You may be entitled to a refund if you have overpaid someone. If you paid for services you weren't happy with, or didn't receive, you may be eligible for a refund.
I received my refund. The amount is $300.00 over the amount I was entitled to from my tax return. I want to know who to contact to properly return the $300.
If you were entitled to a refund on April 15th, and the penalty for late filing is not more than your refund, and you file within three years of the original due date of the return (including any applicable extensions of time to file), then, yes, you will get a refund.
If you were entitled to both a state and a federal refund, then you would get two separate checks.
Yes. Unemployment benefits are taxable income. If you had taxes withheld from your checks, you may be entitled to a refund.
Yes, and even more so if you filed a W-2 form, for employment. You may have paid taxes, that would give you a refund. Even a teen that has mowed lawns should file a tax return.... You may be entitled to a refund.
Go up to them and give them your receipt ..Stay there if they don't give you a refund your entitled of these remedy credit note or a refund , or just go looking for a ombudsman.
If the debtor is entitled to receive an income tax refund or a similar nonexempt asset in the near future, he or she should not file under chapter 7 until after the refund or asset has been received and disposed of. Otherwise, the refund or asset will become the property of the trustee.
Yes, the IRS is entitled to dock a refund for a variety of things, including court ordered debt.
Yes, you can request a refund from an attorney. Most attorneys will not give you a full refund, but may give you a partial refund. If some of the money was for filing fees, you won't be entitled to receive those back.
I received my refund. The amount is $300.00 over the amount I was entitled to from my tax return. I want to know who to contact to properly return the $300.
If you were entitled to a refund on April 15th, and the penalty for late filing is not more than your refund, and you file within three years of the original due date of the return (including any applicable extensions of time to file), then, yes, you will get a refund.
No, the IRS already has it. They can probably take any refund to which you are entitled.
If you were entitled to both a state and a federal refund, then you would get two separate checks.
If the debtor is entitled to receive an income tax refund or a similar nonexempt asset in the near future, he or she should not file under chapter 7 until after the refund or asset has been received and disposed of. Otherwise, the refund or asset will become the property of the trustee.
It's the same as the tax cap on employees. There is one slight difference: If an employee pays more than the annual cap because he had more than one job, the employee is entitled to a refund of the excess employee share withheld. The employers are not entitled to a refund.
No. It was a NONREFUNDABLE payment.
READ THE AGREEMENT that established the client relationship, and has the terms of the engagement including fee's. That is what YOU agreed to. That's all there is to it...