The IRS acknowledged the 50th anniversary of the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC), which has helped lift millions of working families out of poverty since its inception. Signed into law by President ...
The IRS has released the applicable terminal charge and the Standard Industry Fare Level (SIFL) mileage rate for determining the value of noncommercial flights on employer-provided aircraft in effect ...
The IRS is encouraging individuals to review their tax withholding now to avoid unexpected bills or large refunds when filing their 2025 returns next year. Because income tax operates on a pay-as-you-...
The IRS has reminded individual taxpayers that they do not need to wait until April 15 to file their 2024 tax returns. Those who owe but cannot pay in full should still file by the deadline to avoid t...
Effective May 1, 2025, the Alabama Department of Revenue begins administering and collecting the city of Glencoe's local sales and use taxes. The first city of Glencoe local tax return filed...
Alaska has enacted legislation creating new energy incentives by extending tax-exempt statutes to independent power producers. An electricity generation facility or electricity storage facility that i...
Arizona amended current property tax statutes regarding the decisions made by county boards of equalization. The county board's decision must not exceed the county assessor's noticed valuation and rec...
The Arkansas Wood Energy Products and Forest Maintenance income tax credit has been amended to include eligible projects that support the Arkansas timber industry by using wood byproducts...
The Arkansas Wood Energy Products and Forest Maintenance income tax credit has been amended to include eligible projects that support the Arkansas timber industry by using wood byproducts...
Colorado has updated updated its guidance on the subtraction from income allowed to individuals for interest and other income earned on money in a first-time home buyer savings account. The...
Connecticut notifies tobacco products manufacturers of the annual revision of required forms that must be completed and filed with either the Connecticut Department of Revenue Services or the Office o...
Delaware Gov. Matt Meyer released his budget for fiscal year 2026 that includes proposals to cut personal income taxes and create 3 new tax brackets. The budget also includes a proposal to increase th...
The District of Columbia has provided additional information regarding new electronic filing requirements for specific income taxpayers for the 2025 tax year. The regulation requires taxpayers, who ex...
Beginning June 1, 2025, dealers must resume collection of the following Hillsborough County discretionary sales surtaxes for Florida sales and use tax purposes:the 0.5% indigent care surtax; andthe 0....
Georgia has enacted legislation that reduces the state's 2025 personal income tax rate from 5.39% to 5.19%. This is an acceleration of the previously scheduled rate reductions. The rate is scheduled t...
Hawaii has amended provisions relating to the withholding of tax on wages to:repeal the maximum tax rate that may be considered in determining the amount of income tax that must be withheld;re...
The Idaho State Tax Commission has issued a release announcing that veterans with disabilities are eligible to have their property tax bill reduced by as much as $1,500 on their Idaho residence and up...
Illinois announced that Logan and Macon counties are imposing a tax on retail sales of adult use cannabis beginning July 1, 2025. Counties in the state can impose a tax in increments of...
A taxpayer may assign any part of the film and media production tax credit against Indiana corporate income, personal income, and financial institutions tax.Assignment of Film and Media...
Qualifying grants issued under the State Disaster Recovery New Housing Program are excluded from net income for State corporate income tax and personal income tax purposes. The exclusio...
The Kansas Legislature voted to override Gov. Laura Kelly's veto of legislation that allows income tax and financial institution privilege tax rate reductions if:revenue from income and privilege tax ...
Kentucky updated a bulletin that contains guidance on local government premium taxes for insurance companies doing business in Kentucky, including the 2025-2026 tax rate schedule, a list o...
Proposed Amendment 2 to the Louisiana Constitution, which was on the March 29, 2025 ballot, failed. The amendment would have :lowered the maximum income tax rate;increased income tax deductions for ci...
Maine Rule 104, which outlines requirements for filing certain Maine tax returns, including electronic filing requirements, has been amended to require that the following file electronic returns:certa...
A previous story incorrectly summarized provisions in the Budget Reconciliation and Financing Act of 2025 approved by the Maryland General Assembly and sent to Maryland Governor Wes Moore.Sales and us...
The interest rates on the underpayment and overpayment of Massachusetts taxes are unchanged for the period April 1, 2025, through June 30, 2025.The rate for overpayments is 6%; andThe rate for underpa...
The Michigan interest rate on the underpayment and overpayment of taxes decreases to 8.66% for the period of July 1, 2025 through December 31, 2025. Revenue Administrative Bulletin 2025-6, Michigan D...
The Minnesota Department of Revenue has stated its position on the reconciliation of advance payments of the Minnesota Child Tax Credit. Under certain conditions, taxpayers may receive advance pay...
