Are the bills hitting the mailbox from your holiday hangover?
Tax preparers are banking on the folks who paid for their Christmas giftswith their tax return . Hence, they created the refund anticipation loan.
Instant cash with the benefit of having a professionally prepared tax return sounds like a reasonable proposition, Now this is what I call American ingenuity -- NOT.
Unfortunately, you will pay a whole lot more getting your tax refund now rather than waiting a few days later. According to the Consumer Federation of America the average cost of a refund anticipation loan can range from 40 percent to as high as 700 percent; in 2004 Americans spent more than $1.6 billion incurring these fees.
Finally, the Internal Revenue Service is seeking comments from the public and is considering outlawing these types of loans.
If you need your money quickly, you don't have to pay an arm and leg to get it. Here's how.
- File on the IRS Web site. You can prepare your taxes and file electronically on the Internal Revenue Web site for free using Freefile if you earn less than $54,000 a year. More than 57 million Americans are eligible and can receive a return and have it deposited in a bank account in as little as a week if there are no complications. Visit www.irs.gov
- Use tax software Purchase a software program and plug in the numbers and prepare the return yourself. Once completed you have the option of filing with the IRS electronically and your refund is then deposited to your bank account.
- Have your tax preparer do it electonically. trusted accountant or tax preparer can also file your return electronically and have your return directed to your bank using the IRS E-file procedure that is detailed on the tax return document.
Don't allow someone else to charge you a fee to have access to your own money. Sometimes convenience is too expensive.
www.deborahowens.com

Comments: (18)
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By: judy on 2/07/2008 10:16PM
If you use the irs.gov free e-file. can they deduct money from third parties? Not speaking about money owe to irs or student loans but money owe to rapid refund loans that wasn't paid back?
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By: Warren D on 2/05/2008 10:29PM
This isn't a plug, however, I have used the TaxAct website for 5 years now, and have never paid to file, or had any problems getting my refund. It takes 2 weeks, and it's paperless. They have a deluxe version for those who need to file with multiple deductions and credits, etc, but for the simple filer, it can't be beat.And it's absolutely free.
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By: sonia on 2/05/2008 10:42PM
this is my second year using free file through the irs website. i find it to be very easy and i sent mass emails out to all of my friends and family who i know make less than $54k a year. but i couldnt convince my friend to tell her son about free filing because him & his girlfriend and their 3 kids needed their money back the next day so they can buy "things" for their new house. i just think that it is sad how folks cant wait a few days and save a few hundred bucks at the same time. i guess i am cheap.
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By: Tunafish on 2/05/2008 11:00PM
I used to deal with paid preparers until one day after i bought my house, i was told by my lawyer that i could use my settlement receipt...well the paid preparer said it is not enough for the itemized federal but what i did not know(nor the preparer told me about it ) is that i could had used it as itemized deductions for my state tax) as a result, I was out of the $50 for the service and i owed money for the state tax!Not all paid preparers tell you what you shoud know...if it was not for the free preparer,I would still had known nothing about it to this date...we are hard working people who deserve every single penny that we are intitled to and full seek that advice!
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By: MS.B on 2/06/2008 12:13AM
I used H&R Block for one of those so called Refund Anticipation Loans and I cost me $2300.00. I prepared my own taxes and carried them there for them to file my taxes electronically and was told by their preparer that i did something wrong and that it was rejected, mind you I have been doing my taxes for over 18 years and never made a mistake. I told the person that I was talking to alright go ahead and do them over. When she did them over, she did not use one of my W-2's, it was from a part-time job that I worked on for a few months, I was told my the person that she could get me a larger refund if I opened a IRA with them, so I did, and that was the biggest mistake that I ever made. Yeah, I got the larger refund because all of my income was not reported and that was the mistake she said I made. I received a letter from the IRS saying that I did not report all of my income, when I called the IRS and told them what happened, they said that I was not the first person that told them about H&R Block telling people that. I called H&R Block and told them about the letter and they told me that they reported all of my income, so I carried all of my papers back to them and showed them and of course they did not stand by their word that they will pay any fees if they make a mistake preparing your taxes. I have not and will not go back to them as long as I can do my taxes online and get them back faster without fees.
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By: Ipress on 2/06/2008 12:44AM
I have been using Jackson Hewitt for awhile now, but I never get the RAL, I just wait, but I still like their service.
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By: Stokes Tax & Accounting Services on 2/06/2008 2:01AM
H&R Block and Jackson-Hewitt Tax Franchises are not professional tax preparers. Their target market is low income taxpayers. The tax preparers that work for them are paid hourly, receive a few weeks of classes, and they receive a bonus based on how many tax returns they prepare. Unfortunately, the general public believes that everyone who is a tax preparer has the same level of knowledge. IRS encourage to to prepare your tax return yourself because it increases the chance that you are not aware of deductions you can take. Not even Congress- who write the tax laws- prepare their own tax returns. Find a licensed CPA, an IRS enrolled agent, or a tax attorney to prepare your tax return. I offer "Rapid Refunds " and the additional fee is a maximum of $92.00.
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By: Calvin on 3/08/2008 4:43PM
These RALs are aimed at filers who don't have checking or savings accounts and can't wait the 21 days to get their refunds in the mail. The loans are not always directed at poor, impatience minorities. When I worked for H & R Block, a middle class, white man was rejected by the bank that does those refund anticipation loans. If my clients' refunds was under the bank minimum of $300, I would always refer them to the IRS, where they can get the taxes and refunds done for free.
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