There are too many variables to answer.
Are you filing single or married?
What deductions do you have?
How many deductions on your W-4?
How much did you pay in taxes?
Where you a private contractor or an employee?
Consult a tax preparer or tax attorney to find out what works for you.
That depends on how many dependents that you claimed during the time that you drew pay.
It is virtually impossible to answer this question without specific details. Your tax return will depend on how much money you made and paid in taxes throughout the year. It will also vary if you have dependents, if you are claimed as a dependant, if you are married, have a mortgage, are self employed, and if you claim credits such as the hope credit.
efiled for2011 but owe back taxes from 2009..payment plan is due august 2011..can the back taxes be deducted from payment estimated to be directly deposited by july 4 2012 without delaying deposit?
You would need a skilled tax attorney to help you with back taxes that you owe. An attorney will be able to help you far better than you can help yourself because it is their job to know everything about taxes.
You would probably end up in prison. Or, you could be heavily fined, with added penalties, and forced to pay back taxes.
This would depend on a lot of other factors. What taxes were already paid to other things such as dependents and other deductibles.
If your annual gross income is $1600, even without any dependents I'd normally expect you'd get a refund of any taxes you actually paid. However, since you didn't provide that number, we can't tell you how much you'll be refunded.
That depends on how many dependents that you claimed during the time that you drew pay.
It is virtually impossible to answer this question without specific details. Your tax return will depend on how much money you made and paid in taxes throughout the year. It will also vary if you have dependents, if you are claimed as a dependant, if you are married, have a mortgage, are self employed, and if you claim credits such as the hope credit.
if you claim zero on your w4, they will take the most taxes out of you. If you have dependents and you add them on when you do your income taxes, you will get that money back. even if it is just you, you should claim zero instead of one, then at income tax time you will not have to pay in, you should get back what you overpaid instead. The more dependents you put on your w4, the less taxes they will take out of your check, but at income tax time, if they did not take out enough you will have to pay in. And like me, if you like a big, big check all at once you want to claim zero, its like a way of saving money, and you get the money back at income tax time to do something big with.
The answer to this depends on what state is involved, why there has to be any "pay back" (i.e., misrepresentation or ?) in the first place, etc. And as to the taxes not taken out, whether there is a tax liability depends on other tax issues such as deductions, dependents, etc. Check with a tax preparer for clarification.
"No taxation without representation"
No, not without their written, recorded agreement.Otherwise you are simply a volunteer having paid the taxes.
Owing back taxes is a government loan. Whether or not you can receive another without paying of this one dpends on the loan program you apply for.
no taxation without representation (spelling??) simply means that the people living back in those times i think it was collonial America were being taxed and had no say in the taxes they said this quote to show that maybe if they had a representitive the taxes would be a little more fair it would also be one step forward for them.
You would get back .35 before taxes. Don't forget the taxes.
Generally, if you pay back property taxes on property you do not own you would be considered a volunteer. Your payments would not give you any ownership interest in that property.