Refund delays, stimulus check errors foreshadow rough tax season

Tax-refund delays and stimulus-payment hiccups could spill into the upcoming tax season as the Internal Revenue Service continues to face challenges related to the coronavirus pandemic and as Congress considers yet another round of direct payments.

Tax-refund delays and stimulus-payment hiccups could spill into the upcoming tax season as the Internal Revenue Service continues to face challenges related to the coronavirus pandemic and as Congress considers yet another round of direct payments.

Millions of Americans waited months for refunds in 2020, and millions also have yet to receive some or all of the stimulus payment approved last spring, according to a report Wednesday from Erin Collins, head of the Taxpayer Advocate Service, an independent office housed in the IRS.

The findings foreshadow what is likely to be a complicated and consequential tax season as taxpayers try to navigate tax forms to get missing payments. Further tangling things, another round of stimulus payments may be coming — President-elect Joe Biden and Democratic congressional leaders are pushing for them — and they could go out in the middle of tax-filing season, diverting IRS resources and potentially confusing taxpayers.

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Patty Starr

Patty Starr is president and CEO of Health Action Council and is responsible for driving the strategic direction of the organization--build stronger, healthier communities where business can thrive. 

Since joining the Health Action Council staff in 2013, she has transformed the organization yielding broad national expansion and seven consecutive years of

growth. Patty is a member of the Advisory Board at the Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine and the Board of Directors for Health Policy Institute of Ohio (HPIO). She has also served on the Board of Directors for the Better Health Partnership, Ohio Patient-Centered Primary Care Collaborative and Health Action Council before becoming executive director in 2013. 

Craig Kurtzweil

Craig Kurtzweil is the chief data & analytics officer for UnitedHealthcare's commercial business. In this role, he leverages the nation's largest health care data set to identify and share insights that can help people and care providers make more informed health care decisions, make health care more affordable for everyone and improve outcomes. This includes exploring new ways to apply data through machine learning and artificial intelligence, creating the next generation of health care analytics and making data a differentiator in the marketplace for the company.

Craig joined UnitedHealthcare in 2005. Since then, he has focused on enhancing how data and analytics support UnitedHealthcare's largest employer customers. His team works with large and complex clients that require a broad view of data, ranging from cost and utilization to productivity and disability exposure. As part of this work, Craig formed the Center for Advanced Analytics to focus on analytic innovations that change the way we evaluate health care value.

Prior to joining UnitedHealthcare, Craig served as an actuarial consultant at Deloitte.

Trinity Davis of 360 Privacy

Trinity Davis, managing director at 360 Privacy, spent 18 years in protective services, focused in the UHNW private family office and tech sector.

He built and led cross-functional teams in executive protection, residential security, travel security management and protective intelligence, spending the last six years in Silicon Valley working in social media and fintech. He moved to 360 Privacy in 2022 to focus on educating the industry on digital executive protection and how physical threats begin in the digital landscape.

U.S. Department of the Treasury Internal Revenue Service (IRS) 1040 Individual Income Tax forms for the 2016 tax year are arranged for a photograph in Tiskilwa, Illinois, U.S., on Monday, Dec. 18, 2017. This week marks the last leg of Republicans' push to revamp the U.S. tax code, with both the House and Senate planning to vote by Wednesday on final legislation before sending it to President Donald Trump. Photographer: Daniel Acker/Bloomberg
A pile of 1040 individual income tax forms
Daniel Acker/Bloomberg

Delayed refunds last year were largely because of the agency’s sensitive fraud filters, and tax returns being filed on paper rather than electronically, the report said. The IRS was slow to process the 16 million paper returns as the agency halted work at several processing centers during the early days of the pandemic.

There were still 6.9 million unprocessed individual returns as of Dec. 25, according to the IRS. Some were filed as far back as April, according to the National Taxpayer Advocate’s annual report to Congress.

Awaiting checks

The IRS took until September to create programs that would allow people to manually correct mistakes on the $1,200 stimulus payments, and that only addressed a “limited number of issues,” the report said.

The IRS has instructed millions of taxpayers who have not yet received some or all of their $1,200 payment approved in the spring or their full $600 payment from the December stimulus legislation to claim the missing amount on their tax return this year, which means some Americans could be left waiting more than a year to get their money.

“While the IRS’s inclination to use automation wherever possible is understandable in light of its human-resource constraints, its approach left taxpayers frustrated and without the funds some of them desperately needed,” Collins said in the report. “I am optimistic the lessons learned from the first round will make the process go more smoothly in 2021.”

The money is also critical as Americans have increasingly drained their bank accounts as unemployment levels remain high. Recipients of direct payments reported to the U.S. Census Bureau that they used the money for household basics, including food, rent or mortgage payments and utilities.

Fresh round

Soon-to-be Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer has said his first goal after the Biden administration takes office is giving many Americans an additional $1,400 on top of the $600 payments Congress approved in December. However, it could take several weeks, or even months, for lawmakers to pass legislation — meaning that many taxpayers likely wouldn’t be able to fix mistakes related to those payments on the IRS returns they file this season.

The IRS has yet to announce the start of the filing season, which usually begins in late January. It will run through April 15.

Collins also chided the IRS for a lack of transparency about delays.

“For much of the year, relatively limited information was released, and comments made by IRS officials often were incomplete or misleading,” the report said.

The IRS said in a statement that tens of thousands of its workers are teleworking either part or full-time, and that while “significant progress” had been made processing returns, it’s still working through the backlog.

Collins urged the IRS to send out weekly updates on processing delays and the status of its operations.