When doing taxes, do not forget to report all income (including gig work, interest, and state refunds), claim overlooked deductions like student loan interest and charitable donations, and use direct deposit for faster refunds. Ensure you have all W-2s and 1099s, check for child/dependent credits, and verify your Social Security number and filing status to avoid processing delays.
Wages, dividends, bank interest, and other income received and that was reported on an information return should be entered carefully. This includes any information needed to calculated credits and deductions.
The biggest tax mistakes people make include filing late, math errors, incorrect personal info (like Social Security numbers), forgetting deductions/credits (like EITC), misreporting income, not signing forms, and making errors with bank details for direct deposit, all leading to delays, penalties, or missed savings, with using tax software or professionals helping avoid these common pitfalls.
10 of the Largest Tax Breaks Explained
Use caution when claiming on tax without receipts
If you don't have much in the way of deductible claims to make on your tax, you should not automatically claim an amount up to the $300 limit just because you can. The same applies for the $150 limit for laundry and the small expenses limit of $200.
Businesses that show losses are more likely to be audited, especially if the losses are recurring. The IRS might suspect that you must be making more money than you're reporting. Otherwise, why would you stay in business? Most likely to be audited are taxpayers reporting small business losses.
Not reporting all of your income is an easy-to-avoid red flag that can lead to an audit. Taking excessive business tax deductions and mixing business and personal expenses can lead to an audit. The IRS mostly audits tax returns of those earning more than $200,000 and corporations with more than $10 million in assets.
The 5 Cs of audit (Criteria, Condition, Cause, Consequence, Corrective Action) are a framework for structuring clear, actionable audit findings, explaining what should be (Criteria), what is found (Condition), why it happened (Cause), what the impact is (Consequence/Effect), and how to fix it (Corrective Action/Recommendation) to drive organizational improvement and compliance.
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What does the IRS allow you to deduct (or “write off”) without receipts?
20 Common Tax Deductions: Examples for Your Next Tax Return
Common traps include taxes on Social Security benefits, Medicare surcharges, required minimum distributions (RMDs), real estate sales and estimated quarterly tax payments. With some knowledge, though, you can more effectively steer clear of these potential pitfalls.
Here are 12 IRS audit triggers to be aware of:
The IRS can't seize certain personal items, such as necessary schoolbooks, clothing, undelivered mail and certain amounts of furniture and household items.
Ten Red Flags that Could Trigger an IRS Audit
The IRS usually reviews receipts during an audit — if you don't have the receipts, you can sometimes use bank statements or credit card statements to prove your claims instead. Consequences of being audited without receipts can include additional taxes, interest, and financial penalties.
What Not to Say During an Audit?
100% write-offs, primarily through bonus depreciation, allow businesses to immediately deduct the full cost of qualifying new and used assets (like equipment, machinery, vehicles, and certain improvements) in the year they're placed in service, rather than depreciating them over years, significantly boosting cash flow and lowering taxes, with recent laws making this 100% deduction permanent for assets acquired after January 19, 2025. This is a major tax incentive under recent legislation, often used alongside Section 179 expensing, which offers its own high deduction limits, notes Forbes.