Mississippi has authorized the City of Ridgeland to levy a 1% tax on the gross proceeds of all sales from restaurants and a 2% tax on the gross proceeds of all sales from hotels and motels. The tax re...
The Missouri State Tax Commission has ordered Jackson County officials to roll back residential property tax assessments. Specifically, in order to prevent excessive, mistaken, and erroneous ass...
For Montana tax years beginning January 1, 2026, and ending December 31, 2026, the rate of 4.7% is imposed on taxable income up to $95,000 (increased from $41,000; for joint filers and surviving spous...
The Nebraska Department of Revenue has released a list of local sales and use tax rates in effect as of July 1, 2025. The table includes the new Good Life District (GLD) local sales and use taxes in G...
Nevada has amended its regulation on the deduction of obsolescence from the taxable value of property. In determining the amount of obsolescence to be deducted, the State Board and the county boards o...
The New Hampshire Department of Revenue Administration reminds taxpayers that the Interest and Dividends Tax is repealed effective January 1, 2025. Technical Information Release TIR 2025-001, New Ham...
The New Jersey Tax Court determined that a taxpayer was a "distributor," under the Tobacco and Vapors Product Tax (TPT) Act, so was not required to purchase tobacco directly from a manufacturer to u...
New Mexico has enacted legislation making a minor adjustment to the high-wage jobs tax credit by changing the definition of a “threshold job.” Threshold jobs are used in the tax credit to track a ...
New York Gov. Kathy Hochul announced an agreement on the Fiscal Year 2026 state budget package containing a variety of tax changes, including provisions that would:provide a tax cut for midd...
The North Carolina Department of Revenue will remove late action penalties assessed against affected taxpayers for licenses, returns, or payments due on September 25, 2024, through September 25, 202...
North Dakota has revised the announcement that is issued previously concerning local sales and use tax rate changes effective April 1, 2025. The revised announcement notes that for the City...
The Ohio Department of Taxation has updated its sales and use tax guidance on the taxability of building maintenance and janitorial services. Activities such as sandblasting or chemical cleaning of bu...
The Oklahoma Attorney General's office has opined that annual payments in lieu of ad valorem taxes imposed on property owned by the Wildlife Conservation Commission (OWCC) are unconstitu...
The Oregon House passed a bill that would update the state's income tax Internal Revenue Code conformity date to December 31, 2024. The bill now goes to the Oregon Senate. H.B. 2092, as passed by the...
Pennsylvania launched a new online platform to provide an improved tax appeals process for taxpayers. The new Board of Appeals Online Petition Center offers an improved user interface, a feature to ...
The Rhode Island Department of Revenue Division of Taxation has issued a notice summarizing the 2025 income tax filing requirements for LLCs. Notice 2025-01, Rhode Island Division of Taxation, Februa...
South Carolina has extended for an additional seven years the 1% special sales and use tax imposed by the Lexington County School District Property Tax Relief Act.H.B. 4187, Laws 2025, effe...
For South Dakota property taxes payable in 2026, and for each year thereafter, the maximum levy for school district general education funds the limit per $1,000 of taxable valuation is:a total of $5.2...
Tennessee has authorized counties to increase the 15 cents-per-ton maximum mineral severance tax rate that may be levied on sand, gravel, sandstone, chert, and limestone severed from the ground...
The Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts has determined the average taxable price of crude oil for the reporting period March 2025 is $44.03 per barrel for the three-month period beginning on...
The Utah State Tax Commission has updated its withholding tax guide, effective June 1, 2025. The income tax withholding tables are effective for pay periods beginning on or after June 1, 2025.The publ...
Vermont announced that the following seven towns will have new local option taxes, effective July 1, 2025.Hartford is adding Local Option Sales Tax (the town already has Local Option Meals and Rooms T...
The Virginia Department of Taxation abated an assessment of personal income tax because the taxpayer established that he successfully changed his domicile. The taxpayer was living and workin...
The Washington Department of Revenue has announced local sales and use tax rate changes effective July 1, 2025.Local Rate ChangesThe City of Stevenson transportation benefit district increases...
West Virginia enacted legislation eliminating accelerated tax payment requirements for:taxpayers whose average monthly payment of personal income tax withholding tax for the previous calendar y...
The Wisconsin Tax Appeals Commission dismissed a petition for review due to its untimely submission. The Department of Revenue had issued two Notices of Office Audit Amount Due to the petitioners. In ...
Wyoming has enacted legislation specifying the order in which a taxpayer should apply property tax exemptions when multiple property tax exemptions apply to the same property. The legislation states t...
