Simple, Apply and get a job in their office.
According to state website you'll receive your refund by mid-August if you file by June 15, or 60 days after you file, whichever is later. http://taxes.state.mn.us/prop_refund/refund_information/content/renters_refund.shtml
In my area they mean payment is due 30 or 60 days from invoice date, respectively. -- days net or -- days DOI meaning the same thing.
You have filed your tax return happily awaiting your federal refund to come. On the prescribed day, instead of a refund, you get a letter. These letters,CP5 and 4464C states in brief that the IRS is holding your refund until they do a more thorough review of your return. What does this mean, you ask. The letter goes on to state that they are focusing on the following items of interest on your return: 1. Income: Your wages and /or 1099 Misc income. 2. Federal taxes withheld from your pay and forms 1099. 3. Tax credits that you claimed on your return, such as the Earned Income Credit (EIC). 4. Business income reported on the return, such as from a Schedule C, Profit or Loss Form. In addition, you are advised the IRS reserves the right to contact other parties, such as your employer whose wages appear on the W2 attached to your return, in order to verify the information on your return. You may be asked to submit documentation to substantiate one or more of the items listed above. The worse part is that your refund can be held up to 45 days in the interim. You wonder whether the IRS's actions are legal. Unfortunately, they are. However, all is not lost. There is a silver lining in this dark cloud that generally goes unnoticed given that the letter itself throws you for a loop. Should you read the letter from beginning to end, you will find that near the end, the letter states that if you are facing economic harm (hardship) or problems with the IRS system, you may be eligible for Taxpayer Advocate Service (TAS) Assistance. For more information on the function of this office, read my blog topic "Tax Problems? TAS Might Be Your Answer". In short, they are an independent agency within the Internal Revenue Service whose authority comes from Congress to step in when individuals are facing the situations listed above. They can be reached at 1-877-777-4778. This is the office that you contact if the 45 day hold on your refund is coming in midst of a significant hardship that is currently happening or can occur as a result of your refund being delayed. For example, if you have been laid off from your job and are ineligible for unemployment, you must make the bills like anyone else. Because you are unemployed with no income you have fallen severely behind, with an eviction notice and disconnection notices out of the wazoo. You were counting on the refund to save the roof over your head and keep the gas, water, and lights on yet another day. As long as you can provide substantiation (copies of the notices), the Taxpayer Advocate Service will work as hard as they can to decrease the 45 day time period with respect to your hardship to get the refund released to you as quickly as is humanly possible. In addition, if the IRS requests substantiation of the items shown in the letter, you are able to provide this information directly to the Taxpayer Advocate, who in turn, will give it to the requesting office. In a sense, this makes the Advocate a liaison between you and the requestor. You provide the necessary information to the Advocate needed to expedite and resolve your request and the Advocate is in place to make sure that it gets to the right people. With this office, deadlines are critical, especially when it comes to hardships. Time is of the essence. When you are contacted by your Advocate, be ready to act and quick to move. Excessive delays can result in your case being closed. Best of all, there is no monetary cost to you; only the time that would have been expended anyway in providing documentation. With a program such as this, it is little wonder that they are mentioned only in passing in the letter. For those that fail to read, they are missing the hidden jewel amongst all the treasures. If you are able to fully capitalize on what the Taxpayer Advocate Service offers, hopefully, with their help, very soon that refund can be yours.
After your account has reached 60 days past due. After your account has reached 60 days past due.
Simple, Apply and get a job in their office.
No because for each game there is a guaranteed warranty of up to 60 days. After the time limit is up you can no longer get a refund.
You could, but they will find out about it and if you don't use this money to try and pay creditors then you could be in hot water. I would get some legal advice on this and meanwhile, put that money in an interest bearing account and don't touch it. Marcy * If the refund is received 60 days or less before the filing the entire refund is considered assets that must be included in the BK filing. If it is received more than 60 days before the filing the amount subject to BK is pro-rated.
You have 60 days to file a dispute with the credit card company. Call the company who owes you money and tell them they have 48 hours to refund your money or you will do a "chargeback." Companies hate that word because it is like a bounced check, they get charged a $25 fee (varies from state to state). If they do not refund your money, call your credit card company and tell them you want to dispute a charge on your credit account.
Vodafone dividends may qualify for capital gain treatment under the U.S. Tax Code. The corporation and the type of dividends qualify. For the individual taxpayer, it then depends on whether the holding period requirement has been met. "You must have held the stock for more than 60 days during the 121-day period that begins 60 days before the ex-dividend date." (IRS Publication 17, 2011)
Acuvue has a 90-day money back guarantee. Contacts can be returned within 90 days for any reason and a full refund will be issued. They even offer up to $60 back towards any fitting fee that was paid.
60 days is 8.57 weeks.
Qualified dividends are taxed at flat capital gains tax rate (currently 15%) while ordinary dividends are taxed as ordinary income, depending on an individual's specific tax bracket. For dividends to be considered qualified, they have to be absent form the IRS unqualified dividend list and the underlying stock that pays the dividend must be held for a specified by IRS holding period (more than 60 days during the 120-day period beginning 60 days before the ex-dividend date, and for preferred stock, the holding period is 90 days during the 180-day period beginning 90 days before the stock's ex-dividend date). Examples of dividends that do not qualify are: - Dividends paid on money market accounts - Dividends from mutual funds attributable to interest and short-term capital gains - Dividends from real estate investment trusts (REITs) - Dividends received in your IRA
60 days is 8 weeks and 4 days.
90 days > 60 days.
You can rollover your 401k at any time, as long as it has been 60 days since it was opened. The company holding your 401k benefits has its own rules.
60/24 = 2.5 days