Income Tax Fundamentals 2020
38th Edition
ISBN: 9780357391129
Author: WHITTENBURG
Publisher: Cengage
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Question
thumb_up100%
Chapter 6, Problem 2P
To determine
Introduction:A taxpayer is required to report taxable income using the method of accounting regularly used by the taxpayer for maintaining records and the method that clearly reflects the taxpayer’s income. The recognized methods are accrual method, cash receipt method and hybrid method of accounting.
The income from business in the calendar year.
Expert Solution & Answer
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionStudents have asked these similar questions
Yolanda is a cash basis taxpayer with the following transactions during the year:
Cash received from sales of products $66,000
Cash paid for expenses (except rent and interest) 40,000
Rent prepaid on a leased building for 18 months 45,000 beginning December 1
Prepaid interest on a bank loan, paid on 5,000 December 31 for the next 3 months
Calculate Yolanda’s income from her business for this calendar year.
Sales income $_____________
Expenses:
Other than rent and interest $______________
Rent $_____________________
Interest $__________________
Net income $_______________
Yolanda is a cash basis taxpayer with the following tranasctions during the year:
Cash received from sales of products $70,000
Cash paid for expenses (except rent and interest) $40,000
Rent prepaid on a leased building for 18 monts beginning December 1 $48,600
Prepaid interest on a bank loan, paid on December 31 for the next 3 months 5,000
Calculate Yolanda's income from her business for this calendar year.
Yolanda is a cash basis taxpayer with the following transactions during the year:
Cash received from sale of products
$70,000
Cash paid for expenses (except rent and interest)
40,000
Rent prepaid on a leased building for 18 months beginning December 1
48,600
Prepaid interest on a bank loan, paid on December 31 for the next 3 months
5,000
Calculate Yolanda's income from her business for this calendar year.
If an amount is zero, enter "0". If required, in your computations round any division to five decimal places and round final answers to the nearest dollar.
Sales income
Expenses:
Other than rent and interest
Rent
Interest
Net income
please answer do not image format
Chapter 6 Solutions
Income Tax Fundamentals 2020
Ch. 6 - E Corporation is a subchapter S corporation owned...Ch. 6 - Income and loss from which of the following...Ch. 6 - Which of the following entities is likely to have...Ch. 6 - Which of the following is an acceptable method of...Ch. 6 - Which of the following entities is required to...Ch. 6 - Prob. 6MCQCh. 6 - B Corporation, a calendar year-end, accrual basis...Ch. 6 - Prob. 8MCQCh. 6 - Prob. 9MCQCh. 6 - Prob. 10MCQ
Ch. 6 - Prob. 11MCQCh. 6 - Prob. 12MCQCh. 6 - For 2019, Roberta is a self-employed truck driver...Ch. 6 - Prob. 14MCQCh. 6 - Prob. 15MCQCh. 6 - Which of the following employees would not be...Ch. 6 - Prob. 17MCQCh. 6 - Prob. 18MCQCh. 6 - Prob. 19MCQCh. 6 - Christine and Doug are married. In 2019, Christine...Ch. 6 - Prob. 1PCh. 6 - Prob. 2PCh. 6 - Geraldine is an accrual basis taxpayer who has the...Ch. 6 - Prob. 4PCh. 6 - Prob. 5PCh. 6 - Prob. 7PCh. 6 - Prob. 8PCh. 6 - Refer to the previous problem 8. If Stan's parents...Ch. 6 - Prob. 10PCh. 6 - Prob. 11PCh. 6 - Otto and Monica are married taxpayers who file a...Ch. 6 - Prob. 13PCh. 6 - Prob. 14PCh. 6 - Prob. 15PCh. 6 - Prob. 16PCh. 6 - Sally hires a maid to work in her home for $280...Ch. 6 - Prob. 18PCh. 6 - Rachel is single and has wages of $150,000 and...Ch. 6 - Married taxpayers Otto and Ruth are both...
