Home

Tutoring

Subjects

Live Classes

Study Coach

Essay Review

On-Demand Courses

Colleges

Games

Opening subject page...

Loading your content

CPA Tcp

CPA Tcp Practice Test: Practice Test 3

Practice Test 3 for CPA Tcp: real questions and explanations from the Varsity Tutors practice-test pool.

0%

0 / 25 answered

Question 1 of 25

For 2025, Nia, a single filer, inherited 25,000cashandreceived25,000 cash and received 25,000cashandreceived700 of dividends from a U.S. corporation. Based on IRS gross income rules, which income source is correctly excluded from taxation?

Question Navigator

All questions

Question 1

For 2025, Nia, a single filer, inherited 25,000cashandreceived25,000 cash and received 25,000cashandreceived700 of dividends from a U.S. corporation. Based on IRS gross income rules, which income source is correctly excluded from taxation?

  1. The $700 dividends
  2. The $25,000 inheritance (correct answer)
  3. Both the inheritance and the dividends
  4. Neither the inheritance nor the dividends

Explanation: Inheritances are excluded under IRC Section 102, dividends included under IRC Section 61. Nia inherited 25,000,received25,000, received 25,000,received700 dividends. Answer B is correct: inheritance excluded, dividends taxable. Choice A excludes dividends; choice C excludes both; choice D excludes neither. Categorize bequests vs. income. Reference IRC for verification.

Question 2

A partnership files Form 941 and later discovers it accidentally reported the quarter’s payroll tax deposits in the wrong line, causing the return to show a balance due even though deposits were actually made timely and in full. The partnership wants to correct the filed quarterly return to align reported deposits with the IRS records. Which document should be filed to correct the payroll tax discrepancy?

  1. Form 941-X, Adjusted Employer’s QUARTERLY Federal Tax Return or Claim for Refund (correct answer)
  2. Form 945, Annual Return of Withheld Federal Income Tax
  3. Form W-3, Transmittal of Wage and Tax Statements
  4. Form SS-4, Application for Employer Identification Number

Explanation: This question tests IRS rules for correcting misreported deposit amounts on a filed Form 941, showing an erroneous balance due. The key facts are timely full deposits but wrong line reporting, necessitating return correction. Choice A is correct as Form 941-X adjusts filed quarterly returns to match IRS deposit records. Choice B is incorrect because Form 945 is for non-payroll withholding, not employment taxes. Choice C is wrong as Form W-3 transmits W-2s, and Choice D is invalid since Form SS-4 is for EIN applications. Verify deposits against return lines before filing. File amendments quickly to correct balances and avoid unnecessary payments.

Question 3

An individual taxpayer who files a joint return can file a subsequent amended return as Married Filing Separately (switching from MFJ to MFS) only if:

  1. The amended return is filed by the original due date of the return (not counting extensions) - after the due date, a joint return cannot be changed to separate returns. (correct answer)
  2. Both spouses consent to the change at any time within the 3-year statute.
  3. The IRS grants special permission for the change.
  4. One spouse files a petition for divorce before the amended return is filed.

Explanation: MFJ to MFS changes must be made by the original due date (April 15) - not the extended due date. After that, a joint return is irrevocable. Answer A is correct. Consent doesn't extend the deadline beyond the original due date (B). IRS permission is not required (C). Divorce proceedings are irrelevant (D).

Question 4

The 'throwback rule' in state apportionment applies when:

  1. A taxpayer's income in a state decreases year over year.
  2. A taxpayer has nexus in every state where it makes sales.
  3. A taxpayer's property factor exceeds its payroll factor.
  4. A sale is 'thrown back' to the state of origin (where the goods are shipped from) when the destination state has no jurisdiction to tax the seller - preventing some sales from falling out of all state apportionment formulas. (correct answer)

Explanation: The throwback rule prevents 'nowhere income' by assigning sales back to the shipping state when the seller lacks nexus in the destination state. Answer D is correct. Year-over-year changes (A) are irrelevant. Nexus everywhere (B) is the opposite situation where throwback doesn't apply. Factor comparisons (C) don't trigger throwback.

