English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I worked for the employer and initially earned $13,000 and i received the W-2 form for the income and i filed the taxes for $13,000. Received letter from the IRS that the employer showed addition income for fishing income $12,790, another income $12,790, rental loyalty $13,990.
I don't understand the additional income showed by the employer and how can is dispute. ( The employer never gave me any document regrading the addition income shown on the IRS). I NEVER RECEIVED THE ADDITIONAL INCOME SHOWN IN THE IRS DOCUMENTS BY THE EMPLOYER

2007-06-27 08:25:28 · 6 answers · asked by iqbal s 1 in Business & Finance Taxes United States

6 answers

Go to the Human Resources Department of the company where you work. They can help explain what is going on. Also, call the person who does your taxes. You don't by chance work on a boat? Are you sure somebody else isn't using your Social Security Number? Identity theft can cause strange things to happen with your taxes. Call the IRS to see if anybody worked for a different company using your SSN.

2007-06-27 08:49:30 · answer #1 · answered by color_design_jewelry 2 · 0 1

Report this information to the IRS and they will investigate the employer as well as yourself; it is just regulation standards.

Gather all of your pay stubs as proof and contact your employer for the documentation showing all of your registered hours worked. If the employer has made mistakes or has lied about anything, then he/she is in an enormous amount of trouble.

The IRS will completely handle the situation. If you know that you are not at fault, then you have nothing to worry about. The only thing is, this may cause you to become 'Red Flagged' by the IRS because basically some information is fraudulent somewhere and until they figure out the problem, you will remain under close watch.

Good Luck!

2007-06-27 09:17:16 · answer #2 · answered by βread⊆ℜumbs™ 5 · 2 1

Ask for copies of the checks paid to you.

Did you get free rent from them? If so, they have to report it as income but in a unique way. If you were an apartment manager for example and they paid your rent and electric. However, I don't believe you are taxable the same as income.

I'm sure a CPA could answer this question for you. They probably wouldn't even charge you if you have a CPA that does your taxes for you.

2007-06-27 08:29:57 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Call 1-800-829-1040. That is the number for the IRS. They can at least tell you what you need to do to dispute the income. Employer was supposed to legally give you a 1099 by law. He/she more than likely didn't give you one, because then you would have said to your employer that you didn't get that income to have 1099's issued to you.

2007-06-27 09:18:06 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 2 3

Go to human resources and ask them what is up with it. COuld be someone keyed in a wrong number when reporting. The company could straighten it out faster than anyone else could

2007-06-27 08:34:00 · answer #5 · answered by Pengy 7 · 1 0

report it to the IRS, the employer may be doing something wrong

2007-06-27 08:30:23 · answer #6 · answered by skcs11 7 · 2 1

fedest.com, questions and answers