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"..My background has nothing to do with the question though."
But it does have something to do with how the volunteers who keep this forum afloat choose to answer.
https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/f1128.pdf
I adopted a tax year in prior year. I need pro connect to show accurate fiscal years on the 2017 return.
10/1/2016-9/30/17 is 2016 to the IRS.
our 2016 was the first year and filed as a short tax year 1/10/16-9/30/16.
"..need pro connect to show accurate fiscal years on the 2017 return."
Then you need to enter the correct dates.
Are you a professional tax preparer or are you using PTO for your own return?
IRS accepted fiscal year in the first year. I even have a letter showing my month end and when my first return was due.
Whats confusing me is I filed a 2016 return already, per the IRS due date given to me, so its fine to file two 2016 returns?
I am doing it for my own business, I also am a CPA but I am not a tax preparer. I assist the tax associates at my firm as well. My background has nothing to do with the question though.
What its looking like is I would have to do a 2016 and cannot file a 2017 with this fiscal date range in pro connect . and probably amend 2016 and file a 2015... darn it.
Thanks for the help.
As Susan says, this would be tax year 2016 from the IRS' perspective. In PTO, you choose the fiscal period based on the month you enter for fiscal year.
I agree that you need to amend the initial tax return as that should have been filed on a 2015 tax return. I would include a letter of explanation as this will clearly be confusing to the IRS.
Regulation 1.441-1(a)(2) states that, except in instances related to a 52-53 week year (covered in 1.441-2), a taxable year may not cover a period of more than 12 calendar months. If you would file another 2016 return, you would clearly exceed this 12 calendar month rule. That unfortunately means amending the return.
While the IRS letter may have indicated the due date of the return, which is correct, I would be surprised if the letter indicated that actual tax year of the form to use in your situation.
The first short year fell entirely within 20016 so it correctly was a 2016 tax return.
While the short period may have only encompassed 2016, it was for the elected period 10/1/2015 thru 9/30/2016 since they were electing a fiscal period.
As such, the return should have been filed on a 2015 tax return.
"..My background has nothing to do with the question though."
But it does have something to do with how the volunteers who keep this forum afloat choose to answer.
@stephanie-m wrote:I am doing it for my own business, I also am a CPA but I am not a tax preparer. I assist the tax associates at my firm as well.
Not sure why you'd choose to use PTO to prepare your business' return. This is a software that's designed for tax professionals. Using a professional tax software also means that your business' return will have to be filed on paper unless you have an EFIN.
No. OP said it was a "short tax year 1/10/16-9/30/16." No 2015 days in there.
No argument that it is a short period. However, it is for a short period related to the elected period of 10/1/2015 through 9/30/2016.
If the taxpayer files another 2016 tax return, the total months for filing a 2016 return will exceed the 12 month rule of the noted regulation.
It is doubtful that we will agree, but I am satisfied with my opinion that the original return was filed on a wrong year tax return. Anything else, and 2016 will have more than 12 months of reporting.
I'll agree to disagree.
all amazing answers. I am so thankful for this forum and Thank you all for the help!
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