The American Institute of CPAs in a March 31 letter to House of Representatives voiced its “strong support” for a series of tax administration bills passed in recent days.
The American Institute of CPAs in a March 31 letter to House of Representatives voiced its “strong support” for a series of tax administration bills passed in recent days.
The four bills highlighted in the letter include the Electronic Filing and Payment Fairness Act (H.R. 1152), the Internal Revenue Service Math and Taxpayer Help Act (H.R. 998), the Filing Relief for Natural Disasters Act (H.R. 517), and the Disaster Related Extension of Deadlines Act (H.R. 1491).
All four bills passed unanimously.
H.R. 1152 would apply the “mailbox” rule to electronically submitted tax returns and payments. Currently, a paper return or payment is counted as “received” based on the postmark of the envelope, but its electronic equivalent is counted as “received” when the electronic submission arrived or is reviewed. This bill would change all payment and tax form submissions to follow the mailbox rule, regardless of mode of delivery.
“The AICPA has previously recommended this change and thinks it would offer clarity and simplification to the payment and document submission process,” the organization said in the letter.
H.R. 998 “would require notices describing a mathematical or clerical error be made in plain language, and require the Treasury Secretary to provide additional procedures for requesting an abatement of a math or clerical adjustment, including by telephone or in person, among other provisions,” the letter states.
H.R. 517 would allow the IRS to grant federal tax relief once a state governor declares a state of emergency following a natural disaster, which is quicker than waiting for the federal government to declare a state of emergency as directed under current law, which could take weeks after the state disaster declaration. This bill “would also expand the mandatory federal filing extension under section 7508(d) from 60 days to 120 days, providing taxpayers with additional time to file tax returns following a disaster,” the letter notes, adding that increasing the period “would provide taxpayers and tax practitioners much needed relief, even before a disaster strikes.”
H.R. 1491 would extend deadlines for disaster victims to file for a tax refund or tax credit. The legislative solution “granting an automatic extension to the refund or credit lookback period would place taxpayers affected my major disasters on equal footing as taxpayers not impacted by major disasters and would afford greater clarity and certainty to taxpayers and tax practitioners regarding this lookback period,” AICPA said.
Also passed by the House was the National Taxpayer Advocate Enhancement Act (H.R. 997) which, according to a summary of the bill on Congress.gov, “authorizes the National Taxpayer Advocate to appoint legal counsel within the Taxpayer Advocate Service (TAS) to report directly to the National Taxpayer Advocate. The bill also expands the authority of the National Taxpayer Advocate to take personnel actions with respect to local taxpayer advocates (located in each state) to include actions with respect to any employee of TAS.”
Finally, the House passed H.R. 1155, the Recovery of Stolen Checks Act, which would require the Treasury to establish procedures that would allow a taxpayer to elect to receive replacement funds electronically from a physical check that was lost or stolen.
All bills passed unanimously. The passed legislation mirrors some of the provisions included in a discussion draft legislation issued by the Senate Finance Committee in January 2025. A section-by-section summary of the Senate discussion draft legislation can be found here.
AICPA’s tax policy and advocacy comment letters for 2025 can be found here.
By Gregory Twachtman, Washington News Editor
The Tax Court ruled that the value claimed on a taxpayer’s return exceeded the value of a conversation easement by 7,694 percent. The taxpayer was a limited liability company, classified as a TEFRA partnership. The Tax Court used the comparable sales method, as backstopped by the price actually paid to acquire the property.
The Tax Court ruled that the value claimed on a taxpayer’s return exceeded the value of a conversation easement by 7,694 percent. The taxpayer was a limited liability company, classified as a TEFRA partnership. The Tax Court used the comparable sales method, as backstopped by the price actually paid to acquire the property.
The taxpayer was entitled to a charitable contribution deduction based on its fair market value. The easement was granted upon rural land in Alabama. The property was zoned A–1 Agricultural, which permitted agricultural and light residential use only. The property transaction at occurred at arm’s length between a willing seller and a willing buyer.
Rezoning
The taxpayer failed to establish that the highest and best use of the property before the granting of the easement was limestone mining. The taxpayer failed to prove that rezoning to permit mining use was reasonably probable.
Land Value
The taxpayer’s experts erroneously equated the value of raw land with the net present value of a hypothetical limestone business conducted on the land. It would not be profitable to pay the entire projected value of the business.
Penalty Imposed
The claimed value of the easement exceeded the correct value by 7,694 percent. Therefore, the taxpayer was liable for a 40 percent penalty for a gross valuation misstatement under Code Sec. 6662(h).
