Answer
Example: Fee for 1 year = 12 dollars. Contract terminated after 6 months. The refund is $6; in other words you get back the money for those months you haven't used.
Pro-rated means a portion of the value is deducted based on age and or condition of the item you are returning. So what you get is not the full price paid for the item, only a portion of what you paid.
No
Yes, it is. You send them money, and get the runaround forever. They never send what they're supposed to, and when you finally ask for a refund, they say that the time for a refund has expired.
No, the rebate check is an advance payment of a 2008 tax credit. The money is actually a portion of the refund or payment applied to the taxes you will file in 2009. Therefore as it is a refund check it is not taxable income.
When you have your fees deducted from the refund, the IRS sends the refund to the tax preparer's bank which deducts the fees and deposits the rest into your account. Since the IRS doesn't want to send the rebate to that account, they're issuing a check instead.
If your income tax refund was direct deposited, your stimulus check will also be direct deposited.
Most insurance companies will refund any remaining policy time. It will be prorated. If your mortgage company paid it out of escrow funds, the refund may get sent to them.
Suggest you contact your local Better Business Bureau (BBB) and let them handle it. It's free and they'll know just what to do.
Prorated leave is the leave you receive based on how long you have been with the organization.
For the sake of argument, let us say you are talking paying rent. If rent is $100 a month, and you move in half way into the month, the prorated payment would be half the rent - or $50. Does that answer your question ?
Yes, and the tenant might owe the next month as well.
15,000
If you mean get a refund its not possible.
It means to get your money back.
Calculate the amount of money you make per day, then multiply it with the amount of workdays you have completed and that should give you the prorated contract.
That is the correct spelling of the verb "prorate" (from pro rata),meaning to charge or distribute proportionately.
Loans are never taxable...I'm not sure what you mean by a loan refund though!
Depends on how often the premium was paid.... For more info. see www.steveshorr.com Generally speaking, if the premium was paid on a monthly (or more frequent) basis, the answer is NO. If less frequently (i.e. quarterly, bi-annually, or annually), then most will refund the prorated amount, rounded to some reasonable number (i.e. typically a week). The exact specifics will be found in the policy itself.