Yes, States can intercept your refund via the Treasury Offset Program.
No, when filing for the state income taxes, you will receive your federal income tax refund as well as your state income tax refund.
Im never refund federal tax, like a boss.
No, the IRS already has it. They can probably take any refund to which you are entitled.
When you file for the federal tax refund, you will file the state tax refund on the same 1040 form with schedule A.You can also file for that separately.
You can file a federal tax return and get a refund regardless of the status of your state taxes. If you owe overdue taxes to the state and they have gotten around to it, the state can intercept your federal refund. So, your refund might go to paying your overdue state taxes instead of being sent to you. But unless you file a federal tax return, no refund will be generated and your state taxes will not be paid.
No. The IRS will take an income tax refund for back federal or state taxes, unpaid child support or alimony, student loans in default, and any unpaid federal or government debt.
Yes. State refund must be claimed as income on your federal return.
Federal no; the other , yes.
Not your state income tax refund. But the state may have a claim on it and they would keep the necessary amount that is owed for that purpose.
In the U.S., your federal income tax refund does not count as taxable income for the next year. If you receive a refund from your state, and you itemized your deductions on the federal return, then the state refund will count as income on your federal return. (If you didn't itemize, then your state refund won't count as income.)
You do not have to report any income tax refund on any tax forms, it is not income.
YES