i DON'T know! quit asking stupid QUESTIONS! jk! i LOVE you.
Generally you have three years in which to file a tax return for a refund. After three years, the IRS refund statute doesn't allow for issuing a refund. The three years starts on the due date of the original return for the particular tax year.For more information, go to www.irs.gov/taxtopics for Topic 153 (What to Do if You Haven't Filed Your Tax Return).
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.
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.
You can file as back as you want. If you owe taxes, the IRS will only prosecute up to seven years back, so it's recommended to only file the last seven years. If you are due a refund, the IRS will only refund the previous three years.
no..you have 3 years to file it. after that kiss your refund goodbye. FYI - if you file two or three years together it will take 5-6 weeks regardless of efile....they want to make sure you dont owe on the previous years before they release the current
You cannot get a refund if you don't file. But even if you are years late, you can still file and apply for your refund. It does not expire.
If it has been less than three years from the date the tax return was originally due, then you may be able to get it back. It depends on whether or not you can prove it was a mistake.
A split refund allows you divide your refund, in almost any proportion you would like, and direct deposit the funds into as much as three different accounts with U.S. banking institutions. Use Form 8888, Allocation of Refund, to request to possess your refund split.
A split refund allows you divide your refund, in almost any proportion you would like, and direct deposit the funds into as much as three different accounts with U.S. banking institutions. Use Form 8888, Allocation of Refund, to request to possess your refund split.
If you owe money to the IRS for prior years taxes, and you have a refund due to you on this year's taxes, the IRS will keep the refund and apply it towards the debt that you owe.
You should file your income tax returns if you qualify for any of the refund amounts and see what happens. You can file for a refund up to 3 years from the due date of the tax return and receive the amount of the refund that you qualify for after that period of time the refund is no longer available to you. For the 2006 tax year income tax return the last day to file and receive the refund amount would have been April 15 2010.
Yes. You can actually file for a refund for the current year and two years previous. Right now you can file for a refund on tax years 2008, 2009, and 2010. You can also file for a refund on 2007 if and only if you filed for an extension in 2007 which gives you until October 15th to file for the 2007 refund. If you did not file an extension in 2007 then your time to request a refund expired on April 15th.