July 26, 2006
Want Immediate IRS help?
Filed under IRS Tax Help, Taxpayer Advocate by
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Go to getIRSHelp for additional assistance and information or call us tollfree at (888) GETMISH (888) 438-6474.
Filed under IRS Tax Help, Taxpayer Advocate by Darrin Mish
Comments on Want Immediate IRS help?
I need help. I filed with an incompetant efile place last year and never recieved my state refund. I went back to get my information and they are claiming that I never paid the amount of fees even though I paid them twice! I was suppose to get a nice refund and I am wondering if there is a way I can get that money. can I refile? My local irs wont return my call and I cant get a hold of a human, just a recording. I have scoured the net and cannot find anything. HELP!
If you need immediate help you can call us at (888) 438-6474 for help with your IRS problem. If you need an IRS attorney, you're in the right place. It's hard to tell if your problem is a state tax or IRS tax problem. If it's an IRS problem, you may want to contact the Office of the Taxpayer Advocate by going to http://www.irs.gov and looking for form 911. Follow the instructions and they should be able to help you obtain your refund.
I need help in determining if I should amend my 2005 income taxes as part of a settlement agreement in my divorce. We seperated in September 2005, I began attending college in January 2006 and received Federal Grant money(approx. $3,000) based on my income($9900) for 2005. If I amend, the joint return for 2005 would show an income of over $95,000.00. Wouldn't I have to pay-back the grant money that I received? Also, my husband was claiming 7 deductions for 2005, and has an IRS debt of $10,000.00 ($7,000.00 plus $3,000.00 interest and penalites)for 2005. He will not agree to pay me any alimony unless I amend the taxes and I am afraid to amend the taxes because I am not sure if I will owe for the grant money or a portion of the tax debt.
I think you should speak with your family law attorney and determine whether it is wise for you to amend your tax return or not. My gut feeling is that amending your return (I assume from married filing separate to married filing joint) is not in your best interests.
I didnt file my earned income credit in 2006 and I was able too. Is there any way of going back to file?
Kristin,
Sure there is. Download a form 1040X from the irs website and file an amended return. You have 3 years from the filing date to amend the return. Good luck.
Can the Irs keep your return if you filed a Chapter 13 Bankruptcy which included some small back taxes. Can they just deduct their amount from your return even if they have an agreement in our repayment plan.