1. Who doesn't qualify for an
advance payment check this year?
If you did not pay any income tax for 2000, you are not
eligible for the advance payment. Your 2000 return will show if
you did not pay income tax. If line 51 on Form 1040 is zero,
there was no income tax and you will not receive an advance
payment check. Form 1040A filers should look at line 33; 1040EZ
filers, line 10.
If you could be claimed as a dependent on another person's 2000
return, you are also ineligible for an advance payment. Look at
Box 6a on Form 1040 or 1040A. If you used Form 1040EZ, look at
which box you checked on line 5.
If you left Box 6a blank, or you checked "yes" on
Form 1040EZs line 5, you will not get an advance payment.
You
must have owed AND paid income
tax
for 2000 or there is no advance payment for you
IF
you owe the IRS Money You Will receive an
advance
payment only if the tax, penalties and
interest
owed are less than the advance payment you qualify for.
2. I moved after I filed my taxes - how will my check will get
to me?
If you've moved since filing your tax return, you should file a
change of address form with the U.S. Postal Service. Unlike some
government checks, these can be forwarded to a new address.
3. I paid taxes last year, and I wasn't anyone's dependent -
how come I'm not getting an advance payment check?
You may have paid Social Security taxes or self-employment tax,
but you must have paid income tax for 2000 to get an advance
payment check. For this information, look at your Form 1040,
line 51 - if it's zero, then you did not pay any income tax. For
Form 1040A, see line 33; Form 1040EZ, see line 10. Line 56 of Form
1040 or line 35 of Form 1040A are not the correct lines to check -
they include other taxes and advance earned income credit amounts.
4. I had income tax withheld from my pay all year -- why does
the IRS say I didn't pay any tax?
You may have had income taxes withheld from your paychecks, but
then you got all of that withholding back through a refund. This
would happen if your exemptions and deductions reduced your
taxable income to zero, or if certain credits, such as the child
tax credit or education credits, reduced your tax to zero. In such
cases, you did not pay any income tax and you do not qualify for
an advance payment check. But if you had a tax liability before
subtracting the Earned Income Tax Credit, you would be able to get
a check.
5. I think my advance payment check is the wrong amount - what
can I do?
Your check may have been reduced - even to zero - by taxes you
owed or by non-tax federal debts, such as certain child support
obligations or student loans. In such a case, you should receive a
letter explaining the reduction. The advance payment amount
is based on the information shown on your 2000 tax return or as
adjusted by the IRS during processing. The IRS cannot re-figure
the amount because of later adjustments or an amended return.
6. I heard that the advance payments were for $300, but mine is
only $100 - is there any way I can get the rest?
The advance payment is based on your 2000 taxes, but your
situation may be different this year. If your advance payment -
before any reduction for taxes or other debts - is less than the
maximum permitted for your filing status, you may be able to claim
an additional credit when you file your 2001 tax return. The
maximum amounts are $300 for single or married filing
separately; $500 for head of household; and $600 for married
filing jointly or qualifying widow(er). A worksheet in the tax
instructions will help you to figure any credit you qualify for,
based on your 2001 tax data.
7. My spouse and I made more than $12,000 last year -- how come
we're not getting a $600 advance payment check?
The advance payment is based on your taxable income, not your
gross income.
Your taxable income is what's
left after you subtract your standard or itemized deductions and
your personal exemption amounts. For example, a couple with two
children would have four personal exemptions, worth $11,200, and a
standard deduction of $7,350, for a total subtraction of
$18,550. This couple would need gross income of at least
$30,550 to have a taxable income of $12,000 and get the maximum
$600 advance payment.
8. I filed my return by mid-April and I know the IRS received
it because my tax payment check was cashed. Why haven't I gotten a
notice about my advance payment?
Some taxpayers who filed their returns by the April deadline
and sent a payment with the return may not yet have received a
notice about their advance payment check. If you are getting a
check, you will receive a notice, but it may not arrive until a
week or two before the check does. If you are not eligible
for a check, you will receive a notice to that effect after your
return is processed. When the IRS prepared the names in June
for the initial notice mailout, it had not finished processing all
the returns filed in April. This is because it first processes the
payment checks, then the refund returns, and finally the returns
that came with the payments. The IRS usually completes this third
stage of processing sometime in July.
Solutions
are dependent upon facts & circumstances, law and the
objectives. These elements vary from one time to another, from one
circumstance to another and from person or entity to another
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