Proposed Collection; Comment Request for Regulation Project, 34698-34700 [2018-15627]
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34698
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 140 / Friday, July 20, 2018 / Notices
requiring a Recipient to have a legally
binding agreement with an entity that
has a mortgage lending license is often
not feasible. In this scenario, it is more
reliable to have the Recipient provide
the mortgage financing directly to the
Low-Income Families. The CDFI Fund
has determined that for the purpose of
evidencing Commitment to a Project for
Purchase and achieving Project
Completion for Purchase, a Recipient’s
entire portfolio of Homeownership
financed and/or supported with its CMF
Award will be deemed a Project.
For the above stated reasons, the CDFI
Fund is issuing a general waiver herein
of 12 CFR 1807.501(b) in cases where
the CMF Award Recipient serves in the
role as the developer for the Project or
is financing and/or supporting a Project
for Purchase and the Project is not
owned, sponsored, or being developed
by a limited partnership or limited
liability company or other separate
entity. Additionally, the CDFI Fund is
issuing a general waiver herein of 12
CFR 1807.501(b) in cases where the
Recipient is committing its CMF Award
to a Loan Loss Reserve made by the
Recipient, where the reserve is not
pledged to a third party or separate
entity affiliated with the Recipient, but
is used to reserve against losses from
loans directly made by the Recipient.
In lieu of a legally binding written
agreement, such Recipients will be able
to evidence a Commitment via a Board
of Director’s resolution for an identified
Project. The resolution will be required
to be in the form and substance
acceptable to the CDFI Fund in its sole
discretion. The CDFI Fund has
determined that providing this waiver
does not adversely affect the
achievement of the purposes of HERA.
Authority: Pub. L. 110–289. 12 U.S.C.
4701, 12 CFR part 1805, 12 CFR part 1807,
12 CFR part 1815, 12 U.S.C. 4502.
Mary Ann Donovan,
Director, Community Development Financial
Institutions Fund.
[FR Doc. 2018–15473 Filed 7–19–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810–70–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
daltland on DSKBBV9HB2PROD with NOTICES
Internal Revenue Service
Proposed Collection; Comment
Request for Regulation Project
Internal Revenue Service (IRS),
Treasury.
ACTION: Notice and request for
comments.
AGENCY:
The Internal Revenue Service,
as part of its continuing effort to reduce
SUMMARY:
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18:06 Jul 19, 2018
Jkt 244001
paperwork and respondent burden,
invites the general public and other
Federal agencies to take this
opportunity to comment on continuing
information collections, as required by
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995.
The IRS is soliciting comments on forms
used by individual taxpayers: Comment
Request focused on Form 1040 and
Schedules 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, the
discontinuance of 1040A and 1040EZ
and revised Form W–4. The remainder
of the collection including Schedules A,
B, C, C–EZ, D, E, EIC, F, H, J, R, and SE,
Form 1040NR, Form 1040NR–EZ, Form
1040X, and all attachments to these
forms will be addressed on the next
submission of the information
collection.
DATES: Comments should be received on
or before September 18, 2018 to be
assured of consideration.
ADDRESSES: Taxpayers may submit
comments electronically via the Federal
eRulemaking Portal at
www.regulations.gov (type IRS–2018–
0015 in the search field on the
regulation.gov homepage to find this
notice and submit comments). All
recommendations for guidance
submitted by the public in response to
this notice will be available for public
inspection and copying in their entirety.
Direct all written comments to Laurie
Brimmer, Internal Revenue Service, at
(202) 317–5756, Room 6529, 1111
Constitution Avenue NW, Washington,
DC 20224.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Requests for additional information or
copies of the form should be directed to
Kerry Dennis at Internal Revenue
Service, at (202) 317–5751 Room 6529,
1111 Constitution Avenue NW,
Washington, DC 20224, or through the
internet, at omb.unit@irs.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
PRA Approval of Forms Used by
Individual Taxpayers
Under the PRA, OMB assigns a
control number to each ’’collection of
information’’ that it reviews and
approves for use by an agency. The PRA
also requires agencies to estimate the
burden for each collection of
information. Burden estimates for each
control number are displayed in (1) PRA
notices that accompany collections of
information, (2) Federal Register notices
such as this one, and (3) OMB’s
database of approved information
collections.
