The IRS applies a two-part test to personal appearance expenses: the item must be required by your work and unsuitable for everyday use. Most suits, makeup, haircuts, and gym memberships fail. This guide details what qualifies, with case law including Pevsner v. Commissioner and Hamper v. Commissioner.
The 2026 SALT cap rises to $40,400, restoring the property tax deduction for many homeowners in high-tax states. Here are the new rules, the MAGI phaseout starting at $505,000, the income-based deductions, and the bunching, recordkeeping, and rental-property strategies that maximize the benefit.
How to verify 501(c)(3) status through the IRS Tax Exempt Organization Search, substantiate donations at the $250, $500, and $5,000 thresholds, and work with 2026's new 0.5% AGI floor and non-itemizer charitable deduction rules.
A practical breakdown of what the IRS does when you skip a tax return—5% monthly failure-to-file penalty, Substitute for Return, liens, levies, passport revocation, and the step-by-step path back to compliance.
A tax levy is the IRS's legal seizure of wages, bank funds, or property to satisfy unpaid tax debt. This guide explains the notice sequence from CP14 through LT11, the 30-day Collection Due Process window, bank levy 21-day holds, and seven ways to release an active levy.
A 2026 tax guide for creators covering the new $2,000 1099-NEC threshold, self-employment tax at 15.3%, home office and Section 179 deductions, quarterly deadlines, and fair market value rules for gifted products.
Fewer than 1% of individual returns are audited each year, and over 75% of audits are handled entirely by mail. This guide explains what triggers an IRS audit in 2026, the step-by-step process, how far back the IRS can look, and how to prepare records that hold up to scrutiny.
Form 8821 grants read-only access to your IRS tax information for lenders, accountants, and verifiers. Learn how it differs from Form 2848, when to use it, how to complete each of its six sections, the 120-day signature rule, and how to revoke it.
Letter 1058 (LT11) is the IRS's final 30-day warning before it can levy wages, bank accounts, or property. Here are the four real options — pay in full, installment agreement, Offer in Compromise, or Collection Due Process hearing — and the exact steps to take before the deadline expires.
A working landlord's reference to every major rental property deduction—mortgage interest, 27.5-year depreciation, the $25,000 passive loss allowance, 100% bonus depreciation restored under OBBBA, Section 199A QBI, and the safe harbors and recordkeeping that keep Schedule E audit-ready.