Actually, most of my refund is EIC. It isn't from my withholdings.
I'm going to have to do some work on my withholdings for 2006. I'm getting about $800 back. ing A.
Actually, most of my refund is EIC. It isn't from my withholdings.
I think our accountant said we're gonna owe around $3500 this year! Awesome!
Last edited by Shelly; 01-29-2006 at 10:10 PM. Reason: apostrophes and commas aren't the same thing
A five-hour old thread on taxes and no T Park?
I won't qualify for that this year. Since the marriage, Jess is the breadwinner now and throws me way over the 12,000 limit. I have no idea what to expect this year with the carryover I have from 2004, school loans, a marriage credit, and some type of relief for new homeowners. I hate having my taxes prepared for 40 bucks or whatever the ridiculous fee is but it's getting tricky now. I'll probably just use Turbo Tax again and if it doesn't look right, i'll take it somewhere.
How about these people that pay 200 bucks so that they can get their 1000 dollar refund back in 2 days. That makes no sense.
Man, my mom retired last year and took a large chunk of her retirement to pay off her bills. She was then rehired by the school district for a much higher paying job a month later. She's gonna owe some major cash this year.
The one that cracked me up was for some tax service that gives you a scratch off card. If you win, they double your refund. They don't tell you that you'll get taxed on your winnings.
I had never qualified for EIC before. But I guess with working for non profits for almost nothing and being a full time student finally put me under 12k taxable income. I was happy![]()
I used to owe every year when I was renting, before I bought a home. Paying the quarterly estimated taxes was a pain.
Oh, the services that offer that are horrible. They are super high interest loans and the people constantly go for them.
Get a ing job Manny - faced freeloader.
Manny spends all his money on booze for Jekka.
Is income from panhandling considered taxable?
I'm not sure if you're pulling out loans for school, but don't forget to use that W-2.
Sheyit...I wish we could write off my husband's student loans.
You can't? I figured the interest was okay to use once you're done with school.
I was in graduate school when they first changed the rules to start taxing TAs/RAs. There was a lot of opposition to it at the time, and the schools didn't withhold and basically said they weren't going to volunteer the information to the Govt; they'd have to come look for it. So for at least a few years in the 80s very few grad students were actually paying their taxes.
I think it may depend on the kind of loan, but most student loan interest should be deductible.
Not if you make over a certain income.
Where do you think think the refund is going? Jess already claimed it for booze.
That's right, - I'm just making sure you have your priorities straight.
Make sure he splurges by buying Schlitz!
One of my closest friends is a manager at a certain liqour store in the SAC/Trinity area. He gets so many bottles of wine and liquor from vendors as gifts and gives them to me. Well, not the wine, he's a huge wine snob, I really wouldn't touch it either way, but it's pretty great always having free vodka and rum in the house. I'm not talking cheap like Skol, Bacardi or Cuervo either.
I have to use my refund for new carpet in the house. Good times.
Rainbow Spirits?
Lame.
Which reminds me, I should probably look into consolidating my school loans soon.
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