By
Keryn Page MISSISSIPPI
STATE --
Although
the Internal Revenue Service is urging Mississippians to
update their addresses by Dec. 5 to receive refund checks,
most taxpayers have nothing to worry about. More
than 2,300 income tax refund or advance child tax credit
checks totaling more than $946,000 were returned to the IRS
this year as undeliverable. But if taxpayers updated their
addresses with the U.S. Postal Service, the refund checks
should have been delivered to the new address. "The
main reason taxpayers' refund checks are being returned to
the IRS is that they failed to file a change of address form
with the post office or the IRS," said Sheri Lokken Worthy,
an associate professor of human sciences with Mississippi
State University's College of Agriculture and Life Sciences.
"To correct the address, all they need to do is file Form
No. 8822 with the IRS, or call the IRS toll-free assistance
line." The IRS
change of address form can be found on the Internet at
http://www.irs.gov and requires the taxpayer to list the new
address information. Alternately, addresses can be updated
by calling (800) 829-1040 and providing identification and
new address information. But if
a taxpayer's address or name has not changed, there is
virtually no reason why a check could not be delivered
unless that taxpayer owed money to a government
agency. "Any
time you have a refund and owe other state or federal
government debt, your refund will be offset, and you will
receive a letter notifying you that the refund has been
applied to the debt," said Kathy Heidorn, a tax specialist
in the IRS' Jackson office. "This includes people who are
behind on child support payments or who have student loans
that are in default. Any refunds will be offset to cover
those debts." If
taxpayers miss the Dec. 5 deadline to update mailing
addresses, they simply must wait until their 2003 tax return
to receive the advance child credit tax refund. Missing the
deadline does not make the taxpayer ineligible to receive
the refund. "If
they miss the deadline, they just have to wait and claim it
on their 2003 return -- they're not out the money," Heidorn
said. "But they do need to be able to tell their tax
preparer whether or not they received an advance payment and
how much that payment was for." If
taxpayers do update their addresses by the deadline, they
can expect to receive their refund check about four weeks
after the update. The
Jobs and Growth Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2003 raised
the child tax credit from $600 in 2002 to $1,000 in 2003.
This $400 difference was sent in advance to taxpayers who
would have been eligible to claim that maximum amount on
their 2002 returns. Generally, taxpayers must report a
minimum income of around $26,600 in order to claim the child
tax credit. Released:
Nov. 20, 2003
Family,
Youth & Consumer News
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Update address
with IRS to
avoid delaying refund
Contact: Dr. Sheri Lokken Worthy, (662) 325-0918
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:29:04
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/fcenews/fce03/031120.html
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