Taxpayer Burden Model
The IRS uses the Individual Taxpayer
Burden Model (ITBM) to estimate the
burden experienced by individual
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taxpayers when complying with Federal
tax laws. The model was developed
using a survey of tax year 2015
individual taxpayers that was fielded in
2016 and 2017. The approach to
measuring burden focuses on the
characteristics and activities undertaken
by individual taxpayers in meeting their
tax return filing obligations.
Burden is defined as the time and outof-pocket costs incurred by taxpayers in
complying with the Federal tax system.
Out-of-pocket costs include any
expenses incurred by taxpayers to
prepare and submit their tax returns.
Examples include tax return preparation
fees, the purchase price of tax
preparation software, submission fees,
photocopying costs, postage, and phone
calls (if not toll-free).
The methodology distinguishes
among preparation method, taxpayer
activities, taxpayer type, filing method,
and income level. Indicators of tax law
and administrative complexity, as
reflected in the tax forms and
instructions, are incorporated into the
model.
Preparation methods reflected in the
model are as follows:
• Self-prepared without software,
• Self-prepared with software, and
• Use of a paid preparer or tax
professional.
Types of taxpayer activities reflected
in the model are as follows:
• Recordkeeping,
• Tax planning,
• Gathering tax materials,
• Use of services (IRS and other),
• Form completion, and
• Form submission.
Taxpayer Burden Estimates
Summary level results from fiscal year
2018 using this methodology are
presented below. The data shown were
the best forward-looking estimates
available for income tax returns filed for
tax year 2017.
The burden estimates were based on
tax year 2017 statutory requirements as
of January 31, 2018 for taxpayers filing
a tax year 2017 Form 1040, 1040A, or
1040EZ tax return. Time spent and outof-pocket costs are presented separately.
Time burden is broken out by taxpayer
activity, with record keeping
representing the largest component.
Out-of-pocket costs include any
expenses incurred by taxpayers to
prepare and submit their tax returns.
Examples include tax return preparation
and submission fees, postage and
photocopying costs, and tax preparation
software costs.
Reported time and cost burdens are
national averages and do not necessarily
reflect a ‘‘typical’’ case. Most taxpayers
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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 140 / Friday, July 20, 2018 / Notices
experience lower than average burden,
with taxpayer burden varying
considerably by taxpayer type. For
instance, the estimated average time
burden for all taxpayers filing a tax year
2017 Form 1040, 1040A, or 1040EZ is
12 hours, with an average cost of $210
per return. This average includes all
associated forms and schedules, across
all preparation methods and taxpayer
activities. The average burden for
taxpayers filing a tax year 2017 Form
1040 is about 15 hours and $270; the
average burden for taxpayers filing a tax
year 2017 Form 1040A is about 7 hours
and $90; and the average for a tax year
2017 Form 1040EZ filers is about 5
hours and $40.
Within each of these estimates there
is significant variation in taxpayer
activity. For example, tax year 2017
non-business taxpayers are expected to
have an average burden of about 8 hours
and $120, while tax year 2017 business
taxpayers are expected to have an
average burden of about 21 hours and
$410. Similarly, tax preparation fees and
other out-of-pocket costs vary
extensively depending on the tax
situation of the taxpayer, the type of
software or professional preparer used,
and the geographic location.
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Proposed PRA Submission to OMB
Title: U.S. Individual Income Tax
Return.
OMB Number: 1545–0074.
Form Numbers: Form 1040 and
Schedules 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, the
discontinuance of 1040A and 1040EZ
and revised Form W–4.
Abstract: These forms are used by
individuals to report their income tax
liability. The data is used to verify that
the items reported on the forms are
correct, and also for general statistical
use.
Current Actions:
2018 Draft Form 1040
The revised 2018 Form 1040 is in
draft form and subject to change. The
updated form, full set of draft
instructions, and updated burden and
cost estimates will be included in the
30day FRN issued by Treasury.
