As the coronavirus pandemic grinds on, clients’ questions about their personal finances are starting to get frantic. What to tell them? According to the tax practitioners we spoke with, it depends on your circumstances, patience, and in some cases, a lot of hope from everybody involved.
First off: Advisors or not?
Yet, “For many, we’re their only money counselor,” said Kerry Freeman, an EA at Freeman Income Tax Service in Anthem, Arizona. “We’re the only people they see yearly, and they share everything with us.”
Tapping nest eggs
Ditto on the retirement account questions for Jeffrey Gentner, an EA in Amherst, New York. “Fortunately, a vast majority of my clients are professionals or retired. They haven’t been affected during the past six months like others who’ve been laid off,” he said.
Stimulating
“Small businesses are asking about [Paycheck Protection Program] loans and [Economic Injury Disaster Loans] and how to spend their cash flow on equipment or savings,” Freeman said. “I also have those small businesses that often do work well in advance and are not paid till the completion of the service. One such client assisted in corporate meeting events — all now cancelled for 2020, and most of 2021 have all been canceled. Working that far ahead causes a feast-or-famine work environment. We’re talking about how to change these billing models and get some funding up front.”
“Still lots of questions regarding the PPP and EIDL loans,” said Terri Ryman, an EA at Southwest Tax & Accounting in Elkhart, Kansas. “I’ve helped clients get these loans, and in some cases, they’re a real life-saver.”
Not knowing the basics
Creative advice
“I did give some advice to hard-up clients this filing season. For a client whose 2019 successful business was a bust in 2020 due to shelter-in-place, I suggested that she withdraw enough funds from her SEP to make a 2019 SEP contribution by Oct. 15,” Foss said. “She needed the deduction and qualified to treat the withdrawal as a coronavirus-related distribution that she could pay back over three years. I hate to recommend early distributions from a retirement plan, but this was a case where I felt her business could come back and she could return the money before the three years elapsed.”
Patience and lemonade
“I called my car insurer and asked for a COVID break,” Nemeth added, “and got [a] 15 percent reduction for the next three months just by asking.”
Accentuate the positive
New IRS policy allows taxpayers with existing installment agreements to roll over any 2019 balance due to reinstate their installment agreements, Nemeth added. “Smart business,” he said, “since the IRS will collect more money while utilizing fewer resources.”