Question 5

The accumulated adjustments account (AAA) of an S corporation represents:

  1. The sum of all shareholder capital contributions to the S corporation.
  2. The S corporation's retained earnings for financial accounting purposes.
  3. The total distributions made by the S corporation during its existence.
  4. The cumulative undistributed income (net of losses) that has been taxed at the shareholder level during the S corporation's existence - it tracks the amount that can be distributed tax-free after previously taxed post-S election income. (correct answer)

Explanation: The AAA tracks the post-S election income that has already been taxed to shareholders but not yet distributed - distributions from AAA are tax-free (return of previously taxed income). Answer D is correct. Capital contributions (A) are separate. Book retained earnings (B) differ from AAA. Cumulative distributions reduce AAA (C).

Question 6

Hana, a head of household filer, completed work in December 2025. Her employer mailed her paycheck on December 31, 2025, and it could not be accessed until it arrived on January 3, 2026. Under IRS constructive receipt principles, what is the proper treatment of the paycheck for tax year inclusion?

  1. Include in 2025 because the services were performed in December
  2. Include in 2025 because the employer mailed it on December 31
  3. Include in 2026 because Hana could not access the funds until January without substantial availability in 2025 (correct answer)
  4. Exclude from income because it was paid after year-end

Explanation: IRS constructive receipt principles require inclusion when income is available without substantial limitations, per Reg. Section 1.451-2. Hana's paycheck was mailed December 31, 2025, but inaccessible until January 3, 2026. Choice C is correct because lack of access defers inclusion to 2026. Choice A ties to service date, ignoring receipt; choice B assumes mailing triggers receipt, but it doesn't if not available; choice D excludes entirely, which is wrong. Assess availability and restrictions for timing. This framework applies to deferred payments.

Question 7

In 2025, Talia is single and has 40,000ofwagesand40,000 of wages and 40,000ofwagesand30,000 of net profit from her sole proprietorship (Schedule C). She will owe self-employment tax on her self-employment income. Under current IRS rules, which statement best describes her eligibility for the above-the-line deduction for one-half of self-employment tax?

  1. She is eligible only if she itemizes deductions.
  2. She is eligible only if her wages are below the Social Security wage base.
  3. She is eligible for an above-the-line deduction equal to one-half of her self-employment tax, regardless of whether she itemizes. (correct answer)
  4. She is not eligible because she also has wage income.

Explanation: The deduction for one-half of self-employment tax is available to all taxpayers with net earnings from self-employment, regardless of other income sources or whether they itemize deductions. Talia has both 40,000inwagesand40,000 in wages and 40,000inwagesand30,000 in self-employment income, making her subject to self-employment tax on her Schedule C net profit. The above-the-line deduction for one-half of self-employment tax applies to her self-employment income without any restriction based on her wage income or itemization status. Option A incorrectly requires itemization, Option B incorrectly imposes a wage base limitation on the deduction eligibility, and Option D incorrectly disqualifies those with wage income. The deduction recognizes that self-employed individuals pay both the employer and employee portions of Social Security and Medicare taxes, allowing them to deduct the employer-equivalent portion. For tax planning, individuals with multiple income sources should understand that each type of income has its own tax treatment and associated deductions.

Question 8

An individual taxpayer receives a notice of deficiency after an IRS examination disallowed significant cash charitable contributions due to lack of written substantiation. The taxpayer wants to continue disputing the liability without paying first. Which step should the taxpayer take next in the appeals process?

  1. File a timely petition with the United States Tax Court within the statutory period stated in the notice of deficiency (correct answer)
  2. Send additional receipts to the IRS service center and assume the notice of deficiency is automatically withdrawn
  3. File a claim for refund before paying any tax and request an immediate refund suit
  4. Request an Appeals conference using the 30-day letter procedures, because a notice of deficiency is not appealable

Explanation: The process being tested is disputing a notice of deficiency via Tax Court petition under IRC Section 6213(a), allowing pre-payment challenge. Key facts are disallowance for unsubstantiated contributions, desire to dispute without paying. Choice A aligns with regulations by filing a timely petition, preserving jurisdiction per Publication 556. Choice B is incorrect as additional docs do not withdraw deficiencies; Choice C is wrong because refund suits require payment first; Choice D is improper since deficiencies are petitionable, not 30-day letters. A framework is to petition within 90 days with facts. Professionals should evaluate litigation merits post-examination.

