Wednesday, November 18, 2009

irs 1040 series

1040 series

The Form 1040, U.S. Individual Income Tax Return, is the starting form for personal (individual) Federal income tax returns filed with the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) in the United States. The first Form 1040 was published for use for the tax years 1913, 1914, and 1915. Beginning with the tax year 1916, Form 1040 was converted to an annual form (i.e., updated each tax year with the new year printed on the form).[1]

Any full-time resident individual U.S. income taxpayer can use the standard Form 1040 (often referred to as the "long form" to distinguish it from the other 1040 variants). Those with uncomplicated tax situations (for example, no itemized deductions, no capital gain or loss, etc.) may be able to use the simplified Form 1040A (the "short form") or the even simpler Form 1040EZ (the "easy form") instead of Form 1040. Some versions of Form 1040 are colored blue (though not the case when tax return software packages are used).

Income tax returns for individual calendar year taxpayers are due by April 15 of the next year. Should April 15 fall on a Saturday, Sunday, or holiday, the returns are due on the first succeeding day that is not a Saturday, Sunday, or holiday. If Patriots Day (a state holiday in Massachusetts) falls on the Monday in question, then filers in southern New England and some parts of New York State have until Tuesday to file, since the IRS processing center for these areas is located in Andover, Massachusetts. Generally, income tax returns for fiscal year taxpayers (an individual taxpayer may choose a fiscal year other than the calendar year, though this is uncommon) are due on or before the 15th day of the fourth month following the close of the fiscal year (if the 15th falls on a Saturday, Sunday, or holiday, the return must be filed by the next business day).

Form 1040 consists of two full pages not counting attachments. The first page collects information about the taxpayer(s), dependents, income items, and adjustments to income. The second page calculates the allowable deductions and credits, tax due given the income figure, and applies funds already withheld from wages or estimated payments made towards the tax liability.

Federal tax forms

The IRS Form 990 is titled "Return of Organization Exempt From Income Tax." It is submitted by tax-exempt organizations and non-profit organizations to provide the Internal Revenue Service with annual financial information. A short version, Form 990-EZ, may be used by organizations with gross receipts of less than $100,000 and total assets of less than $250,000. Another variant, Form 990-PF, is available for private foundation organizations.

The Form 990 provides the public with financial information about a given organization, and is often the only source of such information. It is also used by government agencies to prevent organizations from abusing their tax-exempt status. In June 2007, the IRS released a new Form 990 that requires significant disclosures on governance and boards of directors. These new disclosures are required for all nonprofit filers for the 2009 tax year, with more significant reporting requirements for nonprofits with over $1 million in revenues or $2.5

I.R.S. (International Record Syndicate)

I.R.S. (International Record Syndicate) Records was a record label, started in the United States in 1979 by Miles Copeland III along with Jay Boberg and Carl Grasso. Miles was also the manager of Wishbone Ash, The Police, and later, Sting, as well as other bands. I.R.S. was the sister label of Copeland's Illegal Records (UK).

I.R.S. releases were distributed by A&M Records until 1985, by MCA Records until 1990, and finally by EMI (which bought the label in 1994) until the label folded in 1996.

Acts on I.R.S. included R.E.M., The Animals, Wishbone Ash, Marillion (US & Canada only), Karel Fialka Top 10 hit with "Hey Matthew", The English Beat, Nuclear Assault, Human Switchboard, The Cramps, The Go-Go's, The Fleshtones, Oingo Boingo, Squeeze, Suburban Lawns, Over the Rhine, The Buzzcocks, The Alarm, Gary Numan, Wall of Voodoo, General Public, John Cale, Belinda Carlisle, Camper Van Beethoven, Gren, Dread Zeppelin, The Surfing Brides, Show Of hands, with Randell Kirsch, LuAnn Olson and Chris Hickey, Lords of the New Church, Fine Young Cannibals, Black Sabbath and Concrete Blonde. An instrumental-only imprint, I.R.S. No Speak, released albums by Wishbone Ash, Miles' younger brother Stewart Copeland (The Police) and William Orbit. I.R.S. also produced the feature film Shakes the Clown, which starred Bobcat Goldthwait. They released David Lynch and Alan R. Splet's soundtrack to Eraserhead in the 80s.

In 1985, Copeland brokered a deal to switch the label's distributor to MCA Records. Under the agreement, A&M continued to release the label's pre-1985 catalog, much of which still can be found under the A&M banner.