Following the most expansive tax law
changes in 30 years, Treasury asked the
IRS to look at ways to improve the 1040
filing experience. In response, the IRS
took a strategic look at the family of
1040 forms with a goal of simplifying
the experience for taxpayers and our
partners in the tax industry. The 2018
draft Form 1040 replaces the current
Form 1040 as well as the Form 1040A
and the Form 1040EZ. The 2018 draft
Form 1040 uses a ‘‘building block’’
approach, which can be supplemented
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with additional schedules as needed.
The 2018 draft Form 1040 goes from the
current 79 lines to somewhere around
23 lines. Taxpayers with straightforward
tax situations would only need to file
this new 1040 with no additional
schedules. The changes effective in
2018 and affecting the tax returns
taxpayers will file in 2019 include (but
are not limited to);
The Filing Status section was
simplified. The filing status is ‘‘Single’’
if only one name is entered; ‘‘Married
filing jointly’’ if two are entered and no
filing status box is checked.
Information for the standard
deduction was moved below the name
entry spaces.
The checkbox for ‘‘Full-year health
care coverage’’ was moved to the first
page.
The ‘‘Exemptions’’ section was
renamed ‘‘Dependents.’’ Taxpayers will
continue to list individuals for whom
they claim tax benefits associated with
an exemption. Only two dependents can
be listed on the form itself. Just as in
2017, dependents who cannot be listed
on the form must be identified in an
attached statement.
The entry spaces for subtotaling
exemptions were removed; a new
checkbox was added for dependents
who qualify for the credit for other
dependents.
The signature block was moved. An
entry space was added for the spouse’s
identity protection PIN in lieu of the
taxpayer’s daytime phone number. The
‘‘Paid Preparers’’ section was shortened
and a third-party designee box was
added. Taxpayers with third-party
designees or a foreign address must
attach Schedule 6.
Line 4 (IRAs, pensions and annuities)
combined 2017 Form 1040, lines 15 and
16.
Line 6 is a subtotal from Schedule 1,
which includes less common types of
income, as well as any adjustments to
income.
Line 9 was added for the qualified
business income deduction under
section 199A.
Line 11 is the chapter 1 tax.
Taxpayers with less common situations
will enter an amount from Schedule 2,
which generally includes lines 44
through 47 of the 2017 Form 1040.
Line 12 is the child tax credit and/or
credit for other dependents. Taxpayers
with other nonrefundable credits, will
enter a subtotal from Schedule 3, which
generally includes lines 48 through 55
of the 2017 Form 1040.
Line 14 is a subtotal from Schedule 4,
which generally includes the items from
the ‘‘Other Taxes’’ section of the 2017
Form 1040.
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34699
Line 17 is refundable credits and
some payments. The earned income
credit, additional child tax credit, and
American opportunity tax credit remain
on the form. Taxpayers with other
credits and payments will enter an
amount from Schedule 5, which
generally includes items from the
‘‘Payments’’ section of the 2017 Form
1040. Treasury’s Office of Tax Analysis
projects that roughly 25% of projected
2018 individual income tax filers would
be able to file the new form without any
attachments (meaning any of the six
new schedules or any existing forms or
schedules that are retained). For
context, in Tax Year 2015, 16% of 1040
series returns filed were Form 1040–EZ.
2019 Draft Form W–4
The Form W–4 was changed for 2019
as a result of PL 115–97 (Tax Reform
Act of 2017), especially section 11041,
which reduced the personal exemption
amount to zero and modified the statute
related to withholding of tax from
wages. Even though most tax changes
were effective for tax year 2018, PL 115–
97 allowed these withholding changes
to be delayed until 2019.
The Form W–4 is modified to remove
the reliance on the personal exemption
and discrete number of withholding
allowances. The Form W–4 has separate
instructions, which provide
comprehensive guidance for employees
and employers. For ease of use in
simple situations, a summary version of
the instructions has been added to the
back of the 2019 W–4 form for quick
reference. New lines were added to the
W–4 in order to provide more accurate
withholding amounts.
