
ninasgramma
 |
Take all those sorted receipts to a good tax preparer. Then, stay out of it until this matter is settled, then consider marrying him. |
|

bostonianinmo
|
1. Have him hire an accountant or EA to sort this out.
2. Postpone the wedding until this is done and all back taxes are paid.
Contrary to what another poster stated YOU cannot be held liable for anything that happened prior to your marriage but his finances will likely be FUBAR for quite some time. He has a poor track record and you don't need that kind of stress in your marriage. |
|

white.wendell@sbcglobal.net
|
WT! Just a week ago you asked about your "husbands ex-wife, and his children" Now you are asking about your fiance? I know you can't have it both ways so which is it, are you married or engaged? Or are you just a kid making up all this drivel. |
|

T
|
You will have to obtain past tax forms for the previous years and file accrodingly. Once they are filed, you will probably be looking at an audit and fines and penalties. You might want to either get an accountant or set up an appointment with the IRS now rather than letting them receive it and then come looking for you. |
|

kev l
 |
see a tax agent pronto |
|

wija99
|
Uh oh....may need to prove to IRS that she is not evading taxes. |
|

glamour04111
 |
Hope you got alot of time............contact the IRS and have them send you the forms for the years he did not file and complete them and if he owes they will set up a payment plan for you |
|

j.simpson123
|
First you need to realize or find out how much he hasn't paid in taxes. Once you find that out, you need to see if its viable to pay that. If not, the IRS can probably work something out with you. They will be glad you went to them, and they didn't have to search you out. |
|

v b
 |
Go to IRS.GOV and you can pick a year, type it into the search box and a link to the forms for that year will appear.
If there are potential refunds, start with 2004 first. Then the earlier years. (Refunds from 2003 and earlier are barred by statute, but at least you show he doesn't owe for those years.) If he owes, plan on the bills at least doubling due to penalties and interest. |
|

Martini
|
Wow. Not cool! It will eventually catch up to him. My uncle is in jail for tax evasion. Something you don't want to mess around with. Seek a tax adviser asap. |
|

wartz
 |
As a matter of policy--written in the IRS manual--it will require filing of the last six years returns unless there was fraud. Negligence is not fraud. Do the six. Returns showing self-employment income must be filed within three years of the due date--this means 2004, 5 & 6--in order for the income to be credited to the taxpayer's social security account. Self-employment tax (social security and medicare for the self employed) will still be due, but the taxpayer will get no benefit. If you plan to marry this guy, make sure he has his tax problem under control before you say I do, or his problem will become your problem. |
|

Judy1
 |
This would be a good time for him to take all the info to a CPA or enrolled agent. This is NOT something he should go to someplace like H&R Block for.
The CPA will prepare the returns for the missing years, and your fiance can file them. If he owed money for those years, there will be penalties and interest on the unpaid amounts, so if he made much of anything, he can expect a hefty tax bill. |
|

stefani
|
his butt is going to be in a lot of trouble. I don't think i would marry him because it may come back on you too. the irs does not care to much for people who go that long without paying taxes. |
|

pammy
|
Thats really not good at all, he could get into lots of trouble, and will probably owe ALOT of money tho the IRS. But he needs to see a tax specialist ASAP!!! |
|

Tim
|
DON'T GET MARRIED UNTIL HE STRAIGHTENS THIS ALL OUT!
You can be held liable for his past taxes if you marry. |
|

toriihunter_48
|
Turn him in to the IRS! ;) |
|

| |
|