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Apparently i owe this year... Lots of fucking money.... I NEVER owe money.
I'm pretty pissed, i didn't file. Not sure what to do here. |
Originally Posted by Erat
(Post 1100505)
Apparently i owe this year... Lots of fucking money.... I NEVER owe money.
I'm about halfway through my federal 1040, and it looks like I'm going to owe about $6-7k. This is a welcome change from last year when I wound up with a friggin' refund... (Though I must admit that my AGI for 2013 is embarrassingly low. Like, five figures low... I didn't really realize how much time I'd spent outside of the workforce.)
Originally Posted by Erat
(Post 1100505)
I'm pretty pissed, i didn't file. Not sure what to do here.
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I didn't hit the "submit" button.
I can assure you that i make far less than you and the amount i owe is more than my mortgage payment for a month... Something is wrong, i'm just going to pay a professional to make sure i break even like i always do. |
Nothing changed in your life that would change your tax liability?
I usually break even. But leaving my old job before I received my large year-end bonus meant an overall decrease in income, which resulted in a refund. Oh well. |
Originally Posted by Erat
(Post 1100512)
I didn't hit the "submit" button.
I can assure you that i make far less than you and the amount i owe is more than my mortgage payment for a month... Something is wrong, i'm just going to pay a professional to make sure i break even like i always do. You didn't vote for him...did you? |
Originally Posted by Erat
(Post 1100512)
(...) the amount i owe is more than my mortgage payment for a month...
Frankly, so long as the rate of interest which I accrue on the money while it's in my hands exceeds the rate at which I am penalized for underpayment, I'd very much prefer my entire tax burden to be payable in one lump sum every April. I don't understand why people consider getting a tax refund to be a good thing. It's not free money, it's money that you needlessly loaned the government over the course of the year, for which you received no interest. |
I don't want a huge refund either. I want to break even. I don't see any reason any person shouldn't break even...
Appearantly working this second job is what's to blame. |
Originally Posted by Joe Perez
(Post 1100708)
I don't understand why people consider getting a tax refund to be a good thing. It's not free money, it's money that you needlessly loaned the government over the course of the year, for which you received no interest.
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Originally Posted by mgeoffriau
(Post 1100722)
I don't understand why people feign confusion over things that are easily understood. For people with self-control issues who live paycheck to paycheck, it's like a magic bonus that you didn't even realize you were saving.
I don't understand how a person can be conscious of this fact and yet still revel in it. I mean, it's not a secret that taxes are due from time to time. And I'm totally fine with people who have the aforementioned issues being happy at the end of the year when they finish their 1040EZ and find that they owe no money. But when I hear people talking about tax refunds like this, it's usually in the context of deciding how they're going to spend this "free" money which just fell out of the sky. By comparison, when I finish my return and find that I'm owed a huge refund, I am pissed off that I improperly estimated my quarterly payments / W2 witholdings, with the result that I have been deprived of income over the course of the whole year. |
Big Tax Refund - Like a savings account the Government forced you to contribute to. Money you would have blown on new trousers at Wal-Mart if you would have been getting it in your regular paycheck every week.
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Whoops, scratch out "new trousers", insert "Cartons of American Spirit Cigarettes"...
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Originally Posted by Efini~FC3S
(Post 1100768)
Big Tax Refund - Like a savings account the Government forced you to contribute to. Money you would have blown on new trousers at Wal-Mart if you would have been getting it in your regular paycheck every week.
And no, mgeoffriau, I am not feigning confusion or being deliberately obtuse about this. I genuinely cannot understand the motivation for this kind of behavior... |
Originally Posted by Joe Perez
(Post 1100708)
I consider this to be a good thing.
Frankly, so long as the rate of interest which I accrue on the money while it's in my hands exceeds the rate at which I am penalized for underpayment, I'd very much prefer my entire tax burden to be payable in one lump sum every April. I don't understand why people consider getting a tax refund to be a good thing. It's not free money, it's money that you needlessly loaned the government over the course of the year, for which you received no interest. Words to live by. I'm enjoying my last year being in the 53% club (unless I go back to school AGAIN). |
I'm about 90% certain that income is "earned" when payment for services is received, regardless of when the services were actually performed and invoiced for.
This complicates my TY13 computations dramatically (and will, in fact, continue to do so into TY14.) |
Originally Posted by Joe Perez
(Post 1101370)
I'm about 90% certain that income is "earned" when payment for services is received, regardless of when the services were actually performed and invoiced for.
This complicates my TY13 computations dramatically (and will, in fact, continue to do so into TY14.) Most small businesses, or contractors, are cash basis which means when you actually receive payment. You can't mix/match.... and technically you can't invoice after you receive payment. |
I use a simple cash accounting method. So even though I did the work and submitted the invoices in August, the fact that my broke-ass client didn't actually pay me until the first week of January means that I have SE / C income for 2014, and while a resident of New Jersey and a W2 employee no less!
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Originally Posted by Joe Perez
(Post 1098952)
how we've been procrastinating the filing of our annual state and federal income tax returns, which are due on 15 April, but which ought to have been completed by early February, since that's when all of the W2 and 1099 forms are generally complete by" thread.
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Originally Posted by Joe Perez
(Post 1101784)
I use a simple cash accounting method. So even though I did the work and submitted the invoices in August, the fact that my broke-ass client didn't actually pay me until the first week of January means that I have SE / C income for 2014, and while a resident of New Jersey and a W2 employee no less!
In other words, you get to write off the expenses incurred last year to create the income earned this year. |
Being a plebeian sub-poverty-line college student, I expected to get all of my piddly little part-time-engineering-intern withholding back, but I was plesently surprised that in addition to Baracka Flocka Flame returning my microscopic quantity of taxation, I'm getting a free $1000 check this year for being a full time student.
I was not aware that this credit existed until I got to the end of the H&R Block E-File nonsense and it said I was getting more than 10% of the money I made this year back. I did a little jig and began hunting for toys to purchase. |
Originally Posted by Savington
(Post 1101787)
I received a K1 from ProShares in early April last year. :party:
Originally Posted by bahurd
(Post 1101820)
Well, aren't you going to be taking your relo and associated costs on your 2013 taxes as a business?
Originally Posted by bahurd
(Post 1101820)
Do you have a tax id number?
Originally Posted by bahurd
(Post 1101820)
Business expenses pretty much come off the top as does health insurance expenses. SEP contribution comes off the top if you do one.
Originally Posted by bahurd
(Post 1101820)
as does health insurance expenses.
Originally Posted by bahurd
(Post 1101820)
SEP contribution comes off the top if you do one.
Originally Posted by bahurd
(Post 1101820)
And you get to defer the income to 2015. Never bitch about deferring potential taxes.....
Originally Posted by vehicular
(Post 1101839)
I'm getting a free $1000 check this year for being a full time student.
(...) I did a little jig and began hunting for toys to purchase. |
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