The Form W–4 provides more
accurate withholding by addressing
credits, other income, deductions and a
graduated tax rate structure directly,
rather than converting these items to a
discrete number of withholding
allowances tied to the personal
exemption amount under prior law. The
Form W–4 reduces complexity for
employees by allowing them to directly
report tax credits and adjustments to
income, rather than using worksheets to
convert these items to withholding
allowances.
Burden Impact Evaluation
A thorough analysis of the impact of
the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) of
2017 on the burden faced by individual
taxpayers in complying with the Federal
tax law is still underway but
preliminary results indicate that the
overall impact of the law on individuals
will lower taxpayer burden. Currently,
the average time to complete a tax year
2018 individual tax return is estimated
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to decrease by 4% to 7% and the
average out-of-pocket costs are
estimated to decrease 1% to 3%. A more
detailed evaluation of the impact of
specific provisions will be provided
soon.
The expected impact of TCJA
provisions by statutory and
discretionary change are provided
below:
Statutory Changes—Overall, the
statutory changes are expected to lead to
an overall decrease in burden. There are
three major changes that are expected to
have a material impact on burden in the
TCJA.
1. The increase in the standard
deduction and the limitation on the
Schedule A tax deduction, taken
together, are the most substantial
changes introduced in the TCJA. These
changes are expected to decrease the
number of Schedule A filers from 46
million to 20 million. The 26 million
drop in Schedule A filings is expected
to lead to a material decrease in burden.
2. The change in thresholds on the
Form 6251 for alternative minimum tax
is expected to lead to a significant
decrease in Form 6251 filings, from 10
million to 1 million or less. This change
should also lead to a material drop in
burden.
3. The new Sec 199A Deduction for
qualified business income is expected to
increase burden for many filers who
report sole proprietor and passthrough
income. The deduction is also expected
to increase the number of filers with
sole proprietors and passthrough
income which should increase burden.
Overall, the decreases in burden from
the change in Schedule A and Form
6251 filings are expected to more than
offset the increase burden from the Sec
199A Deduction.
IRS Discretionary Changes—The
largest discretionary change in place for
tax year 2018 is the redesign of the Form
1040 and the discontinuance of Forms
1040A, and 1040EZ. Modest decreases
in burden are expected for some
taxpayers who prepare by hand without
using a paid preparer or tax software but
overall, the transition from Forms 1040,
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1040A, and 1040EZ to the shortened
Form 1040 is not expected to have a
material impact on the burden
individual taxpayers face.
Approximately 95% of individual
taxpayers use a paid preparer or tax
software to complete their tax return
and almost 90% of individual taxpayers
e-file. Currently, these taxpayers using
assisted methods interact with either a
tax software interface or a paid prepare
so they have limited interaction with
the tax forms themselves. There is very
little expectation for their experience to
change so the form redesign is not
expected to have a material impact on
them.
The impact of the Form 1040 redesign
on the approximately 5% of individual
taxpayers who complete their taxes by
hand without using a paid preparer or
software is not expected to have a
material impact on overall filing burden.
The current expectation is that some
taxpayers who prepare unassisted will
have marginally lower burden while
others will have marginally higher
burden. For example, taxpayers who
previously filed a Form 1040EZ may
experience slightly more burden
because they need to evaluate more
information than before while a segment
of taxpayers who previously filed the
Form 1040 and 1040A may experience
slightly less burden because they need
to evaluate less information than before.
In addition, some filers are expected to
experience a reduction in burden from
the separation of the components of the
Form 1040 onto the new set of
schedules while some are not. Overall,
the minor increases and decreases that
this population experiences are
expected to mostly offset and lead to an
immaterial change in burden.
Type of Review: Revision of currently
approved collections.
Affected Public: Individuals or
households.
Estimated Number of Respondents:
157,800,000.
Total Estimated Time: 1.970 billion
hours (1,970,000,000 hours).
Estimated Time per Respondent:
12.48 hours.
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Total Estimated Out-of-Pocket Costs:
$32.315 billion ($32,315,000,000).
Estimated Out-of-Pocket Cost per
Respondent: $205.
