yes
Deferred tax assets is a companies asset that may reduce their income tax expenses. These can arise from net loss carryovers and can be applied to future fiscal periods.
The income tax expense on the income statement is the sum of the income taxes payable for the year and the changes in deferred tax asset or liability balances for the year.
Deferred tax is not considered a fixed asset. Instead, it represents a tax obligation or benefit that arises due to temporary differences between the accounting treatment of certain items and their treatment for tax purposes. Deferred tax assets can arise from situations like tax losses carried forward, while deferred tax liabilities arise when income is recognized for accounting purposes before it is recognized for tax purposes. Thus, they are classified under non-current assets or liabilities on the balance sheet but do not fit the definition of fixed assets.
Current Tax Liability is that tax amount which is actaully payable in current year.Deffered Tax liability is that amount of tax liability which is created due to difference in net income in income statement and income according to tax authorities.
The answer is no.A contra account to the "Income Tax Benefit (Deferred)" would be a "Income Tax Charge (Deferred)".
yes - either a deferred tax asset (DTA) or a deferred tax liability (DTL).
If that is what the amount is that you may owe and that is what you want to call it YES it would be your deferred income tax amount.
Accrued income tax (Income Tax Payable) is a current liability. When the tax is actually paid it is reported on the income statement as Income Tax Expense.
Deferred Tax Asset
Deferred income taxes on a balance sheet represent temporary differences between the accounting income reported and the taxable income calculated according to tax regulations. These differences arise from various factors, such as timing differences in revenue recognition or expense deductions. Deferred tax assets indicate potential future tax benefits, while deferred tax liabilities represent future tax obligations. Essentially, they reflect the future tax consequences of current transactions and events.
You may not understand what your asking, in provision and "tax" are 2 different things. Provision is a purely accounting (GAAP) term. it has nothing to do with IRS tax really. It isn't even part of IRS vernacular really. An Income Tax Provision basically has 2 components; Deferred Tax Provision & Current Tax Provision. (Some ancillary accounting lines may have to do with credits and tax effect of state tax deduction for example). The total income tax provision is the combination of the 2. If current tax provision is higher than deferred tax provision, than the deferred tax provision is a tax benefit. A very common thing that happens when tax accounting requires a provision be recorded for income recorded for GAAP before it is income for tax.
Tax-deferred wages is a reference to income of which there is no tax withholding. The taxes on the wages will be deferred until the end of the year.