Question 9

For its year ended December 31, 2024, a C corporation reported taxable income of $700,000beforeconsideringanetoperatingloss(NOL)carryforward.ThecorporationhasanNOLcarryforwardof\$700,000 before considering a net operating loss (NOL) carryforward. The corporation has an NOL carryforward of $700,000beforeconsideringanetoperatingloss(NOL)carryforward.ThecorporationhasanNOLcarryforwardof$900,000 available from the 2022 tax year. What is the corporation's taxable income for 2024 after applying the NOL deduction?

  1. $$$0
  2. $$$140,000 (correct answer)
  3. $$$200,000
  4. $$$700,000

Explanation: When you encounter NOL carryforward questions, you need to understand the 80% limitation rule that applies to losses arising in tax years beginning after December 31, 2017. This rule limits how much of your current year taxable income can be offset by NOL carryforwards. The corporation has $700,000intaxableincomebeforetheNOLdeductionanda\$700,000 in taxable income before the NOL deduction and a $700,000intaxableincomebeforetheNOLdeductionanda$900,000 NOL carryforward from 2022. Since the NOL arose after 2017, it's subject to the 80% limitation. This means the NOL deduction cannot exceed 80% of the taxable income computed without regard to the NOL deduction. Calculate the maximum allowable NOL deduction: $700,000×80%=$560,000\$700,000 × 80\% = \$560,000$700,000×80%=$560,000. Even though the corporation has $900,000inNOLcarryforwardavailable,itcanonlydeduct\$900,000 in NOL carryforward available, it can only deduct $900,000inNOLcarryforwardavailable,itcanonlydeduct$560,000 in 2024. Therefore, taxable income after the NOL deduction is $700,000−$560,000=$140,000\$700,000 - \$560,000 = \$140,000$700,000−$560,000=$140,000. Answer A ($0)assumesyoucanusethefullNOLamountwithoutlimitation,whichignoresthe80\$0) assumes you can use the full NOL amount without limitation, which ignores the 80% rule. Answer C ($0)assumesyoucanusethefullNOLamountwithoutlimitation,whichignoresthe80$200,000) might result from incorrectly calculating 20% of the NOL carryforward amount rather than 20% of the remaining taxable income. Answer D ($$$700,000) suggests no NOL deduction was applied at all. Remember this key exam pattern: for NOLs arising after 2017, always check if the 80% limitation applies before calculating the final taxable income. The NOL deduction is limited to 80% of pre-NOL taxable income, ensuring corporations always have some taxable income when profitable.

Question 10

In 2025, Chris and Dana file a joint return and have 120,000ofwagesand120,000 of wages and 120,000ofwagesand30,000 of taxable IRA distributions. They paid 6,900ofstateincometaxand6,900 of state income tax and 6,900ofstateincometaxand2,400 of real property taxes, and they also paid $900 of local occupational tax that is based on wages. What is the maximum SALT deduction they may claim on Schedule A?

  1. $10,200, including state income tax, real property tax, and local occupational tax
  2. $9,300, because local occupational taxes are not included in SALT
  3. $10,000, limited by the SALT cap for married filing jointly (correct answer)
  4. $5,000, limited by the SALT cap for married filing separately

