IRS delays start of tax filing season to Feb. 12

0
118


The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) building in Washington, D.C.

Getty Images

The IRS is delaying the start of the 2020 tax filing season to Feb. 12, according to an announcement Friday from the agency.

On that date, the IRS will start accepting and processing last year’s tax returns.

Normally, the agency opens tax season in late January.

This year, however, the IRS will need more time to prepare after the Covid relief act that took effect in late December. And yes, the tax filing deadline is still April 15.

“If filing season were opened without the correct programming in place, then there could be a delay in issuing refunds to taxpayers,” the IRS said in its announcement.

“These changes ensure that eligible people will receive any remaining stimulus money as a recovery rebate credit when they file their return,” the agency said.

The recovery rebate credit is a new addition to the federal income tax return, and it’s available to filers who didn’t receive the full amount of stimulus they’re entitled to.

“While I am disappointed that this year’s filing season will begin later than usual, I recognize that the IRS has faced extraordinary challenges throughout the COVID crisis,” said House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Richard Neal, D-Mass.

“It’s a relief to know that despite contending with the distribution of two rounds of economic impact payments, facility closures and other disruptions, the agency will be able to begin accepting returns within the next month,” he said.

The IRS is recommending that taxpayers submit their returns electronically and use direct deposit as soon as they’re ready.

Refunds in March for some

Headaches for tax pros and clients

Companies distribute Form W-2 to their employees in January. These documents spell out how much workers have earned, as well as what they paid in income and payroll taxes during the year.

“You can’t get your refund until the IRS opens filing, and there are people who get refunds who are used to filing as soon as they open up,” said Ed Zollars, CPA and partner at Thomas, Zollars & Lynch in Phoenix and an instructor at Kaplan Financial Education.

Taxpayers who submit their returns in paper format are risking delays. The IRS accumulated a large backlog of mail last year amid the pandemic, and returns have taken a longer time to process.

There were still 7.1 million unprocessed individual returns and 2.3 million processed business returns as of Nov. 24, the Taxpayer Advocate Service found.

“If you, for any reason, think that a paper return makes sense for you, reconsider,” Zollars said.



Source : CNBC