The IRS is not playing around this year. They are seriously trying to crack down on fraud this year. But, in the process of doing so, law abiding tax payers are having to deal with delays. Yahoo! News reports:
The fiscal cliff is still causing headaches for taxpayers.
Technically, the IRS kicked off tax season Wednesday — a week later than
expected, as a result of Congress’s 12th-hour deal — but tax pros say
it could be weeks before many Americans can actually file their returns.
The various changes to the tax code forced payroll departments to
hold off their end-of-year accounting. A fair number of taxpayers still
haven’t received their W2s, experts say. Those who need to file Form
8863 to claim credits for higher education won’t be able to file until
the middle of February, after the IRS finishes updating its processing
systems, officials said Monday. And people claiming residential energy
credits, depreciation of property, or general business credits will have
to wait even longer — until the end of February at least.
The delays generally mean that early-bird filers who would normally
collect tax refunds in January — $3,000 on average — won’t be getting
their checks until at least mid-February, says John Hewitt, chief
executive of Liberty Tax Service. “It’s causing heartache,” says Hewitt,
especially for people relying on that money to pay bills.
Refunds are typically issued within three weeks from the date a
return is filed, but some taxpayers will have to wait longer because of
an effort by the IRS to crack down on identity theft. The agency says it
has more filters in place to help spot possible fraud, and some returns
will be getting a closer look, further pushing back the delivery date
of those refunds.
And the shorter time frame also means taxpayers getting
professional help will find themselves competing for their accountant’s
attention. “They’re requiring us to do more work in a shorter period of
time,” says Harlan Rose, president of the National Society of
Accountants. Normally, Rose is able to prepare some simple tax returns
in January before his busiest weeks kick off in February, but this year
he lost that calm period — and his clients are already grumbling about
the delays, he says.
To be sure, the IRS says the majority of taxpayers, or 120 million
households, can start filing now. And 70% of Americans qualify to file
free returns, according to the Free File Alliance, a coalition between
the IRS and tax-software companies. The IRS is also offering relief to
some taxpayers: Farmers and fishermen, for example, won’t be penalized
if they can’t file and pay their 2012 taxes by March 1, because of the
delay. The famous April 15 deadline, however, isn’t budging.
Another setback for many taxpayers: W-2 and 1099 forms, which
people need to have in hand so they can file even the most basic return,
have also been delayed. The forms are due to be sent out by Jan. 31,
but some employers are still amending them, experts say. And while the
late start may push some taxpayers to be more efficient about preparing
their returns, it could lead others to drag their feet, says Laura
Stack, a productivity and time-management expert based in Denver. “Now
they have an excuse for putting off all the things they could be doing,”
says Stack, such as gathering receipts and filling out the forms they
do have. “It’s a classic time-management dilemma."
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