Explanation: This question tests whether local occupational taxes are included in the SALT deduction. Chris and Dana paid 10,200inpotentiallyeligibletaxes(10,200 in potentially eligible taxes (10,200inpotentiallyeligibletaxes(6,900 state income tax + 2,400realpropertytaxes+2,400 real property taxes + 2,400realpropertytaxes+900 local occupational tax), but their deduction is limited to 10,000formarriedfilingjointly.Thecorrectansweris10,000 for married filing jointly. The correct answer is 10,000formarriedfilingjointly.Thecorrectansweris10,000 because local income and occupational taxes based on wages are included in the definition of deductible state and local taxes under IRC Section 164, subject to the overall cap. Answer A (10,200)correctlyidentifiestheeligibletaxesbutignoresthecap.AnswerB(10,200) correctly identifies the eligible taxes but ignores the cap. Answer B (10,200)correctlyidentifiestheeligibletaxesbutignoresthecap.AnswerB(9,300) incorrectly excludes local occupational taxes from SALT, when such taxes are actually eligible. Answer D (5,000)wronglyappliesthemarriedfilingseparatelylimittojointfilers.SinceChrisandDana′stotaleligibleSALTexpenses(5,000) wrongly applies the married filing separately limit to joint filers. Since Chris and Dana's total eligible SALT expenses (5,000)wronglyappliesthemarriedfilingseparatelylimittojointfilers.SinceChrisandDana′stotaleligibleSALTexpenses(10,200) only slightly exceed the cap, they should consider timing strategies for state tax payments, such as adjusting withholding or estimated payments to maximize the benefit across tax years.

Question 11

The sale of a partnership interest where the partnership has hot assets results in which form filing requirement?

  1. Form 4797 (Sales of Business Property) for the entire gain.
  2. Form 8308 (Report of a Sale or Exchange of Certain Partnership Interests) must be filed by the partnership, and the selling partner reports ordinary income from hot assets and capital gain from the remaining interest separately. (correct answer)
  3. Schedule D only, since all partnership interest sales are capital transactions.
  4. Form 1065 amendment to reflect the sale.

Explanation: Form 8308 must be filed by the partnership when a partner sells an interest and hot assets are present. The selling partner reports the hot asset ordinary income and capital gain separately. Answer B is correct. Form 4797 covers business property but not specifically the hot asset split (A). Not all capital gain (C). The partnership return reflects the sale but Form 8308 is the required form (D).

Question 12

The foreign earned income exclusion under Section 911 for 2024 excludes up to approximately:

  1. $126,500 of foreign earned income (indexed annually for inflation) - plus additional amounts for foreign housing. (correct answer)
  2. $75,000 of foreign earned income, with no housing exclusion.
  3. All foreign earned income without limitation.
  4. 50% of foreign earned income up to $200,000.

Explanation: The Section 911 exclusion for 2024 is approximately 126,500(indexedforinflation),withaseparatehousingexclusion.AnswerAiscorrect.126,500 (indexed for inflation), with a separate housing exclusion. Answer A is correct. 126,500(indexedforinflation),withaseparatehousingexclusion.AnswerAiscorrect.75,000 (B) is outdated. There is a dollar cap (C). The exclusion is not percentage-based (D).

Question 13

When a partnership distributes property that has a different basis (inside) than the partner's outside basis, and the partnership has a Section 754 election in effect, which adjustment applies?

  1. Section 743(b) adjustment to the inside basis of remaining partnership assets.
  2. Section 704(c) allocation to prevent income shifting.
  3. Section 481(a) adjustment to account for the change in accounting method.
  4. Section 734(b) adjustment to the inside basis of remaining partnership assets, allocating the adjustment to specific assets to reflect the basis discrepancy created by the distribution. (correct answer)

Explanation: Section 734(b) adjustments apply when a Section 754 election is in effect and a distribution causes a discrepancy between inside and outside basis - the partnership adjusts the inside basis of remaining assets. Answer D is correct. Section 743(b) (A) applies to transfers, not distributions. Section 704(c) (B) addresses contributed property. Section 481(a) (C) is an accounting method change adjustment.

Question 14

A single taxpayer has \140,000ofwages,of wages,ofwages,$1,200oftaxableinterest,of taxable interest,oftaxableinterest,$1,800ofqualifieddividends,andof qualified dividends, andofqualifieddividends,and$60,000oflong−termcapitalgains.Thetaxpayeritemizesdeductionsincludingof long-term capital gains. The taxpayer itemizes deductions includingoflong−termcapitalgains.Thetaxpayeritemizesdeductionsincluding$16,000ofSALTandof SALT andofSALTand$7,000$ of charitable contributions; no other AMT adjustments apply. Which adjustment is required for AMT calculation under IRC §56?

