5. Afraid I'll get audited
If fear No. 4 comes true, then this is definitely one to be scared of. Audit fears, however, tend to be much greater than actual audit realities. True, there are some red flags, such as excessive medical or charitable deductions, that might catch an IRS examiner's eye. But overall, the risk of audit is small -- about 1 percent of individual returns were audited in 2006. So don't let fear of IRS questions keep you from filing. And definitely don't let it stop you from claiming legitimate tax breaks. "If you're really doing stupid things on your tax return, expect to get audited. Deservedly so," says Enrolled Agent Eva Rosenberg, who is based in Southern California and the Internet's Tax Mama at www.taxmama.com. "But if you're afraid to use a legitimate tax break because you're afraid you're going to be audited, stop it! Stand up for your rights. There's no reason to be afraid." The remedy: Make sure you can show an IRS examiner why you filed as you did. This means keeping good records, especially if you're self-employed. People who work for themselves and file Schedule C with their returns tend to get scrutinized a bit more, so your business record keeping needs to be more precise. 6. Afraid to e-file because my personal info could be lost or stolen
Slightly more than half of us send in our returns electronically. But that leaves another 60 million, give or take a million, folks who still file the old-fashioned paper way. This fear is one of the contributors to that mind-set. Yes, identity theft is a major issue. In fact, the IRS keeps careful track of e-mail phishing scams that falsely claim to be from the tax agency. And yes, hackers still manage to break into online financial data systems periodically. The biggest problem the IRS has had in recent years, though, has been with such information left on laptop computers that were lost or stolen, not with someone compromising the government's online tax database. But that doesn't mean you should ignore Internet safety precautions. The remedy: Any tax data transference requires two parties. Make sure the starting point of such a relay, your computer, is secure. "You're one of the end points and the IRS server is the other," says Gary Morse, president of Razorpoint Security Technologies in New York. "Make sure that your personal machine is secure, that it doesn't have any viruses, Trojan horses or any other back-door access points that could be attacked." replacecontent-tcm:8-2970 |