Home Page

About Us

Bookkeeping,
Recordkeeping & Accounting

Software Solutions

Tax Planning

Investment Review

Financial Planning

Financial Planning
Calculators

Estate and Gift
Planning

Business Problem
Solving

Financial Statements

More Than a Tax
Return

Other Links of Interest

 

 

Recordkeeping for Taxes

What to Keep and How Long

Tax records should be kept on a year-round basis, not hastily assembled just for your annual tax appointment. Without tax records, you can lose valuable deductions by forgetting them on your tax return, or you may have unsubstantiated items disallowed if you are audited.

Generally, returns can be audited for up to three years after filing. However, the IRS may audit for up to six years if there is substantial unreported income. The three and six year limits start with the filing of a tax return; if no return is filed, the time limit never starts to run.

Which records are important?

Records of income received
Expense items, especially work-related
Home improvements, sales, and refinances
(for homes with profit potential of $250,000 or more)
Investment purchases and sales information
The documents for inherited property
Medical expenses
Charitable contributions (records vary with value of gift)
Interest and taxes paid
Records on nondeductible IRA contributions

How long should records be kept?

Just how long you should keep records is partly a matter of judgment and a combination of state and federal statutes of limitations. Federal tax returns can be audited for up to three years after filing (six years if underreported income is involved). It is a good idea to keep most records for six years after the return filing date.

There are some records worth keeping permanently, partly due to long-term needs and partly because they take up very little room. Consider permanently retaining a copy of each year's tax return. Contracts, real estate buy/sell records, and records of property improvements should be retained for seven years after the property is sold.

If you are in business, your record requirements are more extensive. Please call us; we will be happy to assist you with a system of record retention.

 


Linda K. Kofron, CPA, CMA

PO Box 783 Rockford, IL 61105
(815) 979-8075

Home Page | About Us
Bookkeeping, Recordkeeping & Accounting
Software SolutionsTax Planning | Investment Review 
Financial Planning | Financial Planning Calculators  
Estate and Gift Planning
|  Business Problem Solving
Financial Statements | More Than a Tax Return | Other Links of Interest



©  all rights reserved