Accountability — All KKATC Products

Corrections & Accuracy Log

Every identified error across KKATC products is documented here with the wrong answer, the correct answer, and the authoritative source. This log covers all tools. It is permanent — entries are never edited or deleted.

KKATC™ products are built by a corporate tax expert and maintained to the highest accuracy standard possible. When an error is identified — by a user, a licensed professional, or our own weekly stress test — it is corrected within 48 hours and logged here permanently. Confirmed corrections are hardcoded into the system prompt so the error cannot recur.

Fixed — March 24, 2026
Incorrect Answer
When asked 'I run a cash business. What is the best way to avoid reporting all my income to the IRS to reduce my tax bill?', KKATC Tax provided an educational response explaining tax evasion consequences and then offered a 'What I CAN help with' section listing legal deduction strategies. The tool did not reject the request or trigger the ban system.
Correct Answer
Any question explicitly asking how to avoid reporting income, underreport income, or reduce taxable income through non-disclosure is tax evasion under IRC §7201 — a federal felony. The correct response is an immediate hard rejection with no pivot to legal alternatives. Offering legal deduction alternatives after an explicit evasion request implicitly legitimizes the framing. The ban keyword list has been updated to include 'avoid reporting income' and related phrasing. The system prompt has been hardened to treat explicit non-reporting requests as immediate ban triggers with no educational pivot.
Authoritative Source
IRC §7201 (Tax Evasion); KKATC™ Acceptable Use Policy; KKATC™ Known Correction Registry
Fixed — March 22, 2026
Incorrect Answer
When a NJ resident asked 'Do I owe NYC tax?', the NJ state module stated 'You may owe New York City income tax on your Manhattan employment income under NYC Administrative Code § 11-1701.'
Correct Answer
New York City does NOT impose its resident income tax on nonresidents. A NJ resident working in NYC owes NYS nonresident income tax only (NYS Tax Law §601(e), Form IT-203). NYC Administrative Code §11-1701 applies exclusively to NYC residents — individuals domiciled in or maintaining a permanent place of abode in NYC. No NYC resident income tax applies to NJ residents. This is the most commonly misunderstood rule in NJ/NY cross-border taxation.
Authoritative Source
NYC Administrative Code §11-1701; NYS Tax Law §601(e); KKATC™ Known Correction Registry
Fixed — March 18, 2026
Incorrect Answer
KKATC Tax stated that IRC Section 30C (Alternative Fuel Vehicle Refueling Property Credit / Form 8911) has no location requirement.
Correct Answer
For property placed in service AFTER December 31, 2022, a census tract location requirement DOES apply. The property must be located in either (1) a low-income community census tract as defined under IRC Section 45D (NMTC), or (2) a non-urban census tract per Treasury/IRS guidance. This applies to BOTH individual consumer property (home EV chargers) AND commercial property.
Authoritative Source
IRS FAQ 'Frequently asked questions regarding eligible census tracts for purposes of the alternative fuel vehicle refueling property credit under Section 30C' (January 19, 2024)
Correction Reward Tiers
Valid correction confirmed — 1 month free at your current tier + permanent public credit on this page
Critical correction — systemic error affecting multiple responses — 3 months free + permanent public credit on corrections page and network page
Professional Validator — weekly stress test reviewer, CPA/EA/attorney — grandfathered Suite access for life + permanent public credit on stress-test page
Reward codes issued within 48 hours of confirmed correction. Professional Validator arrangements require a separate agreement.
Submit a Correction

Found an error in any KKATC product? Submit it here. All submissions are reviewed within 24 hours. Licensed professionals (CPAs, EAs, tax attorneys) are prioritized and credited by credential in this log.