  1. Add back \7,000$ of charitable contributions because they are disallowed for AMT
  2. Add back \16,000$ of SALT because state and local taxes are disallowed for AMT (correct answer)
  3. Add back \60,000$ of long-term capital gains because AMT treats capital gains as preference items
  4. Subtract \16,000$ of SALT because AMT provides an additional SALT deduction

Explanation: The tax concept being tested is the AMT adjustment requiring the add-back of state and local taxes (SALT) deducted for regular tax, as per IRC §56(b)(1)(A)(ii). Key financial details include 16,000inSALTand16,000 in SALT and 16,000inSALTand7,000 in charitable contributions, with substantial capital gains potentially affecting AMT calculations. The correct adjustment adds back the $16,000 SALT because it is not allowable as a deduction in AMTI. Choice A is incorrect as charitable contributions remain deductible for AMT under IRC §56(b)(1)(G); Choice C is wrong because long-term capital gains are not treated as preference items but receive favorable rates in AMT per IRC §55(b)(3); Choice D is erroneous since AMT does not provide an additional SALT deduction but disallows it entirely. For AMT exposure determination, compile all income and add back disallowed deductions like SALT to derive AMTI. Apply the appropriate exemption and tax rates to AMTI, then compare the tentative minimum tax to regular tax liability.

Question 15

Catalyst Corp., a C corporation, had an operating loss of ($10,000)fortheyear.Duringtheyear,Catalystalsoreceived\$10,000) for the year. During the year, Catalyst also received $10,000)fortheyear.Duringtheyear,Catalystalsoreceived$50,000 in dividends from a 15%-owned domestic corporation. Catalyst has no other income or expenses. What is Catalyst Corp.'s taxable income for the year?

  1. $$$15,000
  2. $$$20,000 (correct answer)
  3. $$$27,500
  4. $$$40,000

Explanation: When you encounter questions about corporate dividends received from other corporations, you need to understand the dividends received deduction (DRD), which prevents triple taxation of corporate income. Here's how to calculate Catalyst's taxable income. Start with the operating loss of $(10,000)\$(10,000)$(10,000) and add the dividend income of $50,000\$50,000$50,000, giving you $40,000\$40,000$40,000 of income before the DRD. Since Catalyst owns 15% of the dividend-paying corporation (less than 20%), it qualifies for a 50% dividends received deduction. This means Catalyst can deduct $25,000\$25,000$25,000 (50% × $50,000\$50,000$50,000) from its taxable income. Therefore: $40,000\$40,000$40,000 income minus $25,000\$25,000$25,000 DRD equals $20,000\$20,000$20,000 taxable income. Answer choice A ($15,000\$15,000$15,000) incorrectly applies a 70% DRD, which only applies when ownership is 20% or more. Answer choice C ($27,500\$27,500$27,500) uses a 45% DRD percentage that doesn't exist in the tax code. Answer choice D ($40,000\$40,000$40,000) fails to apply any dividends received deduction at all, missing this crucial corporate tax benefit entirely. Remember the DRD ownership thresholds: less than 20% ownership gets a 50% deduction, 20% or more (but less than 80%) gets a 65% deduction, and 80% or more gets a 100% deduction. Also note that the DRD is limited to the corporation's taxable income before the deduction (unless taking the full deduction creates or increases a net operating loss).

Question 16

A trust instrument requires all accounting income to be distributed annually to a surviving spouse, with principal discretionary for health, education, maintenance, and support; remainder to children. The trustee is evaluating whether distributions will shift taxable income to the spouse or remain taxed at the trust level. Under IRC §§ 651–652 (simple trusts) and §§ 661–662 (complex trusts), which factor would most likely impact the trust’s tax treatment?

