Pandemic tax season just got worse. Here’s what to expect now

The tax season just got more confusing.

A flurry of unexpected announcements from the IRS regarding the latest pandemic relief package has sent advisors and accountants scrambling to suss out tax savings for their clients.

Even with the filing deadline extended to May 17, it hasn’t been easy.

“It’s a disaster. It’s a mess. It’s a nightmare,” says Neil Carousso, a CFP and CPA In Bayside, New York.

The latest complication to an already-chaotic season comes thanks to a new tax break for a chunk of unemployment benefits received last year. One day after extending the filing deadline, the IRS said on March 18 that it would “automatically” issue refunds of taxes that individuals who already filed had paid on $10,200 in benefits received last year. The surprise announcement came one week after after President Biden signed the $1.9 trillion pandemic relief bill, exempting the chunk of benefits from federal tax.

The 2020 tax filing season, now in full swing, has been complicated by a patchwork of IRS rulings.
The 2020 tax filing season, now in full swing, has been complicated by a patchwork of IRS rulings.

At a Congressional hearing on the filing season on March 18, IRS Commissioner Charles Rettig promised that the IRS would "automatically" compute the refund for taxpayers who have already sent in their returns. Advisors and accountants are sceptical.

“How the IRS is going to do this with returns already filed -- it’s going to be a challenge,” says Scott Rutherford, a wealth advisor who is also a CFP and CPA at Gratus Capital, an RIA in Atlanta.

Rettig has commanded taxpayers not to file amended returns. More than 66 million individuals had sent in their returns as of March 12, with more than 58 million already processed.

Some advisors plan to ignore his directive.

“It’s not incumbent on the IRS to make a taxpayer whole,” says Stephen Bonick, a CPF and CPA in Monterey, California. “You can let the IRS do the work for you, or you can do it yourself and file an amended [return] as a prophylactic.”

The latest IRS guidance, made as the tax season is in full swing, has poured fuel on a filing season that some advisors said was already a "dumpster fire.”

The nation’s tax collector opened the filing season late, on Feb. 12, to give it time to send out the two (nontaxable) stimulus checks ($600 and $1,200) to taxpayers in 2020. It already has a logjam of unprocessed returns from last year, when it sent its 80,000 employees home and shut offices due to the pandemic. A total 12 million returns, including 2.4 million individual returns, filed last year for the 2019 tax season remain unprocessed.

Advisors and accountants complain that the rules governing the forgiveness of Paycheck Protection Program loans, used by many small-business owners, are still fuzzy. The IRS said in January that for federal purposes, holders of forgiven loans can deduct business expenses paid with the money, like wages, rent and utilities. But a few states, including California, Ohio and North Carolina, don’t allow the deduction for state returns.

There have been other surprises.

On March 15, the agency unexpectedly agreed not to reduce a taxpayer’s stimulus checks if they owe federal taxes. That means people who didn’t get some or all of the first two payments can recoup them when they file this year. Or they can start a cumbersome “recovery trace” through the IRS. But as of now, people who don’t get the third, $1,400 check now being sent out will find their payment reduced next year if they owe taxes for federal or state reasons or improperly received too much in unemployment benefits.

The 2020 tax season, the second during the COVID pandemic, has advisors and accountants scrambling to pull together clients' returns.
The 2020 tax season, the second during the COVID pandemic, has advisors and accountants scrambling to pull together clients' returns.

Amid the changes, Rutherford says that “advisors have an opportunity to talk to clients and say, ‘let’s stay on top of it and make sure your refund is what you should have’.” This tax season in particular, “we need to be diligent and vigilant about the IRS doing what it needs to do.”

Not all states have followed the federal government and extended their own filing deadlines for state returns. New York, New Jersey and California are among those that have, according to TurboTax.

In any case, the May 17 federal deadline is only for individuals, not for returns for estates, trusts, corporations and other businesses. Taxpayers required to make quarterly estimated payments, on self-employment income, dividends, rental income and the like, still have to send them in by the traditional April 15 deadline. The American Institute of Certified Public Accountants, the leading trade and lobby group for CPAs, is urging a further delay, to June 15.

Last June, the IRS said that people under age 59 ½ could take money out of a 401(k), 403(b) or traditional IRA by the end of last year to cover pandemic-related costs, without owing the 10% penalty for an early withdrawal. Such taxpayers would owe income tax on the withdrawn amount’s gains. But the IRS said they can pay it over three years. Or they can replenish their plans with the withdrawn amount within three years, and recover any paid tax by filing amended returns. Alternatively, they can replenish by the time they file this year, and face no tax consequences.

The problem, Carousso says, is that the IRS is still coordinating with tax software providers on the forms needed to handle that change.

Sharif Muhammad, a CFP and CPA who is the founder and CEO of Unlimited Capital Advisors, a planning and advisory firm in Somerset, New Jersey, says that in theory, “this is the opportune time where advisors and CPAs should be holding hands and having a kumbaya moment.”

Instead, many are howling. The flurry of IRS guidelines is "kind of patchwork,” he says, “and creates gridlock while tax season is in full swing.”

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Tax planning IRS Tax regulations COVID-19 Stimulus bill
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