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I don't understand your question. A refund (rapid or otherwise) occurs when you have overpaid your taxes and the IRS owes you money. If you owe the IRS money, you will not be getting any kind of refund. If you are talking about the situation where this year's tax return shows a refund, but you still owe unpaid taxes from last year, do NOT apply for a rapid refund. The IRS will keep your refund to pay your back taxes and the rapid refund company will still charge you a fee for processing the rapid refund even though you won't be getting any refund. You've waited this long to get a refund. Even if the IRS wasn't getting your refund, is it really worth paying $100 or $200 in fees just to get your refund one week earlier? well that answer is not totally true if you owe the IRS does not mean will not get any refund back because they could have still owed it from the year before and the IRS will deduct what is owed and send out the difference
If this is an original return, 90 percent of the time you'll still receive your refund within three weeks with direct deposit, six weeks for a paper check. If it's an amended return, normally it's 6 to 8 weeks, and a processing delay will add another 45 days.
six weeks
No unless you have earned income you can not receive a refund.
No not if you are in the FMS offset refund program and your expected refund amount is less than the amount that is owed to the IRS.
I don't understand your question. A refund (rapid or otherwise) occurs when you have overpaid your taxes and the IRS owes you money. If you owe the IRS money, you will not be getting any kind of refund. If you are talking about the situation where this year's tax return shows a refund, but you still owe unpaid taxes from last year, do NOT apply for a rapid refund. The IRS will keep your refund to pay your back taxes and the rapid refund company will still charge you a fee for processing the rapid refund even though you won't be getting any refund. You've waited this long to get a refund. Even if the IRS wasn't getting your refund, is it really worth paying $100 or $200 in fees just to get your refund one week earlier? well that answer is not totally true if you owe the IRS does not mean will not get any refund back because they could have still owed it from the year before and the IRS will deduct what is owed and send out the difference
If this is an original return, 90 percent of the time you'll still receive your refund within three weeks with direct deposit, six weeks for a paper check. If it's an amended return, normally it's 6 to 8 weeks, and a processing delay will add another 45 days.
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six weeks
No
Hopefully you do not own them money. In that case, yes you can still get a refund.
No unless you have earned income you can not receive a refund.
The company will try to sell you a list of people who are due for a refund. You will have to try to reach them and try to do their paperwork for a fee. Is this a scam?
No not if you are in the FMS offset refund program and your expected refund amount is less than the amount that is owed to the IRS.
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.
Yes, but they will first deduct any amount you owe from what your refund would be.
With most processing banks, the answer is NO, worse yet some processing banks charge a fee for the refund, as well as the original transaction.