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Every Saturday, we open the mailbag, pour some strong coffee, and tackle the tax questions keeping America awake at 2 a.m. If you have a question, hit reply to this email and let us know.
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If I file my taxes early, do I get my refund faster?
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Not always, and here’s why that’s maddening.
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You’d think the IRS operates like a deli counter — take a number, wait your turn, first come, first served. You file on January 20, you’re ticket No. 47. Someone files on April 10, they’re ticket No. 8,347. Logic says you win by a mile.
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And sometimes you do. Filing early can mean a faster refund, especially if your return is straightforward. But the IRS processes returns in batches, not one at a time, so that head start doesn’t always translate the way you’d expect. Someone who files a few weeks after you might land in the same processing cycle and see their refund hit at roughly the same time.
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There’s also a legal hurdle. If you claimed the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) or the Child Tax Credit (CTC), the PATH Act forbids the IRS from issuing your refund before mid-February, even if you filed on New Year’s Day. It’s an anti-fraud measure. You can file early, but your money is legally stuck in purgatory until February 15. No amount of early-bird enthusiasm changes that.
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So is early filing worth it? Absolutely, and not just for the possible speed boost:
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Identity theft protection. If you file first, scammers can’t file a fake return in your name. It’s like claiming your seat on the plane before someone else sits in it.
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Peace of mind. You get to stop thinking about it. The mental relief of being “done” in January is worth something, even if your refund doesn’t land overnight.
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Filing early won’t guarantee a faster refund, but it gives you a better shot at one — plus the freedom to ignore tax season and get on with your life. And honestly? That’s priceless.
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The IRS says my refund was sent but it never showed up in my bank account. What do I do?
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Congratulations! You’ve unlocked one of the most maddening experiences in modern finance. The IRS has declared victory, closed your file, and gone home for the day. Your money, however, has apparently taken a scenic detour through the void.
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First, don’t panic. This happens more than you’d think, and there’s a clear process for tracking it down.
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Wait five days. The IRS considers a deposit “sent” the moment it leaves their hands, not the moment it lands in yours. Banks can take up to five business days to post the funds. If you’re inside that window, your money is probably just sitting in processing purgatory.
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Check your account details. Log into your filing software or your IRS online account and verify the routing and account number you submitted. One wrong digit sends your refund into a stranger’s account, or more commonly, into a temporary holding account that bounces it back to the IRS automatically.
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If it bounced back, the IRS has it. The IRS will typically mail you a paper check to your address on file within a few weeks. Make sure your address is current.
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If five days have passed and nothing bounced, call your bank first. They can trace the deposit. If the bank comes up empty, call the IRS at 800-829-1040 and ask them to initiate a refund trace. They’ll file an inquiry with the Bureau of the Fiscal Service and track it down.
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It’s tedious. It’s annoying. But your money didn’t disappear. It’s just lost in the bureaucratic equivalent of the couch cushions.
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I lost money on stocks this year. Can that actually help my tax bill?
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Bad news on the portfolio, good news on the tax return. Welcome to the silver lining nobody puts on a motivational poster.
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When you sell a stock for less than you paid for it, that’s called a capital loss. And yes, the IRS will absolutely let you use it against you, in your favor, for once.
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Here’s how it works. Capital losses first offset capital gains. If you made $3,000 on one stock and lost $5,000 on another, you don’t owe taxes on any gains. In fact, you have $2,000 left over, which leads us to the genuinely useful part.
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You can deduct up to $3,000 of net capital losses against your ordinary income every year. That means if your losses outpace your gains, you can use up to $3,000 of the difference to reduce the income the IRS taxes you on — wages, freelance income, all of it. For someone in the 22% bracket, that’s roughly $660 back in your pocket.
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Got more than $3,000 in losses? Don’t worry, they don’t vanish. The IRS lets you carry them forward into future tax years until they’re used up. Lose $15,000 this year, and you’ve got five years of $3,000 deductions ahead of you. Every cloud, silver lining, etc.
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The strategy of intentionally selling losing investments to offset gains even has a name, tax loss harvesting, and wealthy investors use it religiously.
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Turns out a bad year in the market doesn’t have to be a bad year on your taxes.
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