Taxes that you get from gifts :D
You don't pay the taxes, the person receiving the car as a gift does.
Gift taxes are owed by the party who gives the gift and not the recipient.
Yes, it could be considered a gift, although the deed may recite "for good and valuable consideration," which undermines that presumption. In any case, there are no taxes payable by the recipient of a gift; any taxes on gifts are accrued to the person GIVING the gift.
Federal gift taxes are not paid by the recipient. However, in the rare case where the donor does not have the resources to pay gift taxes they may owe, the IRS might try to recover some or all of the gift from the recipient. The donor may owe a gift tax depending on the size of the gift and depending on what other gifts the donor has given.
Yes.
No, you cannot write off gift cards on your taxes as they are considered a personal expense and not a deductible business expense.
No.
The maximum amount that can be deducted for a business gift expense on taxes is 25 per recipient per year.
I'm not sure about the State of New York taxes but if the value of the car was $14,000 or over then a gift tax return would be required by the person who is gifting the car and gift taxes would have to be paid. The giver of the gift is responsible for filing such a return and paying the taxes. The penalties are steep on this type of thing so you need to make sure the laws are obeyed on this.
Income estate and gift taxes would be the subjects of the cases heard in U.S. Tax Court.
Income estate and gift taxes would be the subjects of the cases heard in U.S. Tax Court.
i received $20,000 as a gift how much taxes do i have to pay on the $7,000 overage