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I used to rent out a portion of the home. Now I'm renting it all out effective 01/01/2024
The IRS has garnished my refunds every year for the past 10 years, because they inexplicably believe that I owe them almost $50,000 in back taxes from a return filed 2015.   This would imply that I... See more...
The IRS has garnished my refunds every year for the past 10 years, because they inexplicably believe that I owe them almost $50,000 in back taxes from a return filed 2015.   This would imply that I must have made a lot of money in 2015, but no. It was actually by far the brokest year of my entire life. Like, I literally became homeless for part of this year. Like, living outside, HOMELESS homeless. I remember filing my return that year, and my income was well below the poverty line. Everything seemed normal when I submitted it, the tax software didn't find any errors and calculated that I should actually expect a decent refund.   And then something went HORRIBLY WRONG. I never got a refund, and instead got this notice from the IRS that said I owed them $35,000 according to my recently filed return. I checked the return on file to see if maybe I had mistakenly added a few zeros or something, but IT LOOKS NORMAL. I have NO idea what went wrong or where they are getting this huge number. When I call them, they either have no idea about anything, say they're going to transfer me but just put me on hold forever and never pick back up, or they don't take me seriously and assume I'm trying to evade paying taxes or something, and try to set me up with a payment plan. It's seemingly impossible to get them to actually look at my returns and figure out what happened. I can't do it, because everything on my end that I have access to looks okay. This is something that came from their side, that they need to address, and they won't do it because according to them IRS is infallible and if I want to fix this I should get on a payment plan. Like, I'm sorry but I'm not getting put on a payment plan for something I don't owe. If anything, the IRS owes me at this point.   I looked online to see if others had similar problems, but there's not a lot to find and most places that help you with "tax problems" are more geared towards helping you settle legitimate debt, not fix accounting errors at the IRS. I found an article where some people who had experienced erroneous tax liability due to IRS miscalculations were being interviewed. I was very excited to find this article, thinking I might find a solution- but, by the end of the article not a single one of the people had been able to correct the issue and they were all still on the hook for debts they didn't owe, and the conclusion was that apparently, if the IRS makes an error and miscalculates your taxes, it's nearly impossible to fix.  W. T. F.   Eventually I kind of just let it go, as I had other things to do in life and was getting nowhere with them. They didn't seem to be aggressively coming after me for it or anything- once in awhile they'll send me a piece of paper in the mail about it, and they steal all of my tax refunds because like an idiot I keep filing them. I usually hit them up once a year after they garnish my refund and I try and get them to fix it, without results. In total they've probably stolen over $10,000 to put towards this mysterious debt that I don't owe. I don't know why I even bother filing anymore. Whatever IRS, at least the record shows I'm doing what I'm supposed to do and paying what I do owe. Unlike the IRS.   I'm starting to become increasingly concerned about this recently though, because they keep slapping penalties on it and now it's getting close to reaching the $50,000 threshold where they start to garnish more than just tax returns, like your income and assets and passport and such.  I'm not homeless or broke anymore. I own a successful and growing business, and I really like traveling places. I can deal with them clawing back my tax returns - those always felt like free surprise money anyway - but they are NOT going to interfere with my business assets or prevent me from seeing the world.   But how do I get them to correct this error? Or even acknowledge it? Is there any way they'll ever give me back all of the 10 years' worth of tax return money they've stolen? Has this ever happened to anyone else? Why is what seems like a fairly straightforward issue so hard to fix? Helppp what do I do?
My return just isn't right and I cannot tell why. How do I get it looked at?
How can I redo my tax
Am I supposed to be charged twice if rhe irs didn't accept it the first time?
In past years I've never paid estimated quarterly taxes (I'm retired) but simply filed my yearly taxes in April, and a several times my taxes were well over $1,000 (one year was $2600) and I wasn't p... See more...
In past years I've never paid estimated quarterly taxes (I'm retired) but simply filed my yearly taxes in April, and a several times my taxes were well over $1,000 (one year was $2600) and I wasn't penalized by the IRS for not paying quarterly taxes.  I didn't know I should be doing that.  For the filing year 2024 I  also didn't pay quarterly estimated taxes, as usual because I wasn't aware it was even necessary, since it never was before, even when my tax bill was higher.  For 2024 my tax bill was $1805 which I paid in full all at once as usual, and on time, but the website tells me that I will be penalized for not having paid any estimated quarterly taxes in 2024.  I looked on my IRS account page it says NOTHING about me owing any penalty for failure to pay quarterly taxes in any year, but it does show all the tax filing payments I did make in past years. The IRS also has never once contacted me by any means - letter or email, about me owing any penalties/interest for past years failure to pay estimated quarterly taxes.     I chose not to try to figure out what my tax penalty/interest would be, and to let the IRS tell me what it is.  So I am very confused right now and don't understand what is going on and why now this is a problem when before, it never came up. 