Ranch Springs, LLC, 164 TC No. 6, Dec. 62,636
State and local housing credit agencies that allocate low-income housing tax credits and states and other issuers of tax-exempt private activity bonds have been provided with a listing of the proper population figures to be used when calculating the 2025:
State and local housing credit agencies that allocate low-income housing tax credits and states and other issuers of tax-exempt private activity bonds have been provided with a listing of the proper population figures to be used when calculating the 2025:
- calendar-year population-based component of the state housing credit ceiling under Code Sec. 42(h)(3)(C)(ii);
- calendar-year private activity bond volume cap under Code Sec. 146; and
- exempt facility bond volume limit under Code Sec. 142(k)(5)
These figures are derived from the estimates of the resident populations of the 50 states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico, which were released by the Bureau of the Census on December 19, 2024. The figures for the insular areas of American Samoa, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands and the U.S. Virgin Islands are the midyear population figures in the U.S. Census Bureau’s International Database.
The value of assets of a qualified terminable interest property (QTIP) trust includible in a decedent's gross estate was not reduced by the amount of a settlement intended to compensate the decedent for undistributed income.
The value of assets of a qualified terminable interest property (QTIP) trust includible in a decedent's gross estate was not reduced by the amount of a settlement intended to compensate the decedent for undistributed income.
The trust property consisted of an interest in a family limited partnership (FLP), which held title to ten rental properties, and cash and marketable securities. To resolve a claim by the decedent's estate that the trustees failed to pay the decedent the full amount of income generated by the FLP, the trust and the decedent's children's trusts agreed to be jointly and severally liable for a settlement payment to her estate. The Tax Court found an estate tax deficiency, rejecting the estate's claim that the trust assets should be reduced by the settlement amount and alternatively, that the settlement claim was deductible from the gross estate as an administration expense (P. Kalikow Est., Dec. 62,167(M), TC Memo. 2023-21).
Trust Not Property of the Estate
The estate presented no support for the argument that the liability affected the fair market value of the trust assets on the decedent's date of death. The trust, according to the court, was a legal entity that was not itself an asset of the estate. Thus, a liability that belonged to the trust but had no impact on the value of the underlying assets did not change the value of the gross estate. Furthermore, the settlement did not burden the trust assets. A hypothetical purchaser of the FLP interest, the largest asset of the trust, would not assume the liability and, therefore, would not regard the liability as affecting the price. When the parties stipulated the value of the FLP interest, the estate was aware of the undistributed income claim. Consequently, the value of the assets included in the gross estate was not diminished by the amount of the undistributed income claim.
Claim Not an Estate Expense
The claim was owed to the estate by the trust to correct the trustees' failure to distribute income from the rental properties during the decedent's lifetime. As such, the claim was property included in the gross estate, not an expense of the estate. The court explained that even though the liability was owed by an entity that held assets included within the taxable estate, the claim itself was not an estate expense. The court did not address the estate's theoretical argument that the estate would be taxed twice on the underlying assets held in the trust and the amount of the settlement because the settlement was part of the decedent's residuary estate, which was distributed to a charity. As a result, the claim was not a deductible administration expense of the estate.
P.B. Kalikow, Est., CA-2
An individual was not entitled to deduct flowthrough loss from the forfeiture of his S Corporation’s portion of funds seized by the U.S. Marshals Service for public policy reasons. The taxpayer pleaded guilty to charges of bribery, fraud and money laundering. Subsequently, the U.S. Marshals Service seized money from several bank accounts held in the taxpayer’s name or his wholly owned corporation.
An individual was not entitled to deduct flowthrough loss from the forfeiture of his S Corporation’s portion of funds seized by the U.S. Marshals Service for public policy reasons. The taxpayer pleaded guilty to charges of bribery, fraud and money laundering. Subsequently, the U.S. Marshals Service seized money from several bank accounts held in the taxpayer’s name or his wholly owned corporation. The S corporation claimed a loss deduction related to its portion of the asset seizures on its return and the taxpayer reported a corresponding passthrough loss on his return.
However, Courts have uniformly held that loss deductions for forfeitures in connection with a criminal conviction frustrate public policy by reducing the "sting" of the penalty. The taxpayer maintained that the public policy doctrine did not apply here, primarily because the S corporation was never indicted or charged with wrongdoing. However, even if the S corporation was entitled to claim a deduction for the asset seizures, the public policy doctrine barred the taxpayer from reporting his passthrough share. The public policy doctrine was not so rigid or formulaic that it may apply only when the convicted person himself hands over a fine or penalty.
Hampton, TC Memo. 2025-32, Dec. 62,642(M)