Search

Would you be first in line for the next stimulus check? The IRS has 5 payment groups - CNET

guduka.blogspot.com
 002-money-cash-dollar-bills-hundreds-spotlight-black-background-money-clip-stimulus-check-bill-savings-poverty-hope

A stimulus check is back in the conversation, but not everyone will get it at once.

Sarah Tew/CNET

With a handful of proposals for another stimulus checks on the table in Washington this month, there's no saying which, if any, will gain enough support to become law. What we do know, however, is that if Congress does approve another round of payments for $1,200 -- or even $600 -- not everyone will get their checks at the same time.

As we learned with payments distributed earlier this year, the IRS sends checks in three main ways: through direct deposit, in the mail as a paper check, or as a prepaid EIP card. Some methods take longer than others, which means that millions of eligible people got their stimulus checks days or even weeks after others.

The way you received your money isn't the only factor that decided which payment group you fell into, but together, these perhaps unintentional "priority" groups made a difference in regard to who could use their checks immediately and who had to wait and wonder. If there's a second stimulus check (and here's the status right now with negotiations and the latest financial proposals), it's expected to arrive about the same way, with some people getting it faster than others. (You might even be able to speed up the receipt of your next check.)

We'll walk you through the different groups and why they broke out that way. To get a better understanding of how your group could affect your payment schedule, we created a chart that maps out the differences, based on how and when the first checks were sent. If a second direct payment doesn't come in 2020, here's why we think it could arrive in 2021. This story is regularly updated.

Now playing: Watch this: Next stimulus checks: What to expect

3:03

Here are the 5 stimulus payment groups we uncovered

When the CARES Act passed in March, it took a couple of weeks for the IRS to build a tool and a procedure to figure out who was owed a check and for how much. This formula helped determine the size of your household's total sum, but the schedule for sending checks may have felt far less deliberate.

As the IRS was under pressure to get out stimulus money fast, how soon you received your check often depended on the method by which you got paid. Any kind of complication could slow it down. In addition, some calculation errors meant there are people who may not see all or any of their allotted share until the middle of 2021.

Direct deposit recipients: People who already have their direct deposit information on file with the IRS or who provide that info when and if registration opens again should be first in line to receive a stimulus check. An electronic transfer of funds is faster and more efficient, which is why this group largely got their first payment faster.

Social Security beneficiaries: With the first stimulus payment, many Social Security beneficiaries who had direct deposit information on file with the federal government received checks in the first week, though not always the first day.

People who get paper checks: The IRS began to mail checks about a week later to those without direct deposit data on file. 

004-cash-money-dollar-bills-colorful-background-stimulus-2020

When you get your stimulus money could depend on who you are.

Sarah Tew/CNET

EIP card recipients: Economic impact payment debit cards are prepaid Visa cards the IRS sent to about 4 million people starting in mid-May. If the IRS follows the same payment priority order, this group could begin to see their payment weeks after the first direct deposit transfers take place.

People with more complex situations: This category includes people who received a check after June, are still waiting to receive their stimulus payment or who didn't know they need to complete an extra step. Direct payments will continue through the end of 2020 for some individuals who weren't part of the previous groups. Here's what could be holding up the stimulus check delivery for some people and how to contact the IRS to report a missing, lost or stolen check.

Why the IRS can't send all the payments at once

There are a few reasons the IRS doesn't send all the stimulus payments at once. One is the sheer volume of disbursements it has to process. With the first check, the IRS said it could deliver 5 million to 7 million paper stimulus checks a week, starting with people whose adjusted gross income, or AGI, is less than $20,000, and then moving to people whose AGIs are progressively larger, according to the Government Accountability Office.

Another reason payments come at different times for different people depends on the way they get the cash. By summer, the IRS had sent money to at least 160 million people, with those the federal government had direct deposit information for receiving their checks first. 

Physical checks and EIP payments followed, creating a de facto priority order that could result in some Americans receiving their checks days or even weeks before others.

In fact, the final checks from the first round are still being distributed this month, and catch-up payments due to errors and unclaimed checks will continue to arrive throughout 2021. Some people will even need to claim their first check as part of their 2020 tax return.

money-cash-dollars-bills-bank-stimulus-covid-finance-7182

Understanding your stimulus priority group will help you set your expectations about the next check.

Angela Lang/CNET

The first round of payments wraps up this month

While the majority of people in line to receive a stimulus check got theirs by the end of July, up until late November, there were still millions of people who were eligible for stimulus money who hadn't received it. That includes people who didn't receive $500 allotted for their dependents, some who are involved in child support situations and nonfilers who may be owed a stimulus check (including older adults and people who receive SSI or SSDI). 

If you're a US citizen abroad or live in a US territory and didn't receive a check as expected, you may also need to investigate. And a new court ruling has made it possible for millions of people who are incarcerated to get a check, even after the IRS changed its rules to exclude this group.

The Nov. 21 deadline to claim the payment in 2020 has passed, but you'll be able to claim a catch-up payment or error adjustment during the tax season 2021.

Depending on which group you're in, we've also mapped out some speculative dates for how soon you could potentially get your next stimulus check.

Let's block ads! (Why?)



"payment" - Google News
December 13, 2020 at 01:30AM
https://ift.tt/3mfmOtL

Would you be first in line for the next stimulus check? The IRS has 5 payment groups - CNET
"payment" - Google News
https://ift.tt/3bV4HFe
https://ift.tt/2VYfp89

Bagikan Berita Ini

0 Response to "Would you be first in line for the next stimulus check? The IRS has 5 payment groups - CNET"

Post a Comment

Powered by Blogger.