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Credit to the customer.
The credit card is supposed to be presented and processed. But it is possible for some systems to correctly process the refund if it is not. Unfortunately I would be very suspicious that the refund was not applied if the compan7y did not process the credit card.
debit
yes if u sign a contract
It is not possible to get refund unless we file the income tax returns. When we file returns it will check with OLTAS and generate refund if paid excess
Debit
Credit to the customer.
If you claim a tax credit that exceeds the tax owed, you can receive a refund for the excess credit if is a refundable credit:A refundable tax credit allows taxpayers to lower their tax liability to zero and receive a refund for the portion of the credit remaining.A nonrefundable tax credit allows taxpayers to lower their tax liability to zero, but not below zero. Any excess credit remaining is lost.The attached link discusses some refundable and nonrefundable credits. Once you get to the IRS website, type the specific credit you are curious about in the Search box to find out if it refundable or eligible for carryover.
The credit card is supposed to be presented and processed. But it is possible for some systems to correctly process the refund if it is not. Unfortunately I would be very suspicious that the refund was not applied if the compan7y did not process the credit card.
debit
how do i fill for renter credit is there renters credit
It is very common for a credit/refund to take up to 6 or 8 weeks to be processed. It always takes longer to get a refund than it does for them to take the money. Where i used to prefer virtual credit cards for online transaction.
yes if u sign a contract
It is not possible to get refund unless we file the income tax returns. When we file returns it will check with OLTAS and generate refund if paid excess
A credit note is used to write off an invoice or provide a refund.
A deposit may be either refundable or nonrefundable, depending on the wording used in the contract. Read the contract, if it states that the deposit is nonrefundable then you won't refund it. Otherwise you will likely have to refund the deposit, as the absence of a nonrefundability clause is usually taken to imply that the deposit was refundable. If there was no written contract it might just be best to refund it to avoid an argument and remember to use a written contract with an explicit nonrefundability clause in it next time if you want to avoid refunding the deposit.
No.