Chapter 1 Filing & Paying Your Taxes
Is there any way to stop the IRS from taking my tax return refund?
If you have an IRS debt then there isn’t any way to stop them from applying your refund to your debt. Remember, until that debt is paid everything you have the IRS can take to apply to your debt.
No, if you owe the IRS then any refund you’re entitled to goes to your debt. What’s even worse about the rapid refund is that a rapid refund is a loan from the tax prep company that gave it to you. So if you tried to get a rapid refund while you owe the IRS, not only will you still owe the IRS, but now you have to also pay back the rapid refund loan.
Yes…but only if you would have gotten the refund for either last year or the year before. Any tax refund prior to two years ago is null and void.
The government has passed an economic stimulus package to give Americans an amount of money based on their income to help “jump start” the economy. The average middle class person should receive $600.00 or $1200.00 for a married couple plus $300.00 for each child that is a dependent.
The income tax cap is the maximum amount of income that can be taxed. Any income over that amount is not taxed by the Federal Government. The current tax cap is around $92,000, although some politicians are trying to raise the cap or get rid of it all together. Unless you make over $100,000 per year the cap really doesn’t have an effect on you.
No, you won’t go to jail for not paying your taxes. Now if you don’t file your taxes that’s a federal offense and you can go to jail for that, although it’s not very common unless the debt is really big. However the IRS can make your life a hell if you don’t pay your tax debt.
Credits and Deductions:
If you mean deductions and credits then sure you can get a higher tax return if you qualify for either. If you’re asking about the IRS just giving away free money then no there isn’t any way they’ll do that.
No, the IRS does not consider private school tuition to be a necessary expense. It falls into the IRS’s luxury category making it impossible to claim.
Child tax credit goes in the order of the child’s relationship to whoever is claiming them. So with the above example the parent would have the first crack at the credit over the grandparent. Now if the grandparent can prove that they have taken care of the child for the tax year in question then they would be eligible for the credit; but the burden of proof rests on them.