- 19 Feb 2020 00:05
#15068218
Filing taxes was a nightmare for many people last year, said Laura Davison in Bloomberg.com, and this year might not be easier. While the IRS has had plenty of time now to adjust to changes from the 2017 tax overhaul, and it “won’t be facing a government shutdown” as it was last year, tax preparers should still be bracing themselves. Just two months ago, Congress passed a series of minor tax breaks “that will require the IRS and tax software providers to revise forms at the last minute.” Refunds could take longer for taxpayers whose returns get caught in the IRS’s new fraud filters. Last year, the filters “identified nearly 1.1 million returns, but about 71 percent of those were false positives.”
source : http://www.vikilix.com/2020/02/15/taxes ... ng-season/
source : http://www.vikilix.com/2020/02/15/taxes ... ng-season/