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Not enough information. The following factors will influence the amount of any refund or even if you have to make a payment.

1. Was your wages and salary the same all year or did it fluctuate? (Payroll withholding for each paycheck is calculated as if you will receive identical paychecks all year and the income tax is progressive - if your paychecks were all identical - your withholding should be very close to your liability but if some paychecks were higher than others the extra withholding on the high checks will exceed the shortage of withhold on the low checks - so your refund should be substantial.

2. If you don't have a house (along with the mortgage interest and real estate tax deductions), your biggest deduction is the state income taxes or state sales taxes paid. If you are in a high tax state like Michigan, California or New York - you will have a huge deduction for state taxes and a bigger refund. If you are in a low tax state like Utah, Texas or Wyoming, you will have a low or no (standard deduction) state tax deduction and a lower refund.

3. Did you work two or more jobs. Each employer takes out social security taxes up to $107,000 of wages. If you had two employers, you will get a refund of about $1,800 on the SS taxes overwithheld alone.

4. Is your withholding correct for your circumstances. If you file a W-4 saying you're single or married filing separate with no dependants a lot more taxes will be withheld from each check than if your W-4 says you are married filing joint with two dependants. The more withheld the bigger the refund (of course, it's just Uncle Sam repaying the interest free loan you made him).

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11y ago
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Q: If you make one hundred thirty four thousand dollars a year do not own a home good deductions what will you get back from IRS?
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