PensionPro Posted February 4 Posted February 4 We are filing delinquent Form 5500 for 2003. The instructions state that you can attach Schedule P to start the statute of limitations. Is there any benefit to attaching the Schedule P for those early years? What has everyone else been doing? Thanks. PensionPro, CPC, TGPC
Bill Presson Posted February 4 Posted February 4 I think that ship might have already sailed. PensionPro 1 William C. Presson, ERPA, QPA, QKA bill.presson@gmail.com C 205.994.4070
PensionPro Posted February 4 Author Posted February 4 I believe there is an indefinite statute for failure to file a return. There has to be some benefit to starting the 3 year statute by filing a return even if delinquent. PensionPro, CPC, TGPC
Peter Gulia Posted February 4 Posted February 4 If one uses a Schedule P to start the running of the statute-of-limitations period on a retirement plan’s trust: The limitations period does not begin to run until one has filed the tax return or information return. While the IRS now counts a limitations period from the Form 5500, using the old year’s Schedule P likely can’t hurt and might help. This is not advice to anyone. PensionPro and Bill Presson 2 Peter Gulia PC Fiduciary Guidance Counsel Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 215-732-1552 Peter@FiduciaryGuidanceCounsel.com
PensionPro Posted February 5 Author Posted February 5 Thanks Peter! We were thinking along the same lines. Filing Sched P will not hurt, but may help in the event of a tax controversy. It is only a 10 min investment to prepare the Sched. Bill Presson 1 PensionPro, CPC, TGPC
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now