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As long as the bank does not require you to prove your income before approving you.
Include it in your "income from self-employment.
"Under the table" refers to money made that is not reported to the IRS. No taxes are ever paid on this income. It is as if the money changed hands under a table and was not seen by anyone, so no one knows about it.
Pennsylvania says you would receive at least 50% of your weekly benefit, but check out the Related Link below, under $65.111 "Benefit Table, 'Determination of weekly benefit rate'
Proof that someone is being paid 'under the table' could be obtained through video/audio records which would probably best be obtained by a licensed private investigation agency.
you need rent receipt to prove that you are paying rent. this will then become an excempt from your taxable income. note there is a limit that you will have. its called HRA
cat is under the table
No that's why they call it dealing under the table. Or out of sight.
The ball rolled across the table.
Right off, your legal problem with hiding your income is really more criminal, not tax. You obviously need help and better not try and represent yourself...because you even defeat yourself in the little bit you say here... If you've been paid under the table for 5 years....Yes, that says you've had consistent income...and actually much more of it than someone who abided by the law and paid taxes. Not that not having consistent income (under whatever definition you may want) would be a legal excuse to have avoided tax, or good reason to expect others to provide for you. Help is in the yellow pages...under Lawyers or Attorneys.
Tax returns should show the entire income.Answer"Working under the table" refers to unreported incomethat is not reflected on a tax return. Many people who owe child support rely on "under the table" income to avoid being assessed a fair amount of their income for child support obligations and that tactic works well. It is extremely difficult for the custodial parent to document the non-custodial parent's unreported income. The best way is to hire a private investigator to follow the person for a few days and who may be able to obtain photographic evidence of the obligor at work. (If successful, it could be shared with the IRS.) A good investigator should be able to advise you as to what evidence may be effective in court. You should consult with a good family law attorney. Most attorneys have PIs they work with and the attorney can review your situation and explain your options.
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