No.
But if you live in one of the states that allows a state deduction for federal taxes and you took such a deduction, you may have to claim it on your state return.
You do not have to report any income tax refund on any tax forms, it is not income.
Yes. State refund must be claimed as income on your federal return.
Im never refund federal tax, like a boss.
Go to any local tax person in your area. Once you are there they will have the proper paperwork for you to fill out to claim your annual taxes. Do this before April 15th.
If you took the amount as a deduction as State taxes on your federal return originally (say refund is from a prior year), then getting it back now is reported as income.
Taxpayer failed to file a tax return to claim a possible refund amount they had available to them if the refund amount is claimed in the 3 year time frame then the refund amount is no longer available to the taxpayer. Taxpayer filed a income tax return and failed to claim some of the credits that were available to them if the income tax had been filed correctly and the can now file the 1040X amended individual income tax return to correct the error that was made on the original file income tax return to claim the additional refund amount.
Form 941 - Employer's Quarterly Federal Tax ReturnForm 720 - Quarterly Federal Excise TaxReturn941-X - Adjusted Employer's Quarterly Federal TaxReturn or claim for Refund
No, when filing for the state income taxes, you will receive your federal income tax refund as well as your state income tax refund.
You can try to claim a refund for 2002, but the IRS isn't required to pay anything over three years past due. You might get it, but don't count on it.
Married tax credit and children's tax credits can cause a refund to be larger than what was withheld.
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.
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.