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After you file
What last step are you having trouble with? It is too soon to e-file, if that is what you are trying to do. TurboTax will open e-filing on January 3, but be aware that the IRS will not be open for e-files until January 15. So even if you e-file tomorrow or before the 15th of January, your return will just sit on the server--doing nothing.
If you discover that you need to change something, you will not be able to do it unless the IRS rejects your return. If they accept it with your mistake, you will have to wait out the IRS and amend later after they fully process the return. (The 1040X form you will need does not become available until late February so you have to wait for that, too) And amending takes about 4 months. Amended returns have to be mailed; you can’t “fix” a mistake and e-file the correction.
Just hours after TurboTax started allowing users to e-file last year, we began to hear from people who were in such a rush to file that they made big mistakes and are now stunned to find out that they cannot do anything to fix their mistakes for weeks, if not months. Do you want to be one of them?
Tax preparation software cannot be finalized and become available to you until the IRS finalizes the forms and then goes through the process of approving the software. Further, many states do not have their forms ready to use yet. Click on Review to see what forms you are still waiting for.
If you are expecting to get earned income credit or the additional child tax credit, the PATH act means you cannot get your refund before early March, even if you file early.
Employers have until the end of January to issue W-2’s. You may also need to wait for your various kinds of 1099’s and/or 1098’s to come from banks, Social Security, schools, and other financial institutions that will issue them in late January/early February.
Trying to file too early is unwise. With new forms and new software, it is better to wait for the “bugs” and “glitches” to be worked out before you file. Filing too early because you hope for a quick refund may accomplish just the opposite—your return could end up clogged in a mess that will take weeks or even months to sort out, as many “early” filers have discovered in the past.