Posts Tagged ‘TPT’

More Changes For AZ Taxpayers

Friday, June 25th, 2010

July 1 is the start of the Ari­zona State fis­cal year which is why sev­eral changes are going into effect on that date. 

AZ With­hold­ing Tax Change: On July 1, 2010 an employer must with­hold Ari­zona state income tax accord­ing to the new A4s, which they should have obtained from all of their employ­ees prior to that date. We have pre­vously  blogged about the change com­ing to the Ari­zona A4. On July 1st Arizona’s state income tax with­hold­ing rate will decou­ple from the fed­eral with­hold­ing rate. Every employee needs to do a new A4. An employer should not advise employ­ees about how to com­plete the form except to point out the form comes with work­sheet to assist them. That said, a quick and dirty cal­cu­la­tion would be to see how much tax you owed to the state last year and divide it by your Ari­zona state income; but of course this assumes that your income, expenses, mar­i­tal sta­tus, depen­dents, items of credit and deduc­tion, etc. are sim­i­lar to last year, which it may not be.

AZ Child Sup­port Gar­nish­ments Change: If you are an employer who does gar­nish­ments for things like child sup­port in Ari­zona through CLEARINGHOUSE, please be advised that the fee will increase from $2.25 to $5.00  start­ing July 1.

In addi­tion to these changes that go into effect in less than a week, there are other things you should aware of. 

Trans­ac­tion Priv­i­lege Tax License Change:  You are prob­a­bly aware that the Ari­zona “sales tax” increased 1% statewide on June 1st, and you should have already adjusted your soft­ware, point of sales sys­tems and reg­is­ters.  How­ever some­time in Sep­tem­ber the AZ DOR is going to be send­ing out Trans­ac­tion Priv­i­lege Tax renewal forms.  The only peo­ple who won’t have to renew their licenses are those who got their licenses on or after July 1, 2009.  The law increases the fee to obtain, change or renew a license to $40 up from $12 for a period of 1 year and 2 weeks start­ing June 15, 2010;  means the change will be in effect for the state’s entire upcom­ing fis­cal year.  It’s not expected to be a big rev­enue raiser, but the AZ DOR hopes to get peo­ple who have never filed a TPT return or who haven’t filed in a long time off the sales tax rolls.  If you’e had your license a year or longer, you will need to pay for the renewal if you want to keep it.

Non­con­for­mity with Fed­eral 2009 tax forms: This change qui­etly went into effect on April 27, 2010.  The State of Ari­zona decided not to con­form to the Fed­eral Tax code after the first tax dead­line had passed.  If you filed your tax form on or before April 15, 2010 and you had any of the fol­low­ing items of income, deduc­tion or credit on your tax return-you may need to file an amended Ari­zona tax return and pay addi­tional tax.  You do not need to amend your fed­eral tax return, just Arizona’s. 

  • Unem­ploy­ment: you need to add the $2400 the fed­eral gov­ern­ment exempted from gross income back into your Ari­zona income and pay the addi­tional tax.
  • Auto­mo­bile Sales Tax deduc­tion: you need to remove the auto­mo­bile sales tax from your deduc­tions, which will increase your income and you may owe addi­tional tax.
  • Haiti Con­tri­bu­tions made between Jan­u­ary 11 and before March 1, 2010 that were taken as a char­i­ta­ble deduc­tion in 2009.  These con­tri­bu­tions will be eli­gi­ble char­i­ta­ble deduc­tions on your Ari­zona taxes in 2010.  Again this will increase your income and you may owe addi­tional tax.
  • Dis­charge of Indebt­ed­ness (DOI) Income From Busi­ness Indebt­ed­ness Dis­charged by the Reac­qui­si­tion of a Debt Instru­ment–the feds allowed it to be added rat­ably over 5 years, AZ did not. 
  • Orig­i­nal Issue Dis­count (OID) on Reac­qui­si­tion of Debt Instru­ment–the feds allowed the income to be deferred, AZ did not. 
  • Spe­cial Fed­eral Net Oper­at­ing Loss (NOL) Car­ry­back Rules for 2008 and 2009 Losses-the feds allowed a spe­cial longer car­ry­back period of 3, 4, or 5 years, instead of 2, AZ did not. 

 The amended tax form is 140X for indi­vid­ual tax­pay­ers and it can be found on the AZ DOR web­site.  There is more infor­ma­tion about AZ 2009 non­con­for­mity here. These links take you to the Ari­zona Depart­ment of Rev­enue web­site and you will be sub­ject to their pri­vacy poli­cies etc.; Art and Busi­ness Con­sult­ing LLC is not affil­i­cated with the AZ DOR. 

If you live in another state, check with your state’s depart­ment of rev­enue regard­ing con­for­mity issues with respect to your state. 

As always Art and Busi­ness Con­sult­ing is here to help.  If you need help fil­ing an amended Ari­zona tax return, or any other with a small busi­ness and or tax issue, please give us a call.

The usual dis­claimers: Although ABC has made every effort to insure the accu­racy of Taxes, Tips and Tools, mis­in­for­ma­tion, dis­in­for­ma­tion, changes, mis­takes, typos and hack­ers hap­pen, there­fore Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing LLC takes no respon­si­bil­ity for any action taken or results based on the infor­ma­tion sup­plied here in. The con­tent of this blog gen­er­ally applies to busi­ness and indi­vid­ual tax­a­tion in the United States of Amer­ica.  Inter­nal Rev­enue Ser­vice Cir­cu­lar 230 Dis­clo­sure:  As pro­vided for in Trea­sury reg­u­la­tions, advice (if any) relat­ing to fed­eral taxes that is con­tained in this com­mu­ni­ca­tion (includ­ing attach­ments) is not intended or writ­ten to be used, and can­not be used for the pur­pose of (1) avoid­ing penal­ties under the Inter­nal Rev­enue Code or (2) pro­mot­ing, mar­ket­ing or rec­om­mend­ing to another party any plan or arrange­ment address herein.  Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing LLC cur­rently does not have a cer­ti­fied pub­lic accoun­tant, human resource spe­cial­ist, finan­cial plan advi­sor or an attor­ney on staff; this infor­ma­tion is purely for edu­ca­tional pur­poses and not to be con­strued as legal or finan­cial advice. Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing LLC and its employ­ees, mem­bers and asso­ciates are not engage to prac­tice law; you always should dis­cuss legal mat­ters with your attor­ney before talk­ing to any­one else.

