After business check, rules of
record retention come into force. Liquidated services have a legal duty to retain records under civil, state, and original laws, for multiple purposes, including checkups, duty returns, and any claims made against the company.
According to the IRS, how long you must keep your business records after office liquidation depends on what’s recorded in each document.
Employment tax records
Following office decommissioning, you must keep all employment tax records at least four times.
The
IRS saysthat records should include:
- Payment and wage amounts
- Pension payments and annuities
- The fair market value of in-kind payments
- The value of any tips
- Employee occupations
- Dates during which you employed them
- Copies of various income tax withholding forms (W-4, W-4P, W-4S, and W-4V)
- Fringe benefits records
- Copies of filed returns
- Records of allocated tips
- Name, address, and social security number of employees
- Sickness and absence payment records
Please note that pending claims, including open action and workers’ compensation, need you to hold onto records until the case closes.
Property Records
You must also keep property records until the end of the period of limitations in the year you dispose of the property. This is the grace period in which you can make changes to your tax return for credit or refund.
Destroying Records
Once the statutory time frame for keeping records after company dissolution expires, you can destroy them. Doing this helps cover the particular information of former workers and other stakeholders in your business.
still, magpie destruction could be foolish. Before destroying any documents, consider whether keeping them could potentially help you defend against unborn lawsuits.
If you are confused about which documents to keep, and which to dispose of, we can help. Our
commercial office liquidation service shows you precisely what you need to retain for legal purposes.