  1. Whether the trust makes any charitable contributions, because charitable contributions automatically convert a simple trust into a grantor trust
  2. Whether the trust is required to distribute all income currently and makes no distributions of corpus, which is central to simple trust classification (correct answer)
  3. Whether the spouse is also the trustee, because a beneficiary-trustee automatically causes all trust income to be taxed to the beneficiary under IRC § 678
  4. Whether the trust holds tax-exempt bonds, because any tax-exempt interest prevents a trust from taking a distribution deduction

Explanation: This question tests the distinction between simple and complex trusts under IRC §§ 651-652 and 661-662. The trust requires all income distributed annually to the spouse with discretionary principal distributions, and has remainder to children. Answer B correctly identifies that mandatory current income distribution with no corpus distributions is central to simple trust classification under § 651, resulting in all income being taxed to the beneficiary. Answer A is incorrect because charitable contributions don't convert simple trusts to grantor trusts; they convert simple trusts to complex trusts. Answer C overstates the rule; while a beneficiary-trustee can trigger § 678 in certain circumstances, it doesn't automatically cause all income taxation to the beneficiary. Answer D is wrong because holding tax-exempt bonds doesn't prevent distribution deductions; the trust still deducts distributed taxable income. The key distinction is that simple trusts must distribute all income currently and cannot make charitable contributions or corpus distributions.

Question 17

In 2025, a sole proprietorship operating a manufacturing business purchased and placed in service qualifying equipment on December 20, 2025, for 1,300,000.ThetaxpayerpurchasednootherSection179propertyduring2025.For2025,theSection179annualdeductionlimitis1,300,000. The taxpayer purchased no other Section 179 property during 2025. For 2025, the Section 179 annual deduction limit is 1,300,000.ThetaxpayerpurchasednootherSection179propertyduring2025.For2025,theSection179annualdeductionlimitis1,250,000 and the phase-out threshold begins at $3,130,000. What is the maximum Section 179 deduction for 2025 (ignoring the taxable income limitation)?

  1. $1,300,000, because the Section 179 deduction can exceed the annual limit if placed in service late in the year.
  2. $1,250,000, because the annual limit applies and no phase-out reduction is triggered. (correct answer)
  3. $0, because Section 179 is not allowed for equipment placed in service in December.
  4. $780,000, because the annual limit is reduced by 60% bonus depreciation in 2025.

Explanation: This question tests Section 179 annual limit application. The key facts are equipment costing 1,300,000withnootherSection179purchases,annuallimitof1,300,000 with no other Section 179 purchases, annual limit of 1,300,000withnootherSection179purchases,annuallimitof1,250,000, and phase-out threshold of 3,130,000.Sincetotalpurchases(3,130,000. Since total purchases (3,130,000.Sincetotalpurchases(1,300,000) don't exceed the phase-out threshold, the full annual limit is available. The maximum Section 179 deduction is limited to $1,250,000, even though the equipment cost exceeds this amount. Answer A incorrectly allows deduction above the annual limit. Answer C incorrectly prohibits December placements. Answer D incorrectly reduces the limit based on bonus depreciation. The annual limit caps Section 179 deductions regardless of individual asset costs.

Question 18

A mid-sized technology company (C corporation) with 140 employees is evaluating whether its 2025 engineering work qualifies for the research credit. The work involves building a new machine-learning feature for its SaaS platform, including experimentation with multiple model architectures to resolve uncertainty about accuracy and latency; it also includes routine data labeling and cosmetic user interface changes. The company maintained design documents and test results but did not track employee time by project until the last quarter. What documentation is needed to substantiate the tax credit claim?

