

To determine if you need to file a Federal Income Tax return for 2000
answer the following questions:
Occasionally, individuals have one-time or infrequent
financial transactions that may require them to file a Federal Income Tax
return. Do any of the following examples apply to you?
- Did you have Federal taxes withheld from your pension and wages for this
tax year and wish to get a refund back?
- Are you entitled to the Earned Income Tax Credit or did you receive
Advance Earned Income Credit for this tax year?
- Were you self-employed with earnings of more than $400.00?
- Did you sell your home?
- Will you owe any special tax on a qualified retirement plan (including an
individual retirement account (IRA) or medical savings account (MSA)? You
may owe tax if you:
- Received an early distribution from a qualified plan
- Made excess contributions to your IRA or MSA
- Were born before July 1, 1927, and you did not take the minimum
required distribution from your qualified retirement plan.
- Received a distribution in the excess of $160,000 from a qualified
retirement plan.
- Will you owe social security and Medicare tax on tips you did not report
to your employer?
- Will you owe uncollected social security and Medicare or Railroad
retirement (RRTA) tax on tips you reported to your employer?
- Will you be subject to Alternative minimum tax (AMT)? (The tax law gives
special treatment to some kinds of income and allows special deductions and
credit for some kinds of expenses.)
- Will you owe recapture tax?
- Are you a church employee with income in wages of $108.28 or more from a
church or qualified church-controlled organization that is exempt from
employer social security or Medicare taxes?
If the answer to ANY questions is YES you will need to file a return - see
the limits