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1. Look at the Form 1040 you prepared for Brad and Samantha Johnson. What is the amount on Form 1040, Line 26?
- [ ] a. A. $ 3,265.
- [ ] b. B. $ 2,682.
- [ ] c. C. $ 2,215.
- [ ] d. D. $ 7,955.
2. Look at the Form 1040 you prepared for Brad and Samantha Johnson. What is the amount on Form 1040, Line 73a?
- [ ] a. A. $ 1,044.
- [ ] b. B. $ 1,651.
- [ ] c. C. $ 1,749.
- [ ] d. D. $ 1,034.
3. You can deduct your moving expenses if
- [ ] a. A. Your move is closely related to the start of work.
- [ ] b. B. You meet the distance test.
- [ ] c. C. You meet the time test.
- [ ] d. D. All of the above.
4. If your move does not meet the "Closely related in place" requirement, you may still be able to deduct moving expenses if
- [ ] a. A. You can show that you are required to live at your new home as a condition of your employment.
- [ ] b. B. You can show that you will spend less time commuting from your new home to your new job location.
- [ ] c. C. You can show that you will spend less money commuting from your new home to your new job location.
- [ ] d. D. All of the above.
5. Your move will meet the distance test if your new main job location is at least __________ farther from your former home than your old main job location was from your former home.
- [ ] a. A. 30 miles.
- [ ] b. B. 50 miles.
- [ ] c. C. 60 miles.
- [ ] d. D. 80 miles.
6. If you are an employee, you must work full time for at least ________ during the 1st 12 months after you arrive in the general area of your new job location to meet the time test.
- [ ] a. A. 30 weeks.
- [ ] b. B. 4 weeks.
- [ ] c. C. 53 weeks.
- [ ] d. D. 39 weeks.
7. If you are self-employed, you must work full time for at least 39 weeks during the 1st 12 months and for a total of at least ___________ during the 1st 24 months after you arrive in the general area of your new job location to meet the time test.
- [ ] a. A. 30 weeks.
- [ ] b. B. 53 weeks.
- [ ] c. C. 78 weeks.
- [ ] d. D. 39 weeks.
8. You can deduct only those expenses that are reasonable for the circumstances of your move. The cost of traveling from your former home to your new home should be by
- [ ] a. A. Any route available.
- [ ] b. B. The shortest and most direct route available by conventional transportation.
- [ ] c. C. Any route that you choose and you can still deduct expenses for stopover or side trips.
- [ ] d. D. All of the above.
9. Pat had the following moving expenses:
*Cost of packing and crating and transporting her household goods $1,200.
*Lodging for travel between her old home and her new home $550.
*Meals during the trip $150.
*$250 to break the lease on her old home.
Pat moved to start a new job and met the distance and time tests. What are the total moving expenses that can be deducted
- [ ] a. A. $2,150.
- [ ] b. B. $1,900.
- [ ] c. C. $1,750.
- [ ] d. D. $2,000.
10. Excess reimbursement includes any amount for which you did not adequately account to your employer within a reasonable period of time. Any excess reimbursement for you moving expenses must be returned to the person paying the reimbursement. You adequately account by
- [ ] a. A. Giving your employer documentary evidence of your moving expenses.
- [ ] b. B. Listing on a sheet of paper the expense at or near the time you had the expense.
- [ ] c. C. Keeping documentation that includes receipts, cancelled checks, and bills.
- [ ] d. D. Any of the above.
11. You can generally consider moving expenses incurred within 1 year form the date you first reported to work at the new location as closely related to in time to the start of work. If you do not move within 1 year of the date you begin work, you
- [ ] a. A. Can file an extension to be able to claim the moving expenses.
- [ ] b. B. Cannot deduct the moving expenses since too much time lapsed.
- [ ] c. C. Can still deduct the expenses if you can show that circumstances existed that prevented the move within that time.
- [ ] d. D. None of the above.
12. You can deduct moving expenses for a move to a new home in the United States when you permanently retire. You are considered permanently retired when you cease gainful full-time employment or self-employment. If, at the time you retire, you intend your retirement to be permanent, you
- [ ] a. A. Will not be able to claim moving expenses unless you can prove retirement will be permanent.
- [ ] b. B. Will be considered retired even though you later return to work.
- [ ] c. C. Will not be considered retired because intention in not enough.
- [ ] d. D. None of the above.
13. If you deduct moving expenses but do not meet the time test in 2009 or 2010, you must
- [ ] a. A. Report your moving expense deduction as other income on your Form 1040 for the year you cannot meet the test.
- [ ] b. B. Use Form 1040X to amend your 2008 return, figuring your tax without the moving expense deduction.
- [ ] c. C. Either A or B above.
- [ ] d. D. None of the above.
14. A move begins when
- [ ] a. A. You contract for your household goods and personal effects to be moved to your home in the United States, but only if the move is completed within a reasonable time.
- [ ] b. B. Your household goods and personal effects are packed and on the way to your home in the United States.
- [ ] c. C. You leave your formal home to travel to your new home in the United States.
- [ ] d. D. Any of the above.
15. If you are living in the United State, retire, and then move and remain retired, you can claim a moving expense deduction for that move.
16. Roxana's employer transferred her from Boston, Massachusetts, to Buffalo, New York. On her way to Buffalo, Roxana drove into Canada to visit the Toronto Zoo. As a result
- [ ] a. A. The expenses paid or incurred for the excursion are deductible.
- [ ] b. B. Roxana can deduct what it would have cost to drive directly form Boston to Buffalo.
- [ ] c. C. Roxana can deduct the cost of a hotel room due to the delay.
- [ ] d. D. All of the above.
17. If you use your car to take yourself, members of your household, or your personal effects to your new home, you can figure your expenses by deducting
- [ ] a. A. You actual expenses, such as gas and oil for your car, if you keep an accurate record of each expense.
- [ ] b. B. The standard mileage rate of 19 cents per mile (27 cents per mile after June 30, 2008).
- [ ] c. C. The standard mileage rate of 48.5 cents per mile.
- [ ] d. D. Either A or B above.
18. Paul Brown is a resident of North Carolina and has been working there for the last 4 years. Because of the small size of his apartment, he stored some of his furniture in Georgia with his parents. Paul got a job in Washington D.C. It cost him $1,200 to move his furniture from N.C. to D.C. and $4,000 to move his furniture to Georgia from North Carolina (his former home), it would have cost him $1,500 to move his stored furniture from N.C. to Washington. Moving expense amount he can deduct is
- [ ] a. A. $2,700.
- [ ] b. B. $3,700.
- [ ] c. C. $2,500.
- [ ] d. D. $5,200.
19. Use Form 3903 to figure your moving expense deduction. Use a separate Form 3903 for each move for which you are deducting expenses. You do not have to complete Form 3903 if
- [ ] a. A. You moved to a location outside the United States in an earlier year.
- [ ] b. B. You are claiming only storage fees while you are away from the United States.
- [ ] c. C. Any amount your employer paid for the storage fees is included as wages in box 1 of your Form W-2.
- [ ] d. D. All of the above.
20. If you are claiming only storage fees while you are away from the United States as a moving expense deduction
- [ ] a. A. Enter the storage fees on line 1 of Form 3903.
- [ ] b. B. Enter the storage fees directly on line 26 of Form 1040, and enter "Storage" next to the amount.
- [ ] c. C. You don't have a moving expense deduction as storage fees are not allowed.
- [ ] d. D. None of the above.