  1. Contemporaneous project records demonstrating permitted purpose, technical uncertainty, and a process of experimentation, supported by payroll records for qualified wages (correct answer)
  2. Only a signed statement from the chief technology officer asserting the work was innovative
  3. Invoices for all software subscriptions used by the company, regardless of relation to research activities
  4. A copy of the company’s audited financial statements showing total R&D expense under GAAP

Explanation: IRS guidelines for the research credit under Section 41 require substantiation of qualified research activities through contemporaneous documentation demonstrating the four-part test. Key facts include the technology company's machine-learning feature development with design documents and test results, but incomplete time-tracking. Option A aligns with IRS regulations by requiring records of permitted purpose, uncertainty, experimentation, and qualified wages. Option B is incorrect as a signed statement alone lacks detail on activities and expenses needed for substantiation. Options C and D are incorrect because unrelated invoices or GAAP financials do not tie expenses to qualified research. Tax professionals should implement project-tracking systems to capture contemporaneous evidence. This framework ensures claims are defensible during audits by linking documentation to specific credit criteria.

Question 19

A corporation uses a third-party payroll provider but remains responsible for payroll tax compliance. The controller finds that for two pay dates in the current quarter, the provider processed payroll and calculated FICA correctly but did not remit the federal payroll tax deposits; state SUTA deposits were made. The corporation wants to take corrective action consistent with IRS requirements. How should the business correct the payroll tax error?

  1. Immediately make the missing federal deposits via EFTPS and pursue reimbursement from the provider; the employer remains liable for federal deposits (correct answer)
  2. Assume the state SUTA deposits satisfy the federal deposit requirement and take no further action
  3. File Form 1099-NEC for each employee to shift liability to the payroll provider
  4. Correct the issue by filing Form 940 early; no deposit is required until the annual filing

Explanation: This question tests employer liability for federal payroll tax deposits when using third-party providers. The key facts are correct FICA calculations but unremitted federal deposits for two pay dates, with state SUTA made, and employer responsibility. Choice A aligns with IRS guidelines as employers remain liable, requiring immediate EFTPS deposits and provider reimbursement pursuit. Choice B is incorrect because state deposits do not fulfill federal requirements. Choice C is wrong as Form 1099-NEC shifts no liability, and Choice D is invalid since Form 940 is annual and deposits are required timely. Vet providers but monitor deposits independently. Correct errors promptly to mitigate penalties and retain documentation.

Question 20

When evaluating reasonable compensation in a family-owned business, the IRS pays particular attention to:

  1. Whether family members have filed joint tax returns.
  2. Whether compensation paid to family members reflects the actual value of their services or is inflated to shift income within the family - particularly compensation to family members in lower tax brackets. (correct answer)
  3. Whether all family members receive the same compensation.
  4. Whether family members have signed employment agreements.

Explanation: Income shifting through inflated compensation to lower-bracket family members is an IRS concern - compensation must reflect actual value of services regardless of family relationships. Answer B is correct. Joint filing (A) is irrelevant. Equal compensation (C) is not required. Employment agreements (D) are good practice but don't ensure reasonableness.

Question 21

In a tax preparation engagement, a tax preparer discovers that a client’s prior-year return (prepared by another firm) likely overstated charitable contributions by $9,500 based on receipts the client now provides. The client says, “Do not bring that up; it is already filed.” What is the most appropriate response under Circular 230 guidelines?

  1. Inform the client promptly of the noncompliance and the potential consequences, and advise the client to consider filing an amended return or other corrective action. (correct answer)
  2. Correct the prior-year return by filing an amended return on the client’s behalf without discussing it further, because the practitioner has a duty to fix errors.
  3. Ignore the issue because the practitioner’s responsibilities apply only to the current-year return and not to prior-year filings prepared by others.
  4. Report the client’s prior-year overstatement to the Internal Revenue Service immediately to comply with the practitioner’s duty to report wrongdoing.

Explanation: Circular 230 Section 10.21 requires practitioners to inform clients of errors or omissions in prior returns upon discovery, without mandating direct correction by the practitioner. The key facts include discovering an overstatement in a prior-year return prepared by another firm, and the client's reluctance to address it. Option A complies with Circular 230 by promptly advising the client of noncompliance and potential corrective actions, fulfilling the duty to inform under Section 10.21. Option B is incorrect as it involves unauthorized amendment, potentially violating client consent rules in Section 10.28; Option C ignores the discovery obligation in Section 10.21; Option D breaches confidentiality under Section 10.25 without legal requirement. When discovering prior errors, practitioners must balance client advisement with non-interference in past engagements. A transferable framework is to document the advice given and consider withdrawal if continued noncompliance risks the current engagement under Section 10.29.

