Selected Information from Returns Filed
| Selected Information from Returns Filed | |
|---|---|
| Percent e-filed (TY 2019) [3] | 89.5% |
| Percent using paid preparers (TY 2018) [3] | 52.9% |
| Number of returns with AGI $1M or more (TY 2018) [4] | 541,410 |
| State with the highest number-California (TY 2018) | 91,560 |
What income levels pay the most taxes?
The latest government data show that in 2018, the top 1% of income earners—those who earned more than $540,000—earned 21% of all U.S. income while paying 40% of all federal income taxes. The top 10% earned 48% of the income and paid 71% of federal income taxes.
Do you have to have a tax return preparer?
Anyone who prepares and files 11 or more individual tax returns a year must file electronically. Most tax return preparers provide outstanding service. The IRS urges taxpayers to check their tax return preparer’s qualifications and history.
Where do you put tax preparation fees on a tax return?
Tax preparation fees are “legal and professional services” on Schedule C. That’s Line 17 in Part II of the schedule, “Expenses.” They can include anything you might have to spend to resolve a tax dispute with the IRS over your profit or loss from business.
Do you have to have a PTIN to be a tax preparer?
FS-2018-5, March 2018. More than 83 million taxpayers paid someone to prepare their federal tax return in 2017. Generally, anyone who gets paid to prepare or help prepare a federal tax return must have a Preparer Tax Identification Number (PTIN).
What do you need to know about a tax preparer identification number?
A Preparer Tax Identification Number (PTIN) is a number issued by the IRS to paid tax return preparers. It is used as the tax return preparer’s identification number and, when applicable, must be placed in the Paid Preparer section of a tax return that the tax return preparer prepared for compensation. There is no annual fee for a PTIN.