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10 common tax-filing mistakes you can avoid
Thanks to tax preparation software, more of us are making fewer mistakes on our annual tax returns. But still, just one slip in entering information on your computer could end up costing you, either in the form of a larger tax bill or a smaller refund.
Almost half of individual filers, however, still send in paper forms each year. This process multiplies the opportunities to make a tax-filing mistake.
And even if a mistake, either on your computer or paper forms, doesn't cost you cash, it could delay the receipt of any refund you're expecting.
To get exactly what you should from the IRS -- and as quickly as possible -- look out for these filing pitfalls. A few are new, thanks to recent law changes. Others are perennial problems taxpayers face each filing season. With a little care, you can avoid them all. Watch "Most common tax-filing mistakes"
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| 10 tax mistakes you can avoid: |
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1. Triple direct deposit dangers
Last filing season, taxpayers got the chance to have a refund directly deposited into as many as three accounts. That option is
also available on 2007 returns. It's a great way to save your refund money, but the more numbers you enter on a tax form, the more
chances you have to enter them incorrectly. And a wrong account or routing number could cause you to lose your refund entirely.
You can divide your refund into three accounts by filing Form 8888 along with your individual return. It's not a difficult document to complete, but if you put in wrong account numbers, your refund could end up in someone else's account or be sent back to the IRS. Either way, you might not be able to retrieve your refund, because there is no IRS procedure for replacing lost electronically transferred funds.
Also remember that the IRS can correct errors, such
as a miscalculated amount, that you make on
your return. If the change reduces your refund
amount, the IRS has a specific procedure for
determining how the lower amount will be deposited.
"Any adjustments come from the bottom up, starting
with line 3 then from line 2 and then the first
account," says Jim Keller, PPC Senior Tax Analyst
from Thomson Tax & Accounting.
This could pose a problem if one of your direct deposit accounts is an individual retirement account. "There are no rules for a normal refund, but there are rules for IRAs, and they are fairly strict," says Keller. An unexpected change in an IRA deposit could create confusion at the IRS and your financial institution that is accepting the direct refund deposit. To guard against that possibility, Keller suggests making an IRA the first account so it would be the least likely to be adjusted in case of error.
2. Fluctuating hybrid vehicle credits
Gasoline prices keep rising, making alternative fuel vehicles more attractive. The U.S. tax code has added to the appeal of these
fuel-efficient vehicles via a tax credit. The tax break, however, has a couple of drawbacks.
First, the credit is not a fixed amount. It varies for each qualifying vehicle. Even more problematic is that once a manufacturer sells 60,000 IRS-approved autos, the credit amounts start phasing out.
That's the case for Toyota, the
first manufacturer since the credit took effect
to sell 60,000-hybrids, primarily its popular
Prius model. Once that sales mark was reached,
the credit amounts for Toyota hybrids (including
those for its luxury brand, Lexus) began to
phase out. On Oct. 1, 2007, the credit for all
of these vehicles was eliminated.
If you bought a Toyota or Lexus hybrid in 2007, make sure you claim the correct credit amount. There are two pre-October credit
amounts for this Japanese automaker's hybrids, depending on when you bought the vehicle. And if you bought another manufacturer's
eligible alternative-fuel auto, take care to enter that correct amount, too. There are more than 40 hybrids and a handful of
compressed natural gas vehicles that qualify, each with a specific allowable credit.
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Updated: April 8, 2008 |
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