Another Change Coming to Arizona’s State Withholding Form A4

Friday, April 30th, 2010

Last year the fed­eral gov­ern­ment decided to give a tax break to work­ers in the mid­dle of the year by reduc­ing the amount of tax with­held from each paycheck.

Unfor­tu­nately, this meant the Ari­zona state income tax with­held went down, as AZ with­hold­ing is based on a per­cent­age of the Fed­eral income tax with­held.  So some­where in the mid­dle of the year, Ari­zona changed its with­hold­ing rates and required employ­ers to get new A4’s from their employ­ees select­ing a new higher with­hold­ing tax rate.

This year the tax break is spread out over the entire year, there­fore Fed­eral with­hold­ing went up just a smidgeon.  So at the begin­ning of the year, all employ­ers were required to new A4s from their employ­ees select­ing slightly lower with­hold­ing tax rates as Ari­zona had to adjust its with­hold­ing per­cent­ages again.

But hold on, we are not done yet.  The Ari­zona Depart­ment of Rev­enue (AZ DOR) has been tasked with com­ing up with a state with­hold­ing tax rate that is inde­pen­dent of the fed­eral amount with­held.  The AZ DOR has now posted the new AZ A-4s at their web­site: http://www.azdor.gov/LinkClick.aspx?fileticket=9_U8ufG2wH8%3d&tabid=265&mid=884 If this link is bro­ken you can find it by going to the AZDOR.gov forms pages.  

Ari­zona employ­ers will need to get their employ­ees to com­plete new A-4s before July 1, 2010 and start with­hold­ing amounts in accor­dance with those new A-4s on July 1, 2010.  The new A-4s list  AZ With­hold­ing amounts as a per­cent­age of income; they are not valid until July 1, 2010. 

A good start­ing place for an employee would be to see what per­cent­age of income taxes were in 2009.   For exam­ple if an employee had an AZ adjusted gross income of 70,000 and was required to pay 1,700 in AZ taxes in 2009 their tax was about 2.4 % of their income.  They might opt for the 2.7% check box on their AZ A-4 assum­ing their sit­u­a­tion in 2010 is sim­i­lar to their sit­u­a­tion in 2009.   For a tax­payer that had $30,000 in AZ adjusted gross income for 2009 and paid $500 in taxes, their tax was about 1.7 % of their adjusted gross income in 2009. They might opt for the 1.8% check box on their AZ A-4 assum­ing their sit­u­a­tion in 2010 is sim­i­lar to their sit­u­a­tion in 2009. The new A-4 on-line the form actu­ally has a work­sheet to help them fig­ure out what their with­hold­ing should be.  NOTE:  As an employer you should not advise employ­ees as to what amounts to with­hold, but you can sug­gest they use the work­sheet that is part of the new AZ with­old­ing form.

In other news as a fund-raising mea­sure AZ DOR will now require busi­nesses, which have a Trans­ac­tion Priv­i­lege, Use and Sev­er­ance Tax License (TPT)  issued before July 1. 2009 to “renew” them and pay a fee AND they are rais­ing the fee for a license and updates effec­tive June 15, 2010.  Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing LLC has an inquiry out to the AZ DOR as fur­ther infor­ma­tion about this change to TPT did not appear to be located on their web­site as of the day we received notice of the change.   We will update you when we receive fur­ther infor­ma­tion, such as how much the new license fee will be, are they going to mail the “renewal notices” out to cur­rent license hold­ers, how often the license will need to be renewed, etc.

If you need help with this issue or any other, remem­ber, small busi­ness ser­vices and tax­a­tion are our busi­ness.  Please give Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing a call.  We would love to engage you as a client.

The usual dis­claimers: Although ABC has made every effort to insure the accu­racy of Taxes, Tips and Tools, mis­in­for­ma­tion, dis­in­for­ma­tion, changes, mis­takes, typos and hack­ers hap­pen, there­fore Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing LLC takes no respon­si­bil­ity for any action taken or results based on the infor­ma­tion sup­plied here in.  Inter­nal Rev­enue Ser­vice Cir­cu­lar 230 Dis­clo­sure:  As pro­vided for in Trea­sury reg­u­la­tions, advice (if any) relat­ing to fed­eral taxes that is con­tained in this com­mu­ni­ca­tion (includ­ing attach­ments) is not intended or writ­ten to be used, and can­not be used for the pur­pose of (1) avoid­ing penal­ties under the Inter­nal Rev­enue Code or (2) pro­mot­ing, mar­ket­ing or rec­om­mend­ing to another party any plan or arrange­ment address herein.  Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing LLC cur­rently does not have a cer­ti­fied pub­lic accoun­tant or an attor­ney on staff; this infor­ma­tion is purely for edu­ca­tional pur­poses and not to be con­strued as legal or finan­cial advice.  Art & Busi­ness Con­sult­ing LLC and its employ­ees, mem­bers and asso­ciates are not engage to prac­tice law; you always should dis­cuss legal mat­ters with your attor­ney before talk­ing to any­one else.