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Tax Audits: What Signs Make You More Likely to be Audited by the IRS?


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It's a major fear for most Americans: A notice from the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) summoning you for an audit.

What is it about these three letters that strikes a cord of fear in Americans' hearts? Learning the signs that could put your tax return at the top of the list for an audit, and avoiding them if possible, may put your mind at ease.

Statistically speaking, your chances of actually being audited aren't that high-according to IRS data, one in 150 individual taxpayers were audited in 2003. This number had gone down in recent years-about one of every 79 tax returns was audited in 1998-but then, in 2004, individual taxpayer audits exceeded 1 million for the first time since 1999.

Also in 2004, the IRS gathered a record $43.1 billion in enforcement revenue, a 15 percent increase from 2003. Now in 2005, the IRS plans to add more enforcement to their team, meaning that more tax audits could potentially be performed.

What adds to most people's fear of being audited is that of the unknown: Very few people know just how the IRS chooses which tax returns to audit.

"That's a very closely guarded secret that not many people in the IRS know," said Bernard S. Kent, a partner with the human resource services group at PriceWaterhouseCoopers.

Still, there are some signs that will put your tax return at the top of the "to audit" pile. So take notice of -- and by all means avoid if they're not legitimate -- these red flags that increase your chances of catching the tax examiner's eye.

A computer program called the Discriminant Index Function, or DIF, is the first way your tax return could be marked for an audit. It looks most closely at the following items:

* Higher incomes: If your income is more than $100,000, your chances of being audited increase to one in 20. Says Eric Tyson, co-author of "Taxes 2005 for Dummies," "Higher income earners are more likely to be audited because there is more tax money at stake."

* High incomes compared to the previous year

* Unreported income (investment returns, etc.)

* Income other than basic wages (contract payments, etc.)

* Home-based business: Particular attention is given to returns that claim home businesses in addition to a salary income or excessively high deductions that don't match with the business (for instance, expensive business meals for a virtual administrative assistant.) You should also be careful with how you define your home office. "The room has to be used exclusively for business purposes," said Kent. "You cannot just have a desk in your living room where you have a television set."

* Large business meal and entertainment deductions or excessive business auto use

* Low income with large business deductions: Did you report earning $40,000 and write off a $50,000 car for business? Chances are a tax examiner will find your return warrants a closer look.

* Non-Cash Charitable Deductions

* Hobby Losses: Filing a Schedule C to report income or loss from a sole proprietorship that is not really a business but a hobby is one of the highest risk moves you can make.

* Offshore credit cards

* Large casualty losses: The rules for claiming a casualty loss are very specific, so be sure your loss qualifies before claiming it.

* Having several dependents.

Tax returns that claim the earned income tax credit-a break for those with low-incomes-are also scrutinized more closely by the IRS. That's because its requirements are complex and many honest mistakes are made by those who think they qualify, along with those who intentionally try to increase the credit's payout.

If You Have Legit Deductions, Take Them

This isn't to say that you should be afraid to make honest deductions on your tax return or shy away from credits for which you qualify in order to avoid the IRS. According to Robert G. Nath, author of "The Unofficial Guide to Dealing with the IRS," As long as your deductions and expenses are legitimate and you have documentation, they will be allowed."

And in the event that you get the dreaded IRS letter in the mail that your tax return is being audited-don't despair. "Just because you get a correspondence audit letter, there's no need to panic," says Nath. "In fact, if you get a letter instead of a call, that indicates the IRS views the inquiry as not particularly earth shattering."


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