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Real Estate News and Advice |
December 3, 2008 |
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Hurricane Spawned Tax Relief: IRS Publication 4492
by Broderick Perkins
If you housed anyone displaced by Hurricane Katrina, if you were displaced by one of several hurricanes, if your home was in one of several hurricane zones, if you donated money, food, or car driving services for the relief effort or went to school in a hurricane zone, among many other hurricane related events, you need Internal Revenue Service Publication 4492. A host of federal income tax benefits, designed to help ease the financial burden caused by the most devastating hurricane season on record, have been compiled and published in the new IRS Publication 4492 "Information for Taxpayers Affected by Hurricanes Katrina, Rita, and Wilma". Not every taxpayer eligible for hurricane related tax relief is eligible for all hurricane related tax relief provisions, but there are numerous tax relief scenarios. Chances are, you will need a tax professional to decipher the details and to make sure you obtain all the benefits for which you qualify. Among them are many largely under reported benefits. For example:
Publication 4492 details a host of qualifiers, beginning with geographic areas affected by three hurricanes. Benefits can vary by location and do not always include an entire federally declared disaster area. For example, when President Bush declared a Hurricane Katrina disaster area it included the entire states of Alabama, Florida, Louisiana and Mississippi. A disaster area designation is one qualifier for certain tax benefits. However, IRS also designates as a "Katrina Covered Disaster Area" all parishes in Louisiana, all counties in Mississippi, but only 22 counties in Alabama and 11 counties in Florida. A covered disaster area is another qualifier for benefits. A third geographic qualifier is the Gulf Opportunity or "GO" Zones, core disaster areas where residents are eligible for Federal Emergency Management Agency assistance. The Katrina GO Zone includes 12 Alabama counties, 31 Louisiana parishes and 49 Mississippi counties. IRS has established similar covered disaster areas and GO Zones for Hurricanes Wilma and Rita. The covered areas and zones alone are enough to warrant bringing in professional tax return preparation help. As well as those who housed residents displaced by hurricanes, you are generally eligible for tax benefits if your home is in a qualified area, but also if your estate or trust-related tax records are maintained in a qualifying area or if you work at assisting in the relief activities in a qualifying area. Finally, anyone visiting a county or parish in the Hurricane Katrina or Rita qualifying areas, who was injured or killed (or the estate of someone killed) as a result of the hurricanes, is considered an affected taxpayer who may be eligible for certain tax benefits. Anyone using hurricane related tax benefits are advised to write the assigned disaster designation, i.e. "Hurricane Katrina" in red ink at the top of any form or document filed with the IRS to assure the return is recognized as such. Hurricane benefit related assistance is also available from the IRS at 1(866) 562-5227. Published: February 10, 2006 Use of this article without permission is a violation of federal copyright laws. Related Articles:
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