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What is the unpardonable sin in an IRS audit?

IRS audit

Here in our Chicago South Loop Tax Preparation Office, we help clients that have been audited, and we help resolve tax debt. Suppose for a moment that you are one of our clients, and that you’ve just received that lovely letter from the IRS telling you that you are the subject of an IRS audit.

What one record receives special attention? What one record can create a nightmare for you? What one record makes the IRS suspect that you are the keeper of lousy records?

Think of the record people most hate keeping. That’s the one we are talking about. You have probably guessed what that record might be.

Red-Flag Record for the IRS Examiner

Once your audit examination begins, the examiner likes to see this record. If the record is missing or lacking, the IRS examiner knows that your other records probably are lacking, too.

This record—the one you probably hate keeping—is the mileage log on your vehicle or vehicles.

The IRS notes that a taxpayer’s failure to keep a mileage log on vehicles indicates that the activity under examination is not being conducted in a businesslike manner.

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Do as the Tax Form Says

As a one-owner or husband-and-wife-owned business, regardless of whether it’s a corporation, a partnership, or a proprietorship, you file a tax form that asks you for the following information about your vehicles:

  1. Do you have evidence to support the business/investment use claimed? (If “yes,” is the evidence written?)
  2. List your total business/investment miles on each vehicle.
  3. List your total commuting miles on each vehicle.
  4. List your total personal miles on each vehicle.

IRS Form 4562 has columns for answers to the above questions for up to six vehicles used by either a sole proprietor or an owner of more than 5 percent of a corporation, a partnership, or another entity.

The mileage log (we strongly recommend MILE IQ) is the record of proof that you need to use for your answers to the tax form questions.

Do What the Audit Would Require

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Above, we said to do as the IRS form says. For additional clarification, it is good to know what information the IRS, in a correspondence audit, requires you to provide related to that tax form:

  1. Send copies of repair receipts, inspection slips, and other records showing total mileage for the year.
  2. Send copies of logbooks and other records to support the business mileage claimed.
  3. Provide a copy of your appointment book or calendar of business activities for the year.
  4. If you are claiming actual expenses, provide copies of paid bills, invoices, and canceled checks for automobile expenses. These would include gas, oil, tires, repairs, insurance, interest, tags, taxes, parking fees, and tolls.
  5. Send a copy of the bill of sale or other verification to establish your basis in the vehicle, including the trade-in of another vehicle.

Note that the IRS is looking for

  • a match of the repair bill odometer reading with the mileage in your logbook;
  • a match of the inspection slip odometer reading with the mileage in your logbook;
  • the mileage between repair stops, to see whether that ties in with your claimed mileage; and
  • a business purpose that ties in with your appointment book or other calendar of business activities.

Takeaways

If you want to avoid big trouble during an IRS audit, keep a good mileage log. This takes just minutes a day.

The mileage log is often one of the first records that an IRS examiner will look at. A good mileage log shows that you know the rules and you respect them. We have seen dozens and dozens of IRS audits end favorably and quickly upon presentation of a good mileage log.

On the other hand, a bad mileage log can turn your IRS examiner into an 800-pound gorilla.

Think of it this way: your mileage log (we strongly recommend MILE IQ) gives you the choice to get in and out of the IRS audit quickly and with your wallet or to spend time with an 800-pound gorilla.

Although we’ve given you the basics, this is not an all-inclusive article. Should you have questions, need help with tax debt, business tax preparation, business entity creation, business insurance, or business compliance assistance please contact us online, or call our office toll free at 1-855-743-5765 or locally in Chicago or Indiana at 1-708-529-6604. Make sure to join our newsletter for more tips on reducing taxes, and increasing your wealth. Never miss another tip again! Join our newsletter, to receive tax reduction/wealth building tips delivered right to your inbox!
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