In 1990, the band Green Day included a mock letter from then-I.R.S. college radio rep Lori Blumenthal in one of their last cassette releases for Lookout Records. The fictional letter expressed IRS' interest in signing the band to the label. A mock reply letter from Lookout, also included in the cassette artwork, deemed I.R.S. a "cheesy" and "washed up" record label.

I.R.S. (International Record Syndicate)

I.R.S. (International Record Syndicate) Records was a record label, started in the United States in 1979 by Miles Copeland III along with Jay Boberg and Carl Grasso. Miles was also the manager of Wishbone Ash, The Police, and later, Sting, as well as other bands. I.R.S. was the sister label of Copeland's Illegal Records (UK).

I.R.S. releases were distributed by A&M Records until 1985, by MCA Records until 1990, and finally by EMI (which bought the label in 1994) until the label folded in 1996.

Acts on I.R.S. included R.E.M., The Animals, Wishbone Ash, Marillion (US & Canada only), Karel Fialka Top 10 hit with "Hey Matthew", The English Beat, Nuclear Assault, Human Switchboard, The Cramps, The Go-Go's, The Fleshtones, Oingo Boingo, Squeeze, Suburban Lawns, Over the Rhine, The Buzzcocks, The Alarm, Gary Numan, Wall of Voodoo, General Public, John Cale, Belinda Carlisle, Camper Van Beethoven, Gren, Dread Zeppelin, The Surfing Brides, Show Of hands, with Randell Kirsch, LuAnn Olson and Chris Hickey, Lords of the New Church, Fine Young Cannibals, Black Sabbath and Concrete Blonde. An instrumental-only imprint, I.R.S. No Speak, released albums by Wishbone Ash, Miles' younger brother Stewart Copeland (The Police) and William Orbit. I.R.S. also produced the feature film Shakes the Clown, which starred Bobcat Goldthwait. They released David Lynch and Alan R. Splet's soundtrack to Eraserhead in the 80s.

In 1985, Copeland brokered a deal to switch the label's distributor to MCA Records. Under the agreement, A&M continued to release the label's pre-1985 catalog, much of which still can be found under the A&M banner.

In 1990, the band Green Day included a mock letter from then-I.R.S. college radio rep Lori Blumenthal in one of their last cassette releases for Lookout Records. The fictional letter expressed IRS' interest in signing the band to the label. A mock reply letter from Lookout, also included in the cassette artwork, deemed I.R.S. a "cheesy" and "washed up" record label.

The Inland Revenue

The Inland Revenue was, until April 2005, a department of the British Government responsible for the collection of direct taxation, including income tax, national insurance contributions, capital gains tax, inheritance tax, corporation tax, petroleum revenue tax and stamp duty. More recently, the Inland Revenue also administered the Tax Credits schemes [1], whereby monies, such as Working Tax Credit (WTC) and Child Tax Credit (CTC), are paid by the Government into a recipient's bank account or as part of their wages. The Inland Revenue was also responsible for the payment of child benefit.

The Inland Revenue was merged with HM Customs and Excise to form a new department, HM Revenue and Customs, with effect from 18 April 2005. [2] The former Inland Revenue is thus now part of HM Revenue and Customs, but it is still the name by which the tax gathering department of government is commonly known by British people and is often referred to as "the Tax Man".

Changes that might affect your tax code

You must keep us informed of any change in your circumstances, for example if:

* you get married, form a civil partnership, or separate and either of you were born before 6 April 1935
* you start to receive a second (or third or more) income
* the amount of untaxed income you get increases or reduces

If you don't let us know you could end up paying the wrong amount of tax.

If we change your tax code, you should receive a PAYE Coding Notice from your Tax Office. Keep all notice of coding letters for reference in case you have any questions or need to check you are paying the right amount of tax.

Where to find your tax code

If you're employed or between jobs

You'll find your tax code on your P45 (given to you by your employer when you stop working for them). This is why it's very important to give this to your new employer when you change jobs.

If you've lost your P45 and want to find out your tax code contact your Tax Office and give them your National Insurance number and tax reference number.

You'll also find your tax code on your 'PAYE Coding Notice' sent to you by your Tax Office usually before the start of each tax year. (It may also be sent to you at other times if something has changed - for example, if you’ve started receiving a new source of income or a new company benefit or your entitlement to age-related or other allowances has changed.)

Contact your Tax Office