I was just online with the Where's my refund status and it was approved, then at the bottom is says read note related to your return. I read it and it states that they can take all or part of my tax return for items such as child support, another federal agency debt or state taxes. However, I had an assessment of state taxes that I have been paying on that I have been paying for months and now they can take the rest. I don't see how they can do that if you have a payment arrangement. The government can do whatever pleases them I guess. Just an FYI, you might file, but you might not get if you owe them, but you need them, you will wait, so unfair.
Federal no; the other , yes.
Yes. Unreturned unemployment benefits overpayments may be deducted from your federal income tax refund.
Im never refund federal tax, like a boss.
No, when filing for the state income taxes, you will receive your federal income tax refund as well as your state income tax refund.
yes
Federal no; the other , yes.
Legally, YES.
Yes, your refund is an asset and subject to lien.
Yes. Unreturned unemployment benefits overpayments may be deducted from your federal income tax refund.
yes; it is considered federal debt and federal debt can be and probably will be taken from your refund (if it is in a collection status)
Im never refund federal tax, like a boss.
No, when filing for the state income taxes, you will receive your federal income tax refund as well as your state income tax refund.
yes
Married tax credit and children's tax credits can cause a refund to be larger than what was withheld.
When you file for the federal tax refund, you will file the state tax refund on the same 1040 form with schedule A.You can also file for that separately.
A tax refund schedule can be found online at various different site. Some of these include http://www.irs.com/2011-federal-tax-refund-schedule/ as well as http://www.efile.com/tax-refund/where-is-my-refund/. where is my refund
You qualify for a federal tax refund if you have reached the tax reporting threshold and filed for income taxes. The tax reporting threshold varies depending on your age and marital status.