Jan 11, 2025
The wildfire disasters in Los Angeles County prompted the Franchise Tax Board to push the state’s tax filing deadline to Oct. 15 for county residents. The move, announced Saturday, Jan. 11, follows the Internal Revenue Service, which on Friday postponed the federal filing deadline for LA county residents to mid-October. Individual and business tax returns or requests for extensions are typically due April 15. The deadline change, permitted under presidential disaster declarations, is similar to those in previous years when flooding or wildfires hindered residents and business owners suffering from property loss or damages. Such filing delays are aimed at those affected directly by disasters, but often are extended to anyone living in an area under a FEMA declaration. A good way to stay on top of tax-filing changes is to check the IRS newsroom during tax season. Wind-swept wildfires have ravaged Pacific Palisades and Altadena communities. Thousands of residents were left with destroyed homes and almost no belongings. The state noted in its announcement that taxpayers impacted by “a presidentially declared disaster” ( which the LA fires are ) can claim a deduction for disaster loss. “The advantage of claiming the disaster loss on a tax year 2024 return is that FTB can issue a refund sooner,” the announcement said. Here’s what the state postponed to Oct. 15 for LA County residents: —Individual tax returns and payments normally due on April 15. —Quarterly estimated tax payments due Jan. 15, April 15, June 15, and Sept. 15. —Businesses with corporate or pass-through entity tax returns due on March 15 and April 15. —Pass-through entity elective tax payments due March 15 and June 15. —Tax-exempt organization also get to extend tax returns due May 15. The FTB also recommends anyone affected by the wildfires to check out its “ disaster loss deduction ” website. Related Articles Business | Attorney General Bonta warns against price gouging, looting and scams targeting wildfire victims Business | As fires burn across Southern California, these people jumped into action to help their neighbors in unique ways Business | Disney donates $15 million to Los Angeles wildfire relief efforts Business | L.A. wildfires: Tips for filing home or business claims to recoup losses Business | IRS filing deadline moves to October for LA-wildfire affected residents, businesses
Respond, make new discussions, see other discussions and customize your news...

To add this website to your home screen:

1. Tap tutorialsPoint

2. Select 'Add to Home screen' or 'Install app'.

3. Follow the on-scrren instructions.

Feedback
FAQ
Privacy Policy
Terms of Service