A Tax Credit on 2006  Forms For Excise Taxes on Phone Calls-Truth! 

Summary of the eRumor:  
The IRS is offering a tax credit on 2006 tax  forms for money paid in excise 
taxes on telephone calls.     
The  Truth:  
The  eRumor is long, detailed, and complicated but it is true that on  your 
tax forms for the 2006 tax year in the U.S. you can claim a tax  credit because 
of a change in the collection of Federal excise taxes  on telephone calls.  
This is because of federal court decisions  ruling that the tax no longer 
applies to long distance calls the way  they are billed today. It applies to 
land-line, cellular, and even  Internet calls.

Here are some of the  details:

-Excise taxes on  long-distance telephone service was halted beginning August 
1,  2006.

-Refunds are being offered to  individuals, businesses, and non-profit 
organizations for excise  taxes paid on long-distance service between February 
28, 
2003 and  August 1, 2006.

-If you want to go  to the trouble of actually assembling all the telephone 
bills for  that period, you can do it and get a refund on the actual taxes you  
paid, but for convenience there is a simpler way to do  it.
If you claim one exemption, the refund is  $30
If you claim two exemptions, the refund is  $40
If you claim three exemptions, the refund is  $50
If you claim four exemptions or more, the refund is  $60.

-You do not need to itemize  deductions.  The tax credit will be offered on 
all individual  tax forms for 2006 taxes.

-For  businesses and non-profits, the IRS has come up with a formula for a  
refund.  Check with your tax preparer for  details.

Historically, the long-distance excise tax was based  on the time and 
distance of a call.  But in the 1990s more  telephone companies started 
charging for 
long-distance calls without  regard to distance and court challenges argued 
that the tax should  not longer be levied.

A  real example of the eRumor as it has appeared on the  Internet:  

When it comes time to prepare and file your 2006 tax  return, make sure you 
do not overlook the federal excise tax refund  credit. You claim the credit on 
line 71 of your form 1040. A similar  line will be available if you file the 
short form 1040A. If you have  family or friends who no longer file a tax 
return AND they have  their own land phone in their home and have been paying a 
phone bill  for years, make sure they know about this form 1040EZ-T. What is  
this all about? Well the federal excise tax has been charge to you  on your 
phone 
bill for years. It is an old tax that was assessed on  your toll calls based 
on how far the call was being made and how  much time you talked on that call 
when phone companies began to  offer flat fee phone service, challenges to the 
excise tax ended up  in federal courts in several districts of the country. 
The  challenges pointed out that flat fee/rate phone service had nothing  to do 
with the distance and the length of the phone call. Therefore,  the excise 
tax should/could not be assessed. The IRS has now  conceded this argument. 
Phone 
companies have been given notice to  stop assessing the federal excise tax as 
of Aug 30, 2006. You will  most likely see the tax on your September cutoff 
statement, but it  should NOT be on your October bill. But the challengers of 
the old  law also demanded restitution. So the IRS has announced tat a one  
time credit will be available when you and I file our 2006 tax  return as I 
explained above. However, the IRS also established  limits on how BIG a credit 
you 
can get. He re how it works. If you  file your return as a single person with 
just you as a dependent,  you get to claim a $30 credit on line 71 of your 
1040. If you file  with a child or a parent as your dependent, you claim $40. 
If 
you  file your return as a married couple with no children, you claim  $40. If 
you file as married with children, you claim $50 if one  child, $60 if two 
children. In all cases, the most you get to claim  is $60 - UNLESS you have all 
your phone bills starting AFTER Feb 28,  2003 through July 31, 2006 (do not 
use any bills starting Aug 1,  2006.), then you can add up the ACTUAL TAX AS IT 
APPEARS ON YOUR  BILLS AND CLAIM THAT FOR A CREDIT. Now if you have your 
actual phone  bills and come up with an ACTUAL TAX AMOUNT, you cannot use line 
71  
on your tax return. You have to complete a special form number 8913  and 
attach it to your tax return. Individuals using the special from  1040EZ-T will 
have to attach this form 8913 also. One final point -  this credit is a 
refundable credit. That means you get this money,  no matter how your tax 
return works 
out. If you would end up owing  the IRS a balance, the refund will reduce that 
balance you owe. If  you end up getting a refund, the credit will be added 
and you get a  bigger refund by that $30 to $60, depending on how many 
dependents  are on your return. Feel free to pass this on or make copies for  
family 
and friends who do not have computers.
A tax refund on 2006 forms for excise tax on  long-distance phone calls-Truth!
_http://www.truthorfiction.com/rumors/e/exisetax.htm_ 
(http://www.truthorfiction.com/rumors/e/exisetax.htm) 
 
 
Urban Legends Reference Pages: 2006 Federal Excise  Tax Credit
_http://www.snopes.com/business/taxes/excise.asp_ 
(http://www.snopes.com/business/taxes/excise.asp) 
 
 
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