Thursday, April 15, 2010

Beware the Ides of April

April 15 is Tax Day, the last day for filing your income taxes withourt incurring a penalty. The media has been full of stories about the run up to today. The thrust of most of the stories has been don’t be late, the deadline is looming.

The implication is that there are hordes of people out there who have not yet filed their taxes. The funny thing is, I worked as a paid tax preparer for H & R Block this year, and I was finished doing taxes in early March. As a matter of fact, 75% of the customers are handled during the first peak, from mid-January to early February.

After the first peak, the balance of the clients fall into three categories:
People with insanely complicated tax returns, who take months to get their paperwork in order.
Congenital procrastinators, the kind of folks who would be late to their own funeral.
People who still owe money to the IRS, over and above any withholding or prior payments.

If you’re going to get a refund, you will want to file as early as possible. After all, why leave a pile of money sitting in the government’s hands when it could be sitting in yours? And the vast majority of filers do get a refund.

First of all, almost half of all households pay no Federal income tax. The tax arm of Deloitte and Touche estimated that a married couple with two small children would have to have an income exceeding $50,000/year before they generate the first dollar of income tax liability. They will get all of their withholding back.

Many of those in the lower half of the income scale not only owe no money for taxes, but they also get significant income from the government, due to refundable credits such as the Additional Child Tax Credit and the Earned Income Credit. Of the returns I processed, most fit into this category. Only a handful actually paid income tax, and even those had a tax liability less than their withholding, so even they got a refund.

In the interest of full disclosure, I also got a tax refund, due to overwithholding on my part. I didn’t do a single return this year where the taxpayer had to send additional money to the IRS.

I guess my point is that the media shouldn’t make such a big deal about what the last day for filing your taxes is. Instead, they should run stories on February 1, the due date for employers to send out the W-2 forms needed to file your taxes. For most households, that is the primary, or even only, document they need to get their refund.

Now that would be news you could use.

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