Knowledge Booster
Similar questions
- Yolanda is a cash basis taxpayer with the following transactions during the year: Cash received from sale of products $66,000 Cash paid for expenses (except rent and interest) 40,000 Rent prepaid on a leased building for 18 months beginning December 1 45,000 Prepaid interest on a bank loan, paid on December 31 for the next 3 months 5,000 Calculate Yolanda's income from her business for this calendar year. If an amount is zero, enter "0". If required, in your computations round any division to five decimal places and round final answers to the nearest dollar. Sales income $ Expenses: Other than rent and interest Rent Interest Net income $arrow_forwardtaxpayer who has the following transactions during the current calendar tax year: Accrued business income (except rent) $220,000 Accrued business expenses (except rent) 170,000 Rental income on a building leased for the next 6 months, received on December 1 21,000 Prepaid rent expense for 6 months, paid on December 1 9,000 Calculate Geraldine's net income from her business for the current year. Income: Other than rental $ Rental Expenses: Other than rental Rental Net income $arrow_forwardDennis receives $11,100 during the current tax year from Blanca for some office space in Anaheim, California. The rent covers eight months, from August 1 of the current year to March 31 of the following year. The amount also includes a security deposit of $1,500. How much should Dennis report as rental income in the current tax year? a. $1,200. b. $6,000. c. $9,600. d. $11,100.arrow_forward
- Anna has the following income for the quarter: a. Professional income P80,000 b. Income from her business P30,000 c. Compensation income P40,000 d. Interest income from bank deposit P10,000. 1. What amount of income will Anna report in her quarterly income tax return? a. P80,000 b. P110,000 c. P120,000 d. P150,000 2. If Anna, opted to use 8% rate, how much is her income tax due in her quarterly ITR? a. P6,400 b. P8,800 c. P9,600 d. P12,000arrow_forward! Required information [The following information applies to the questions displayed below.] Christopher is a self-employed cash-method, calendar-year taxpayer, and he made the following cash payments related to his business this year. Calculate the after-tax cost of each payment assuming Christopher has a 37 percent marginal tax rate. b. $800 of interest on a short-term loan incurred in September and repaid in November. Half of the loan proceeds was used immediately to pay salaries and the other half was invested in municipal bonds until November. After-tax costarrow_forwardRequired information [The following information applies to the questions displayed below.] Christopher is a self-employed cash-method, calendar-year taxpayer, and he made the following cash payments related to his business this year. Calculate the after-tax cost of each payment assuming Christopher has a 37 percent marginal tax rate. c. $600 for office supplies in May of this year. He used half of the supplies this year and he will use the remaining half by February of next year. After-tax costarrow_forward
- Required information [The following information applies to the questions displayed below.] Rebecca is a calendar-year taxpayer who operates a business. She made the following business-related expenditures in December of this year. Indicate the amount of these payments that she may deduct this year under both the cash method of accounting and the accrual method of accounting. (Leave no answers blank. Enter zero if applicable.) d. $1,500 for interest on a short-term bank loan relating to the period from November 1 of this year, through March 31 of next year. Deductible Amount Cash method Accrual method $ 0arrow_forwardDorothie paid the following amounts during the current year: Interest on her home mortgage (pre-12/16/17) $9,250 Service charges on her checking account 48 Credit card interest 168 Auto loan interest 675 Interest from a home equity line of credit (HELOC) 2,300 Interest from a loan used to purchase stock 1,600 Credit investigation fee for loan 75 Dorothie's residence has a fair market value of $250,000. The mortgage is secured by the home at the time of purchase and has a balance of $180,000. Dorothie used the same home to secure her HELOC with a balance of $50,000. Dorothie used the proceeds of her HELOC to pay for college and to buy a new car. Dorothie has $1,000 of net