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  • Year-End Tax Questions? Ask The Taxgirl

Year-End Tax Questions? Ask The Taxgirl

Kelly Phillips ErbNovember 17, 2015January 14, 2022

There are just a few weeks left in the calendar year. If you have a year-end tax question, you can Ask the Taxgirl®!

Yes, there are rules and caveats. What did you expect? I am, after all, an attorney. Attorneys love rules. And caveats. And chocolate. For now, we’re focusing on rules and caveats:

  • I get a lot of questions and I read every single one. Trust me: you haven’t sent the only email I’ll get today. I try to choose questions that are most helpful to the most readers. If you don’t see your question, please don’t resend it. I could be researching it. I could be saving it. I could be clueless. There’s a lot that goes into choosing what gets posted. Please be patient.
  • I rarely answer specific state or local tax questions. I just can’t. As much as I’d love to help – and I would – I just don’t know the specific property tax laws in Petaluma or the sales tax rules in Peoria.
  • I like to talk about being a tax attorney. You can ask questions about that, too. But don’t ask me for a job, an internship, a reference, a letter for your mother. I won’t answer you.
  • Keep your personally identifiable information out of your question. This is the internet, remember? If you say things like “I’m the only doctor in my town and my wife is blind,” folks may know it’s you. I’m not going to redact your questions. So use a little common sense. That means no names, no phone numbers, or email addresses in your post, and for the love of chocolate, no Social Security numbers. Just don’t.
  • Also keep in mind that I will not and cannot call the IRS and find out where your rebate checks are, why your refunds aren’t what you expected, or why your return wasn’t accepted as filed. Notwithstanding that I can’t do those things anyway without a Power of Attorney which authorizes me to, I’m not your tax attorney unless you have a representation letter from me. So please don’t ask.
  • I have a spam filter. I have to. Mostly because of, well, you know, evil spammers. My spam filter will almost always dump your email into spam if your email doesn’t have a subject. Try including a word or two in the subject to tell me what your question is about, like “mortgage interest question” or “I don’t have my 1099” – it will help make sure that the emails end up where they need to be. Make sure that you send it to the right address (askthetaxgirl@taxgirl.com). You can also post on Facebook (Facebook.com/taxgirl), Tumblr (taxgirl.tumblr.com), or on Twitter (@taxgirl) but remember that your information – including your name and question – will be visible to others so use caution.
  • Believe it or not, I didn’t grow up under a rock. I’ve been at this blogging thing for a bit. So if you think you’re being clever by sending your advertisement/promotion/tax treatise/election propaganda wrapped up in the guise of a question, you’re not. Don’t pitch me using AskTheTaxgirl. Don’t try to sell me stuff. It’s annoying. And rude.
  • If you’re actually sitting in an audit or jail, I can’t stress enough how much you need to put down the computer and find yourself a good tax professional right now. Run, do not walk, to the phones and call someone to help you.
  • I reserve the right to add more rules and caveats as we go along, so check back often.

Thanks for reading!

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Kelly Phillips Erb
Kelly Phillips Erb is a tax attorney, tax writer, and podcaster.
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