How do I get the eitc that I'm missing?
@ GERR  also wrote:  "I tried to confirm PIN on IRS.com but was instead lead to get an 6 digit IP PIN."   I don't know what "IRS.com" is.   The official IRS website is IRS.gov .   In any case, se... See more...
@ GERR  also wrote:  "I tried to confirm PIN on IRS.com but was instead lead to get an 6 digit IP PIN."   I don't know what "IRS.com" is.   The official IRS website is IRS.gov .   In any case, see the long answer I left you above about your rejection error issue.   Without knowing the original rejection error code, I'd be suspicious you may have ended up with an IP PIN by mistake, but now you do have to use it.
@GERR wrote: In process of e-filing, TurboTax asks for 5 digit "signature" PIN.  The IRS rejected my efile for lack of correct  PIN? I tried to confirm PIN on IRS.com but was instead lead to get... See more...
@GERR wrote: In process of e-filing, TurboTax asks for 5 digit "signature" PIN.  The IRS rejected my efile for lack of correct  PIN? I tried to confirm PIN on IRS.com but was instead lead to get an 6 digit IP PIN.  Very confusing because I did not realize there were two different pins.  When I returned to TurboTax I was shown the screen with the 5 digit pins so could not make correction there.  Had to read community discussions to try to resolve but TurboTax should have lead me to IP PIN entry instead of signature PIN site. Can't believe I was the only one confused. I'm suspicious of your first rejection since you did not provide the rejection error code, so all we can do is guess for now.   I'm curious if the original rejection code might have been for an AGI/PIN issue, which is not an IP PIN (Identity Protection PIN) issue.   In the rejection message did it specifically mention the term "IP PIN" or  "Identity Protection PIN?"   Or did it say there was a problem with AGI or PIN?    If the latter, that is not Identity Pin.   Again, it's hard to know without the rejection error code.     In any case, if you acquired a 6-digit IP PIN, then you do have to use it.  From the above I can't tell if you entered it or not, but if you haven't, here's how:   Federal tab (or the PERSONAL tab in Home and Business desktop) Subtab Other Tax Situations Scroll down to Other Return Info Expand that topic and choose Identity Protection PIN.   You will still need to enter a 5-digit PIN on the Signature page to "sign" your return. It's on a page with today's date and your birth date. Like it says there, those 5 digits can be any 5 digits of your choosing (except can't be all zeros.)   If you get another rejection, be sure to post the actual rejection error code.
Yes, I want to report After tax 401k to Roth IRA rollover. 1099-R received from the 401(k) Box 1 Gross distribution = Box 1 + Box 5 Box 2a Taxable amount Box 5 Employee contributions/Designated R... See more...
Yes, I want to report After tax 401k to Roth IRA rollover. 1099-R received from the 401(k) Box 1 Gross distribution = Box 1 + Box 5 Box 2a Taxable amount Box 5 Employee contributions/Designated Roth contributions
Also check your email's junk/spam folder in case it ending up there.  Otherwise try this:   Log in if not already logged in, and low down in the left menu column choose Intuit Account. In your Ac... See more...
Also check your email's junk/spam folder in case it ending up there.  Otherwise try this:   Log in if not already logged in, and low down in the left menu column choose Intuit Account. In your Account settings, go to Sign In & Security. Check the email address there, and update if necessary. If it has an adjacent tag that says "unverified" or "not verified", there may be a link to verify it there. It will then send a verification email. Once you do all that, I'd log out of TurboTax, close the browser and reopen it. Then log in and try your filing again.   It may or may not ask you again when efiling for an email verification code, but it at least it will be using your correct email address. FAQ: What if I'm having trouble with my filing verification code? https://ttlc.intuit.com/community/security/help/what-if-i-m-having-trouble-with-my-filing-verificati...  
I was very disappointed in this new format. Not customer friendly at all. I have a new computer and wasn't able to get 10 years of information off the old one. It took way too long to find what I n... See more...
I was very disappointed in this new format. Not customer friendly at all. I have a new computer and wasn't able to get 10 years of information off the old one. It took way too long to find what I needed just to get my tax started.  I have used TT for over 10 years no complaints. I miss the CD.  Making us have an Intuit Account was annoying. It should be our choice. I will not recommend TT for next year. 
To remove the 0. (zero) entry in line 27b, right-click on it and select OVERIDE in pop-up menu, then delete the 0. entry. I lost 3 hours figuring out the solution described by first responder.