Total Estimated Monetized Burden:
$63.373 billion ($63,373,000,000).
Estimated Monetized Burden per
Respondent: $402.
The following paragraph applies to all
of the collections of information covered
by this notice.
An agency may not conduct or
sponsor, and a person is not required to
respond to, a collection of information
unless the collection of information
displays a valid OMB control number.
Books or records relating to a collection
of information must be retained as long
as their contents may become material
in the administration of any internal
revenue law. Generally, tax returns and
tax return information are confidential,
as required by 26 U.S.C. 6103.
Request for Comments: Comments
submitted in response to this notice will
be summarized and/or included in the
request for OMB approval. All
comments will become a matter of
public record. Comments are invited on:
(a) Whether the collection of
information is necessary for the proper
performance of the functions of the
agency, including whether the
information shall have practical utility;
(b) the accuracy of the agency’s estimate
of the burden of the collection of
information; (c) ways to enhance the
quality, utility, and clarity of the
information to be collected; (d) ways to
minimize the burden of the collection of
information on respondents, including
through the use of automated collection
techniques or other forms of information
technology; and (e) estimates of capital
or start-up costs and costs of operation,
maintenance, and purchase of services
to provide information.
Approved: July 17, 2018.
Roberto Mora-Figueroa,
Acting Section Chief, Special Services.
[FR Doc. 2018–15627 Filed 7–18–18; 11:15 am]
BILLING CODE 4830–01–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 140 (Friday, July 20, 2018)]
[Notices]
[Pages 34698-34700]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-15627]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Internal Revenue Service
Proposed Collection; Comment Request for Regulation Project
AGENCY: Internal Revenue Service (IRS), Treasury.
ACTION: Notice and request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Internal Revenue Service, as part of its continuing effort
to reduce paperwork and respondent burden, invites the general public
and other Federal agencies to take this opportunity to comment on
continuing information collections, as required by the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995. The IRS is soliciting comments on forms used by
individual taxpayers: Comment Request focused on Form 1040 and
Schedules 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, the discontinuance of 1040A and 1040EZ and
revised Form W-4. The remainder of the collection including Schedules
A, B, C, C-EZ, D, E, EIC, F, H, J, R, and SE, Form 1040NR, Form 1040NR-
EZ, Form 1040X, and all attachments to these forms will be addressed on
the next submission of the information collection.
DATES: Comments should be received on or before September 18, 2018 to
be assured of consideration.
ADDRESSES: Taxpayers may submit comments electronically via the Federal
eRulemaking Portal at www.regulations.gov (type IRS-2018-0015 in the
search field on the regulation.gov homepage to find this notice and
submit comments). All recommendations for guidance submitted by the
public in response to this notice will be available for public
inspection and copying in their entirety. Direct all written comments
to Laurie Brimmer, Internal Revenue Service, at (202) 317-5756, Room
6529, 1111 Constitution Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20224.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Requests for additional information or
copies of the form should be directed to Kerry Dennis at Internal
Revenue Service, at (202) 317-5751 Room 6529, 1111 Constitution Avenue
NW, Washington, DC 20224, or through the internet, at [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
PRA Approval of Forms Used by Individual Taxpayers
Under the PRA, OMB assigns a control number to each ''collection of
information'' that it reviews and approves for use by an agency. The
PRA also requires agencies to estimate the burden for each collection
of information. Burden estimates for each control number are displayed
in (1) PRA notices that accompany collections of information, (2)
Federal Register notices such as this one, and (3) OMB's database of
approved information collections.
Taxpayer Burden Model
The IRS uses the Individual Taxpayer Burden Model (ITBM) to
estimate the burden experienced by individual taxpayers when complying
with Federal tax laws. The model was developed using a survey of tax
year 2015 individual taxpayers that was fielded in 2016 and 2017. The
approach to measuring burden focuses on the characteristics and
activities undertaken by individual taxpayers in meeting their tax
return filing obligations.
Burden is defined as the time and out-of-pocket costs incurred by
taxpayers in complying with the Federal tax system. Out-of-pocket costs
include any expenses incurred by taxpayers to prepare and submit their
tax returns. Examples include tax return preparation fees, the purchase
price of tax preparation software, submission fees, photocopying costs,
postage, and phone calls (if not toll-free).
