Form 1023 must now be filed electronically
The IRS announced that Form 1023, Application for Recognition of Exemption Under Section 501(c)(3), must now be submitted electronically.
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The IRS announced that Form 1023, Application for Recognition of Exemption Under Section 501(c)(3), must now be submitted electronically.
The IRS announced that Form 1023, Application for Recognition of Exemption Under Section 501(c)(3), must now be submitted electronically.
This item reviews how regulations, case law, and IRS guidance address the issue of whether supporting organizations can make grants to other public charities that are not their supported organizations.
EDCs should be aware of both the regulatory foundation for an exemption and the various IRS authorities on EDCs.
The IRS issued new procedures for contributions to charitable organizations, including rules for when donors can rely on the information about an organization’s tax-exempt status on the IRS database Tax Exempt Organization Search.
The 2018 revision to Form 1023-EZ includes a new requirement that organizations describe to the IRS their mission or most significant activities.
The streamlined application for tax-exempt status will ask organizations to describe their mission and activities for the first time.
This article describes the requirements for an organization to meet Sec. 115(1).
Sec. 501(c)(3) organizations that engage in fee-for-service activities need to consider whether a given activity furthers or is “substantially related” to an exempt purpose.
Social welfare benefit organizations are now required to notify the Internal Revenue Service of their formation and intent to operate under Sec. 501(c)(4).
The IRS is cutting the application fee small organizations must pay when applying for tax-exempt status.
Social welfare benefit organizations are now required to notify the Internal Revenue Service of their formation and intent to operate under Sec. 501(c)(4).
The regulations broaden the types of investments by private foundations that qualify as program-related investments that do not jeopardize the carrying out of a private foundation’s exempt purposes.
Organizations should review new proposed regulations and 2015 final regulations as a reminder of what is required to obtain or maintain public charity status.
The court denied the IRS’s petition to avoid having to disclose information about other organizations that were on the IRS’s controversial “be on the lookout” list of organizations.
Complications may arise when the parent of a large, multientity system applies for recognition of tax-exempt status as a Sec. 501(c)(3) public charity.
The fee to use the popular Form 1023-EZ will be lowered, starting July 1.
The first changes to these rules since 1972 add many examples involving programs in foreign countries.
To give itself time to issue governing regulations, the IRS is delaying implementation of Sec. 501(c)(4) requirements.
A federal appeals court ordered the IRS to comply with a lower court’s order that it hand over the names of organizations that had been on its “Be on the lookout” list when it was mishandling applications for tax-exempt status.
DEDUCTIONS
Business meal deductions after the TCJA
This article discusses the history of the deduction of business meal expenses and the new rules under the TCJA and the regulations and provides a framework for documenting and substantiating the deduction.
TAX RELIEF
Quirks spurred by COVID-19 tax relief
This article discusses some procedural and administrative quirks that have emerged with the new tax legislative, regulatory, and procedural guidance related to COVID-19.