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Showing posts with the label Tax Refund

IRS Installment Agreement Default (2026): What Triggers It and How to Fix It Before Levies Restart

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IRS Installment Agreement Default (2026): What Triggers It and How to Fix It Before Levies Restart IRS Installment Agreement Default (2026): What Triggers It and How to Fix It Before Levies Restart Missing a payment or ignoring a notice can quietly cancel your IRS payment plan. When an installment agreement defaults, the IRS can restart aggressive collection tools — including bank levies and wage garnishment. This guide explains exactly what triggers a default in 2026, how much time you really have, and the fastest ways to fix it before enforcement resumes. Key takeaway: Most installment agreement defaults are fixable if you act quickly. The worst outcome usually happens when taxpayers ignore the default notice timeline. Primary keyword: IRS installment agreement default Secondary: IRS payment plan cancelled Secondary: levy restart timeline ...

IRS 5071C Letter (2026): Identity Verification Notice — How to Verify Fast + When Your Refund Restarts

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IRS 5071C Letter (2026): Identity Verification Notice — How to Verify Fast + When Your Refund Restarts If you received IRS Letter 5071C , the IRS is pausing your return to confirm your identity (and that the return is really yours). This guide shows the fastest safe verification steps , what to do if you didn’t file , and when refund processing restarts . Quick answer: What is a 5071C letter? Meaning: The IRS needs you to verify your identity and confirm whether you filed the return. Impact: Your return is effectively on hold until verification is completed. Goal: Finish verification fast to restart processing (including any refund). Before you start (do this in 2 minutes) Use ONLY the instructions on the letter. Don’t click random links in emails/texts claiming “IRS verification.” Prepare these items: ...

2026 IRS Tax Changes: What to Do Before You File in 2025

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2026 IRS Rule Changes Most Taxpayers Will Miss (And Pay For) A lot of people assume tax changes are obvious: a new credit, a new form, a big headline. But the most expensive IRS changes are often the “quiet” ones: inflation-adjusted limits, reporting threshold shifts, and rules that change how the IRS matches your return against what third parties report. Below are the 2026 IRS changes (and 2026-adjacent changes that hit your filing season) that many taxpayers will overlook—then feel later through a smaller refund, a bigger balance due, or a surprise IRS notice. (Sources: IRS inflation adjustments for tax year 2026, IRS guidance on 1099-K thresholds, IRS digital asset reporting details, and CRS summary of TCJA expirations.) Don’t wait until filing week. Use the checklist in this post to review what changed for 2026 and reduce “avoidable” tax overpayments. Jump to the 2026 check...

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