The methodology distinguishes among preparation method, taxpayer
activities, taxpayer type, filing method, and income level. Indicators
of tax law and administrative complexity, as reflected in the tax forms
and instructions, are incorporated into the model.
Preparation methods reflected in the model are as follows:
Self-prepared without software,
Self-prepared with software, and
Use of a paid preparer or tax professional.
Types of taxpayer activities reflected in the model are as follows:
Recordkeeping,
Tax planning,
Gathering tax materials,
Use of services (IRS and other),
Form completion, and
Form submission.
Taxpayer Burden Estimates
Summary level results from fiscal year 2018 using this methodology
are presented below. The data shown were the best forward-looking
estimates available for income tax returns filed for tax year 2017.
The burden estimates were based on tax year 2017 statutory
requirements as of January 31, 2018 for taxpayers filing a tax year
2017 Form 1040, 1040A, or 1040EZ tax return. Time spent and out-of-
pocket costs are presented separately. Time burden is broken out by
taxpayer activity, with record keeping representing the largest
component. Out-of-pocket costs include any expenses incurred by
taxpayers to prepare and submit their tax returns. Examples include tax
return preparation and submission fees, postage and photocopying costs,
and tax preparation software costs.
Reported time and cost burdens are national averages and do not
necessarily reflect a ``typical'' case. Most taxpayers
[[Page 34699]]
experience lower than average burden, with taxpayer burden varying
considerably by taxpayer type. For instance, the estimated average time
burden for all taxpayers filing a tax year 2017 Form 1040, 1040A, or
1040EZ is 12 hours, with an average cost of $210 per return. This
average includes all associated forms and schedules, across all
preparation methods and taxpayer activities. The average burden for
taxpayers filing a tax year 2017 Form 1040 is about 15 hours and $270;
the average burden for taxpayers filing a tax year 2017 Form 1040A is
about 7 hours and $90; and the average for a tax year 2017 Form 1040EZ
filers is about 5 hours and $40.
Within each of these estimates there is significant variation in
taxpayer activity. For example, tax year 2017 non-business taxpayers
are expected to have an average burden of about 8 hours and $120, while
tax year 2017 business taxpayers are expected to have an average burden
of about 21 hours and $410. Similarly, tax preparation fees and other
out-of-pocket costs vary extensively depending on the tax situation of
the taxpayer, the type of software or professional preparer used, and
the geographic location.
Proposed PRA Submission to OMB
Title: U.S. Individual Income Tax Return.
OMB Number: 1545-0074.
Form Numbers: Form 1040 and Schedules 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, the
discontinuance of 1040A and 1040EZ and revised Form W-4.
Abstract: These forms are used by individuals to report their
income tax liability. The data is used to verify that the items
reported on the forms are correct, and also for general statistical
use.
Current Actions:
2018 Draft Form 1040
The revised 2018 Form 1040 is in draft form and subject to change.
The updated form, full set of draft instructions, and updated burden
and cost estimates will be included in the 30day FRN issued by
Treasury. Following the most expansive tax law changes in 30 years,
Treasury asked the IRS to look at ways to improve the 1040 filing
experience. In response, the IRS took a strategic look at the family of
1040 forms with a goal of simplifying the experience for taxpayers and
our partners in the tax industry. The 2018 draft Form 1040 replaces the
current Form 1040 as well as the Form 1040A and the Form 1040EZ. The
2018 draft Form 1040 uses a ``building block'' approach, which can be
supplemented with additional schedules as needed. The 2018 draft Form
1040 goes from the current 79 lines to somewhere around 23 lines.
Taxpayers with straightforward tax situations would only need to file
this new 1040 with no additional schedules. The changes effective in
2018 and affecting the tax returns taxpayers will file in 2019 include
(but are not limited to);
The Filing Status section was simplified. The filing status is
``Single'' if only one name is entered; ``Married filing jointly'' if
two are entered and no filing status box is checked.
Information for the standard deduction was moved below the name
entry spaces.
