March 18, 1999
Time Running Short to Get Tax Forms
WASHINGTON - In determining their need for additional forms,
people should make special note of three forms related to 1998 tax
law changes, but which are not part of the standard tax packages
sent by the IRS.
A person who converted a traditional Individual Retirement
Arrangement (IRA) to a new Roth IRA will need Form 8606,
"Nondeductible IRAs," to report the conversion and determine the
taxable amount for 1998. Annual contributions to Roth IRAs or
Education IRAs are not reported on the tax return, as these amounts
are not deductible.
Taxpayers with more than two children who cannot claim the full
$400 per child tax credit because the credit would exceed their tax
may need to complete Form 8812, "Additional Child Tax Credit," if
they qualify. The child tax credit worksheets in the tax instruction
booklet will indicate whether this additional credit may apply.
People claiming tax credits for college tuition and related
expenses will need Form 8863, "Education Credits." The Hope Credit
is for students in the first two years of college. The Lifetime
Learning Credit applies to any level of post-secondary education,
but only for courses starting after June 1998. Expenses for the same
student cannot be used for both credits in the same year. The
education credits are not available to taxpayers whose income is
more than $50,000 ($100,000 on a joint return).
The IRS Web site -- www.irs.ustreas.gov -- has forms and
publications for downloading. IRS TaxFax -- at 703-368-9694 --
offers 100 forms and their instructions by return fax. Users may
find the order numbers in the tax instruction booklet, or may have
the system fax a list of available items.
The IRS forms line -- 1-800-TAX-FORM (1-800-829-3676) -- is open
24 hours a day, seven days a week. Taxpayers should allow up to 15
workdays for processing of phone orders.
In addition to regular weekday hours, about 250 local IRS
offices are open Saturdays from 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., through
April 10. Taxpayers may pick up forms or publications, or meet with
IRS assistors. They may call the toll-free, 24-hour help line at
1-800-829-1040 to find the nearest IRS office.
Many banks, post offices and public libraries also stock some of
the common tax forms. Libraries may also have reproducible forms for
photocopying, along with a reference set of IRS tax information
publications.
1999 FILING SEASON STATISTICS
Cumulative through the week ending 3/13/98 and 3/12/99
|
1998 |
1999 |
% Change |
Individual Income Tax Returns |
Total Receipts |
50,732,000 |
51,805,000 |
2.1 |
Total Processed |
41,142,000 |
40,950,000 |
-0.5 |
E-filing Receipts: |
TOTAL |
18,796,000 |
21,637,000 |
15.1 |
TeleFile (phone) |
4,597,000 |
4,353,000 |
- 5.3 |
Computer |
14,199,000 |
17,284,000 |
21.7 |
Tax Professionals |
13,649,000 |
15,853,000 |
16.1 |
Self-prepared |
550,000 |
1,431,000 |
160.3 |
Refunds Certified by the Martinsburg Computing Center: |
Number |
37,418,000 |
37,560,000 |
0.4 |
Amount of principal |
$53.048 billion |
$61.470 billion |
15.9 |
Average refund |
$1418 |
$1637 |
15.4 |
Direct Deposit Refunds: |
Number |
13,628,000 |
16,569,000 |
21.6 |
Amount |
$25.723 billion |
$34.984 billion |
36.0 |
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