1 / 18

School and Student Financial Aid: Using Tax Returns for Better Decision-Making

Learn how to collect, review, and analyze tax returns to verify information, identify unreported resources, and protect the integrity of financial aid resources and processes.

millss
Download Presentation

School and Student Financial Aid: Using Tax Returns for Better Decision-Making

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. School and Student Service For Financial Aid 2003 NAIS/SSS Financial Aid Workshop Series Mark J. Mitchell, Leslie Bunting, NAIS Margie Nelcoski, ETS

  2. Using Tax Returns for Better Decision-Making • The avoidance of taxes is the only intellectual pursuit that carries any reward. • John Maynard Keynes

  3. Why Collect and Review Tax Returns? • VERIFY information reported on PFS • IDENTIFY unreported resources • PROTECT the integrity of your resources and process

  4. VERIFY • Family income • U.S. income tax paid • Interest/dividend income • Business profit/loss • Other • Household size, family members • Alimony paid and/or received • Deductions, medical, dental, child care expenses

  5. IDENTIFY • Paper losses, other write-offs that mean little to cash flow • Unreported and/or underreported assets • Items not asked for on PFS • Value of assets sold—capital gains or losses

  6. PROTECT • Ensures accuracy in information • Broader knowledge base to support and document objective decision-making • Assists responsible distribution of limited funds • Recalculate SSS EFC to better represent all information on hand

  7. Reviewing 1040 Page One -- Income and Adjustments • Lines 1 – 6 – family information • Line 7 – wages, salaries • Lines 8a, 8b and 9 – interest and dividend income • Line 11 – alimony received • Line 12 – business income • Line 13 – capital gain • Line 17 – rental income • Line 18 – farm income

  8. Reviewing 1040 Page Two -- Taxes, Credits, Payments • Certain items here should appear on PFS as untaxed income • Line 56 – self-employment tax • Line 61 – total tax • Line 62 – tax withheld (from W-2) • Line 64 – earned income credit; untaxed income • Signatures -- be sure they are signed by the right person(s)

  9. Schedules A & B • Itemized deductions • Cross-check medical and dental expenses shown on PFS #16A • Mortgage interest flag • Interest and dividend income • Sources and amounts • PFS #9C • Clarify differences if unexplained

  10. Schedule C/C-EZ • Sole proprietorship profit or loss • DEPRECIATION • Consider expenses to identify paper losses, write-offs • auto expenses • meals and entertainment • Type and location of business • SSS Business/Farm Statement

  11. Schedule D • Capital gains and losses • Short-term vs. long-term • Note amount of loss/gain • Consider sales price • Represents asset flow • Tax paid based on gain amount not sales amount • Tax benefit on losses incurred

  12. Schedule E • Rental income and expenses • DEPRECIATION • Buildings typically appreciate in value • View carefully as paper loss • May refer to items inside the building, as well • Cross-check with PFS #19, “All Other Real Estate”

  13. Supporting Documents • W-2’s to identify personal income, some sources of untaxed income • Form 4506 authorizing release of original forms submitted to IRS • Form 1065 Partnership return • Non-paper filers • Form 8453 • TeleFile worksheet with filer’s confirmation number

  14. Complicating Factors • Roth IRA, rollovers (Form 8606) • Sale of home(s) • Partnerships (Form 1065, Schedules K, K-1) • S Corporations (Form 1120S, Schedules K, K-1) • Children’s taxes, assets (Forms 8615, 8814) • Farm assets and depreciation • Electronic filing (Form 8453)

  15. Highlights of Changes in 2003 Tax Laws • Educators’ deduction—up to $250 of out-of-pocket expenses, even if filer doesn’t itemize • Taxation rates have been reduced across the board • Fewer taxes paid=more discretionary income • Standard deduction raised for married filing joint and qualifying widow • Higher deduction=lower taxable income=fewer taxes paid=more discretionary income • Maximum child tax credit increased to $1000 per child (up from $600 per child max) • Taxation rates on certain forms of capital gains have been reduced

  16. Resources • Annotated 1040 and PFS • Staff accountant, CPA • Guidebooks and IRS publications • Tax preparation courses • www.irs.gov • Download forms, publications • Highlights, summaries of new tax laws

  17. www.irs.gov

  18. www.irs.gov

More Related