The checkbox for ``Full-year health care coverage'' was moved to
the first page.
The ``Exemptions'' section was renamed ``Dependents.'' Taxpayers
will continue to list individuals for whom they claim tax benefits
associated with an exemption. Only two dependents can be listed on the
form itself. Just as in 2017, dependents who cannot be listed on the
form must be identified in an attached statement.
The entry spaces for subtotaling exemptions were removed; a new
checkbox was added for dependents who qualify for the credit for other
dependents.
The signature block was moved. An entry space was added for the
spouse's identity protection PIN in lieu of the taxpayer's daytime
phone number. The ``Paid Preparers'' section was shortened and a third-
party designee box was added. Taxpayers with third-party designees or a
foreign address must attach Schedule 6.
Line 4 (IRAs, pensions and annuities) combined 2017 Form 1040,
lines 15 and 16.
Line 6 is a subtotal from Schedule 1, which includes less common
types of income, as well as any adjustments to income.
Line 9 was added for the qualified business income deduction under
section 199A.
Line 11 is the chapter 1 tax. Taxpayers with less common situations
will enter an amount from Schedule 2, which generally includes lines 44
through 47 of the 2017 Form 1040.
Line 12 is the child tax credit and/or credit for other dependents.
Taxpayers with other nonrefundable credits, will enter a subtotal from
Schedule 3, which generally includes lines 48 through 55 of the 2017
Form 1040.
Line 14 is a subtotal from Schedule 4, which generally includes the
items from the ``Other Taxes'' section of the 2017 Form 1040.
Line 17 is refundable credits and some payments. The earned income
credit, additional child tax credit, and American opportunity tax
credit remain on the form. Taxpayers with other credits and payments
will enter an amount from Schedule 5, which generally includes items
from the ``Payments'' section of the 2017 Form 1040. Treasury's Office
of Tax Analysis projects that roughly 25% of projected 2018 individual
income tax filers would be able to file the new form without any
attachments (meaning any of the six new schedules or any existing forms
or schedules that are retained). For context, in Tax Year 2015, 16% of
1040 series returns filed were Form 1040-EZ.
2019 Draft Form W-4
The Form W-4 was changed for 2019 as a result of PL 115-97 (Tax
Reform Act of 2017), especially section 11041, which reduced the
personal exemption amount to zero and modified the statute related to
withholding of tax from wages. Even though most tax changes were
effective for tax year 2018, PL 115-97 allowed these withholding
changes to be delayed until 2019.
The Form W-4 is modified to remove the reliance on the personal
exemption and discrete number of withholding allowances. The Form W-4
has separate instructions, which provide comprehensive guidance for
employees and employers. For ease of use in simple situations, a
summary version of the instructions has been added to the back of the
2019 W-4 form for quick reference. New lines were added to the W-4 in
order to provide more accurate withholding amounts.
The Form W-4 provides more accurate withholding by addressing
credits, other income, deductions and a graduated tax rate structure
directly, rather than converting these items to a discrete number of
withholding allowances tied to the personal exemption amount under
prior law. The Form W-4 reduces complexity for employees by allowing
them to directly report tax credits and adjustments to income, rather
than using worksheets to convert these items to withholding allowances.
Burden Impact Evaluation
A thorough analysis of the impact of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act
(TCJA) of 2017 on the burden faced by individual taxpayers in complying
with the Federal tax law is still underway but preliminary results
indicate that the overall impact of the law on individuals will lower
taxpayer burden. Currently, the average time to complete a tax year
2018 individual tax return is estimated
[[Page 34700]]
to decrease by 4% to 7% and the average out-of-pocket costs are
estimated to decrease 1% to 3%. A more detailed evaluation of the
impact of specific provisions will be provided soon.
The expected impact of TCJA provisions by statutory and
discretionary change are provided below:
Statutory Changes--Overall, the statutory changes are expected to
lead to an overall decrease in burden. There are three major changes
that are expected to have a material impact on burden in the TCJA.
