If you can’t pay your taxes in full, the IRS will work with you. Past due
debts like taxes owed, however, can reduce your federal tax refund. The
Treasury Offset Program can use all or part of your federal refund to settle
certain unpaid federal or state debts, to include unpaid individual shared
responsibility payments. Here are five facts to know about tax refund offsets.
1. Bureau of the Fiscal Service. The Department of
Treasury’s Bureau of the Fiscal Service, or BFS, runs the Treasury Offset
Program.
2. Offsets to Pay Certain Debts. The BFS may also use part
or all of your tax refund to pay certain other debts such as:
- Federal tax debts.
- Federal agency debts
like a delinquent student loan.
- State income tax
obligations.
- Past-due child and
spousal support.
- Certain unemployment
compensation debts owed to a state.
3. Notify by Mail. The BFS will mail you a notice if it
offsets any part of your refund to pay your debt. The notice will list the
original refund and offset amount. It will also include the agency that
received the offset payment. It will also give the agency’s contact
information.
4. How to Dispute Offset. If you wish to dispute the
offset, you should contact the agency that received the offset payment. Only
contact the IRS is your offset payment was applied to a federal tax debt.
5. Injured Spouse Allocation. You may be entitled to part
or the entire offset if you filed a joint tax return with your spouse. This
rule applies if your spouse is solely responsible for the debt. To get your
part of the refund, file Form
8379, Injured Spouse Allocation. If you need to prepare a Form 8379, you
can prepare and e-file your tax return for free using IRS
Free File.
Health Care Law: Refund Offsets and the Individual Shared
Responsibility Payment. While the law prohibits the IRS from using
liens or levies to collect any individual shared responsibility payment, if you
owe a shared responsibility payment, the IRS may offset your refund against
that liability.
Each and every taxpayer has a set of fundamental rights they should be aware
of when dealing with the IRS. These are your Taxpayer
Bill of Rights. Explore your rights and our obligations to protect them on
IRS.gov.
Additional IRS Resources:
- Tax Topic 203 - Refund Offsets
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