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Level 2
April 17, 2020
Question

Fix Your “Ducking” Software!

  • April 17, 2020
  • 1 reply
  • 0 views

Both 2018 and 2019 tax years I inputted checking account info into your software.

 

But YOU Intuit screwed up and it didn’t get sent to IRS.  Then thus year, your update communications SUCKED!

 

Fix your DUCKING software you idiots!

    1 reply

    macuser_22
    Alumni - Champ
    Alumni - Champ
    April 17, 2020

    Print all forms and worksheets and view the "Info Worksheet" Part V.   If the bank information is there then it did get sent to the IRS.  If not there then you did not enter it properly.

    **Disclaimer: This post is for discussion purposes only and is NOT tax advice. The author takes no responsibility for the accuracy of any information in this post.**
    Level 2
    April 19, 2020

    Married filing jointly, AGI far below the $150,000 threshold.

     

    As I stated, I inputted checking acct info both years (2018 and 2019 tax years). Intuit did not transmit to IRS, because I wasn’t due a refund that had to be e-deposited. The amounts owed both years were far below any “IRS Penalty Level.”  I simply refuse to give the tax-wasting feds an interest-free “loan” for 12 months. Clearly a flaw in Intuit’s software.  

    And I received an email that “IRS has accepted your return.”  Thus, the return “has been processed.”  Further, the payment for what I owed had posted to my credit card used to pay.

     

    Intuit screwed up, plain and simple.

    macuser_22
    Alumni - Champ
    Alumni - Champ
    April 19, 2020

    @chuckhoffheiser wrote:

    Married filing jointly, AGI far below the $150,000 threshold.

     

    As I stated, I inputted checking acct info both years (2018 and 2019 tax years). Intuit did not transmit to IRS, because I wasn’t due a refund that had to be e-deposited. The amounts owed both years were far below any “IRS Penalty Level.”  

     


    Oh - if this is about the stimulus payment and you "owed" in 2018 & 2019 then the IRS will NOT direct deposit to any account that "paid" tax.   Unless you had a refund and had a direct deposit then the IRS will not use a direct debit account for a direct deposit.   I believe that would be against banking laws and many times the routing will be different.

    **Disclaimer: This post is for discussion purposes only and is NOT tax advice. The author takes no responsibility for the accuracy of any information in this post.**