1. The increase in the standard deduction and the limitation on the
Schedule A tax deduction, taken together, are the most substantial
changes introduced in the TCJA. These changes are expected to decrease
the number of Schedule A filers from 46 million to 20 million. The 26
million drop in Schedule A filings is expected to lead to a material
decrease in burden.
2. The change in thresholds on the Form 6251 for alternative
minimum tax is expected to lead to a significant decrease in Form 6251
filings, from 10 million to 1 million or less. This change should also
lead to a material drop in burden.
3. The new Sec 199A Deduction for qualified business income is
expected to increase burden for many filers who report sole proprietor
and passthrough income. The deduction is also expected to increase the
number of filers with sole proprietors and passthrough income which
should increase burden.
Overall, the decreases in burden from the change in Schedule A and
Form 6251 filings are expected to more than offset the increase burden
from the Sec 199A Deduction.
IRS Discretionary Changes--The largest discretionary change in
place for tax year 2018 is the redesign of the Form 1040 and the
discontinuance of Forms 1040A, and 1040EZ. Modest decreases in burden
are expected for some taxpayers who prepare by hand without using a
paid preparer or tax software but overall, the transition from Forms
1040, 1040A, and 1040EZ to the shortened Form 1040 is not expected to
have a material impact on the burden individual taxpayers face.
Approximately 95% of individual taxpayers use a paid preparer or tax
software to complete their tax return and almost 90% of individual
taxpayers e-file. Currently, these taxpayers using assisted methods
interact with either a tax software interface or a paid prepare so they
have limited interaction with the tax forms themselves. There is very
little expectation for their experience to change so the form redesign
is not expected to have a material impact on them.
The impact of the Form 1040 redesign on the approximately 5% of
individual taxpayers who complete their taxes by hand without using a
paid preparer or software is not expected to have a material impact on
overall filing burden. The current expectation is that some taxpayers
who prepare unassisted will have marginally lower burden while others
will have marginally higher burden. For example, taxpayers who
previously filed a Form 1040EZ may experience slightly more burden
because they need to evaluate more information than before while a
segment of taxpayers who previously filed the Form 1040 and 1040A may
experience slightly less burden because they need to evaluate less
information than before. In addition, some filers are expected to
experience a reduction in burden from the separation of the components
of the Form 1040 onto the new set of schedules while some are not.
Overall, the minor increases and decreases that this population
experiences are expected to mostly offset and lead to an immaterial
change in burden.
Type of Review: Revision of currently approved collections.
Affected Public: Individuals or households.
Estimated Number of Respondents: 157,800,000.
Total Estimated Time: 1.970 billion hours (1,970,000,000 hours).
Estimated Time per Respondent: 12.48 hours.
Total Estimated Out-of-Pocket Costs: $32.315 billion
($32,315,000,000).
Estimated Out-of-Pocket Cost per Respondent: $205.
Total Estimated Monetized Burden: $63.373 billion
($63,373,000,000).
Estimated Monetized Burden per Respondent: $402.
The following paragraph applies to all of the collections of
information covered by this notice.
An agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required
to respond to, a collection of information unless the collection of
information displays a valid OMB control number. Books or records
relating to a collection of information must be retained as long as
their contents may become material in the administration of any
internal revenue law. Generally, tax returns and tax return information
are confidential, as required by 26 U.S.C. 6103.
Request for Comments: Comments submitted in response to this notice
will be summarized and/or included in the request for OMB approval. All
comments will become a matter of public record. Comments are invited
on: (a) Whether the collection of information is necessary for the
proper performance of the functions of the agency, including whether
the information shall have practical utility; (b) the accuracy of the
agency's estimate of the burden of the collection of information; (c)
ways to enhance the quality, utility, and clarity of the information to
be collected; (d) ways to minimize the burden of the collection of
information on respondents, including through the use of automated
collection techniques or other forms of information technology; and (e)
estimates of capital or start-up costs and costs of operation,
maintenance, and purchase of services to provide information.
Approved: July 17, 2018.
Roberto Mora-Figueroa,
Acting Section Chief, Special Services.
[FR Doc. 2018-15627 Filed 7-18-18; 11:15 am]
BILLING CODE 4830-01-P