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$1.5 Billion in Unclaimed Tax Refunds from 2019 Set to Expire in July 2023, Says IRS

CPA Practice

million people across the nation (state-by-state list below) have unclaimed refunds for tax year 2019 but face a July 17 deadline to submit their tax return. billion in refunds remain unclaimed because people haven’t filed their 2019 tax returns yet. Need to file a 2019 tax return?

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$1.5 Billion in Refunds From 2019 Remain Unclaimed, IRS Says

CPA Practice

have unclaimed refunds for tax year 2019 but face a July 17 deadline to submit their tax return, the IRS said on Wednesday. billion in refunds remain unclaimed because people have not filed their 2019 tax returns yet. People face a July 17 deadline to file their returns. million people across the U.S.

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$1.5 Billion in Refunds From 2019 Remain Unclaimed, IRS Says

CPA Practice

have unclaimed refunds for tax year 2019 but face a July 17 deadline to submit their tax return, the IRS said on Wednesday. billion in refunds remain unclaimed because people have not filed their 2019 tax returns yet. People face a July 17 deadline to file their returns. million people across the U.S.

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Key State Tax Changes for 2024

CPA Practice

Child tax credit for 2024 Additionally, several states have increased child and dependent tax credits for 2024. Colorado’s expanded child tax credit of up to $1,200 per child is effective for 2024 (tax returns normally filed in early 2025). Massachusetts now has one of the highest child tax credits in the U.S.

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How to Efficiently Complete a Business Personal Property Rendition

CPA Practice

Most states tax personal property owned by businesses and require businesses to complete and file a personal property rendition every year. The exceptions to that rule are Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Dakota, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and South Dakota.

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Lodging Tax Insanity — So Many Ways to Tax Accommodations

CPA Practice

States typically take one of five different approaches to taxing accommodations: A single, statewide tax on accommodations but no additional local taxes (e.g., Connecticut, Maine, New Hampshire) A combined state/local sales tax on accommodations and local jurisdictions can impose an additional local accommodations tax (e.g.,

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