investment income. Compute Dorothie's interest deduction in the following scenarios: a. Calculate Dorothie's interest deduction (on Schedule A) for 2021. b. Same as part a, and Dorothie used the HELOC proceeds to add a new bedroom to her home. c. Same as part a, but Dorothie's home is valued at $1,200,000 and her…arrow_forwardElizabeth makes the following interest-free loans during the year. Assume that tax avoidance is not a principal purpose of any of the loans. The relevant Federal rate is 5% and that the loans were outstanding for the last six months of the year. Borrower's Net Borrower Amount Investment Income Purpose of Loan Richard $5,000 $800 Gift Woody $8,000 $600 Stock purchase Irene $105,000 $0 Purchase principal residence By how much do each of these loans increase Elizabeth's gross income? If an amount is zero, enter "0". a. Richard is not subject to the imputed interest rules because the $10,000 gift loan exception does apply. Elizabeth's gross income from the loan is $ 0 b. The $10,000 exception does not income producing apply to the loan to Woody because the proceeds were used to purchase assets. Although the $100,000 exception applies to this loan, the amount of imputed interest is 1,000 X.Incorrect is $ 0 ✓. c. None of the exceptions apply gross income from the loan is $ to the loan to…arrow_forward
- Isla runs a bicycle shop in Wellington. During the tax year ending 30 June 2021, her records indicate: Receipts: 135,000 Bicycle Sales 35,000 Spare parts and accessory sales 15,000 Compensation receipt (see note A) 250,000 Proceeds for sale of land (see note B) 1,000 Net interest received from an overseas interest-bearing term deposit (see note C) 5,000 Exempt Income 6,000 Cash dividend income (see note D) 25,000 Net salary and wages (see note E) Payments: 55,000 Purchases of bicycles, spare parts and accessories (see note F) 12,000 Materials (see note G) 39,000 Utilities and rent for the business premises 3,000 Repairs to storage room 1,000 Donation to Oxfam (Deductible gift recipient) ADDITIONAL INFORMATION: (A) - Compensation for damaged trading stock after a storage room was broken into (B) - Isla sold some land purchased in 1984 for $85,000. In 2002 Isla spent $15,000 building new fences for 85% of the boundary after a fire damaged the…arrow_forwardPERSONAL TAXES Mary Jarvis is a single individual who is working on filing her tax return for the previous year. She has assembled the following relevant information: She received $82,000 in salary. She received $12,000 of dividend income. She received $5,000 of interest income on Home Depot bonds. She received $22,000 from the sale of Disney stock that was purchased 2 years prior to the sale at a cost of $9,000. She received $10,000 from the sale of Google stock that was purchased 6 months prior to the sale at a cost of $7,500. Mary only has allowable itemized deductions of $7,500, so she will take the standard deduction of $12,000. The standard deduction is subtracted from her gross income from her gross income to determine her taxable income. Assume that her tax rates are based on the tax tables presented in the chapter. What is Mary’s federal tax liability? What is her marginal tax rate? What is her average tax rate?arrow_forwardPERSONAL TAXES Mary Jarvis is a single individual who is working on filing her tax return for the previous year. She has assembled the following relevant information: She received $82,000 in salary. She received $12,000 of dividend income. She received $5,000 of interest income on Home Depot bonds. She received $22,000 from the sale of Disney stock that was purchased 2 years prior to the sale at a cost of $9,000. She received $10,000 from the sale of Google stock that was purchased 6 months prior to the sale at a cost of $7,500. Mary only has allowable itemized deductions of $7,500, so she will take the standard deduction of $12,400. The standard deduction is subtracted from her gross income to determine her taxable income. Assume that her tax rates are based on the tax tables presented in the chapter. What is Mary’s federal tax liability? What is her marginal tax rate? What is her average tax rate?arrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- Individual Income TaxesAccountingISBN:9780357109731Author:HoffmanPublisher:CENGAGE LEARNING - CONSIGNMENT
Individual Income Taxes
Accounting
ISBN:9780357109731
Author:Hoffman
Publisher:CENGAGE LEARNING - CONSIGNMENT