Question 22

For corporations, the threshold requiring estimated tax payments is:

  1. Expected tax liability of $1,000 or more.
  2. Expected tax liability of $10,000 or more.
  3. Any expected tax liability regardless of amount.
  4. Expected tax liability of 500ormore−corporationsmustmakeestimatedpaymentsinfourinstallmentsiftheyexpecttoowe500 or more - corporations must make estimated payments in four installments if they expect to owe 500ormore−corporationsmustmakeestimatedpaymentsinfourinstallmentsiftheyexpecttoowe500 or more. (correct answer)

Explanation: Corporations must make estimated payments if they expect to owe 500ormoreintax.AnswerDiscorrect.500 or more in tax. Answer D is correct. 500ormoreintax.AnswerDiscorrect.1,000 (A) is the individual threshold. $10,000 (B) is not the standard. There is a minimum threshold (C).

Question 23

A business owner is deciding between operating as a sole proprietorship or an S corporation. The primary tax advantage of the S corporation structure for an active owner-employee is:

  1. S corporation distributions beyond reasonable wages are not subject to FICA/self-employment taxes, potentially reducing the owner's payroll tax burden compared to a sole proprietorship where all net income is subject to SE tax. (correct answer)
  2. S corporations are taxed at the lower corporate rate of 21%.
  3. S corporation losses can exceed the owner's basis in the stock without limitation.
  4. S corporations are not required to file a federal tax return.

Explanation: The primary S corp advantage is FICA savings on distributions above reasonable wages. Sole proprietors pay SE tax on all net income. Answer A is correct.

Question 24

For purposes of the 6-year extended SOL, which of the following is treated as an omission from gross income?

  1. Any expense claimed that later proves to be nondeductible.
  2. A deduction that overstates the taxpayer's basis in property sold.
  3. Income reported in the wrong tax year (timing difference).
  4. Amounts received that are not disclosed as gross income in the return and are not properly described so the IRS has enough information to compute the tax - not including amounts reported on the return or in attached schedules. (correct answer)

Explanation: Under Section 6501(e)(1), the 6-year SOL applies to omissions from gross income - amounts that are not disclosed in the return or in attached schedules so that the IRS has adequate information to compute the correct tax. Routine timing errors (C) and nondeductible expense claims (A) are generally subject to the 3-year SOL because the income itself was reported. A basis overstatement (B) is more nuanced: if a taxpayer overstates basis on an asset sale and the overstatement results in a 25% or greater understatement of gross income, current law (post-2012 regulations and subsequent guidance) may treat the resulting omission as subject to the 6-year period. Answer D is the clearest example of a traditional omission from gross income - amounts received and not reported.

Question 25

A retail pharmacy with average annual gross receipts of 850,000spends850,000 spends 850,000spends9,500 in 2025 to install an accessible checkout counter and $1,000 for staff training on assisting customers with hearing impairments. The owner asks what records should be retained to support a disabled access credit claim. What documentation is needed to substantiate the tax credit claim?

  1. Invoices, contracts, and proof of payment for eligible accessibility expenditures, along with descriptions showing the expenditures were made to improve access for individuals with disabilities (correct answer)
  2. Only a statement that the business complies with the Americans with Disabilities Act, with no cost documentation
  3. A list of all customers who used the accessible counter during the year
  4. A copy of the business’s general liability insurance policy

Explanation: IRS guidelines for the disabled access credit under Section 44 require documentation of eligible expenditures and their accessibility purpose. Key facts include the pharmacy's 9,500counterand9,500 counter and 9,500counterand1,000 training costs. Option A aligns with IRS regulations needing invoices and descriptions for substantiation. Option B is incorrect as statements lack cost evidence. Options C and D are incorrect because customer lists or insurance policies are irrelevant. Professionals should retain purpose-specific records. This substantiation rule supports defensible claims during reviews.