There have been enough dates thrown around lately that I thought it would be worth it this week to look at timing when it comes to taxes.
As most are probably aware, the IRS has pushed the federal
tax filing deadline back one month to May 17. I know for many this feels like
some sort of reprieve because you get more time to do a task you don’t want to
do, but it doesn’t really offer anything more than time. In fact, I would only
counsel people to still get their taxes done as soon as possible, act as if
April 15 is still the deadline, and then you can start looking toward next year
when there will again be more new tax rules to navigate.
Leaving my quick preaching aside, there are actually times
when April 15th is still critical in reality. For instance, if you
are someone who makes estimated quarterly tax payments, the first of those will
still be due on April 15th as that date did not get pushed back with
the filing deadline. (You can read a little more about there here).
It is also worth keeping in mind that the IRS deadline only
affects your federal taxes. Your state deadline may still be different. Most
states have offered some sort of delay, as well, but it is worth checking on
that and making sure before you make a mistake that means your state return is
late. You can do that by clicking here.
You should keep in mind that the tax filing delay was not
only implemented by the IRS as a gift to the taxpayers. The latest stimulus
package contained multiple changes that the agency had to implement, so the
delay gives it some time to figure that all out. It also does not exactly help
that at the same point the IRS received the responsibility of distributing
individual stimulus payments, and this all just leads to a couple more issues
with timing.
First, I know many people are still eager for information
about when they will receive that individual payment. There is no magic
information source about that. The best thing to do is to consult the IRS’s Get
My Payment website - www.irs.gov/coronavirus/get-my-payment
- and find where you stand. Second, the agency is even now still working
through some returns from the 2019 tax year, displaying how difficult pandemic-ravaged
2020 was for it. That means some may need to be preparing themselves to have
their tax refund take a little longer to receive than usual.
Hmm, it’s almost like that is another reason to not delay
filing your taxes.