Quote:
Originally Posted by callipygian
I imagine that for many occupations - your example of the home office deduction is apt - you're just gonna get audited anyway so you might as well just budget for it as an expected expense.
These are all reasonable points, and for an individual they're hard to know.
For some reason, we had a stretch of years where we
always got a nasty letter from the IRS. Most often, they'd consider our HSA expenses as non-qualifying -- even payments to hospitals were considered taxable disbursements. First year? High blood pressure. Should we call the accountant? Then after a couple years, just a bored yawn, send the IRS supporting documentation, and then wait several months to get the "based on the information received we've decided not to prosecute you" letter. Part of this is the price of being self-employed. We don't take a home office deduction, in part to avoid more hassle.
Honestly, TheDarkKnight should find an accountant he trusts and get at least this year's stuff figured out by a tax person who knows gambling. One of the things you can pay a good accountant for is "how do I set up my finances long term so that I'm good for the next few year and I don't need you later." He might find that he likes having an expert do his taxes, and the piece of mind is worth the price. Do you cut your own hair?
Both DD's and KingSpew's POV are reasonable. Part of it depends on how risk adverse you are, how much the prospect of an audit drives you, and how close you run to ruin on your BR. From what he's said around here, I suspect that DD is willing to play really big vs. his liquid net worth (let's ignore total net worth, but just cash on hand). I suspect that TDK isn't jumping into any 1K/2K games no matter what, and his tournament successes mean that locking up a few K for a few months from over withholding can't really matter. Just that difference (among many potential others) might result in very different answers to the same questions. Personally, paying penalties drive me nuts and the incremental opportunity value of the cash is really low...