presence in 2007 and only 1/6 the number of days in 2006.

Tax liability is the total amount of tax that a person or a business is legally obligated to pay to the IRS at the end of a certai time period (like the end of the calendar year, for example).

Filing deadlines for taxing districts

February 2nd, 2010

# Budgets and Appropriation Ordinance
Must be filed within 30 days of their adoption. Included with the filing must be an estimate of revenue, by source, for the following fiscal year signed by the chief financial officer of the district.

# Tax Levies
Must be filed on or before the last Tuesday in December of the given tax year.

# Truth in Taxation
A certificate stating compliance with the Truth in Taxation Law must be filed with the levy ordinance. You may download a sample copy of a Truth in Taxation Certificate*.

Tax Extension

February 2nd, 2010

The Clerk’s Tax Extension Unit is responsible for calculating property tax rates for all local governments, or taxing districts, in Cook County that authorize the collection of revenue through real estate taxes.

How tax rates are calculated:

* The Cook County Assessor’s office establishes property valuations.
* Taxing districts file their levy requests with the Clerk’s Tax Extension Unit.
* To produce the revenue requested, the Tax Extension Unit uses the levy to determine the tax amount to be “extended” against all properties located within the boundaries of the taxing district.
* The Clerk’s Tax Extension Unit determines the rate needed per $100 of taxable value to generate the requested revenue, based on the value of all taxable property within the district boundaries.