Friday, December 20, 2013

2014 IRS Tax Refund Schedule Dates

2014 IRS Refund Cycle Chart and e-file payment information.


This is a schedule for 2014 IRS Refund Cycle Chart. Direct Deposit and Check date’s below. Please see disclaimer. 2014 tax refund schedule is listed below for information purposes. 

2014 IRS Tax Refund Schedule Dates


2014 IRS E File Refund Chart 2013 Tax Year
























































































































































































































































































































































































































































IRS accepts your return (by 11:00 am) between…*Projected Direct Deposit Sent*Projected Paper Check Mailed*
January 30 20142/5/20142/7/2014
February 01andFebruary 08 20142/12/20142/14/2014
February 09andFebruary 15 20142/19/20142/21/2014
February 16andFebruary 22 20142/26/20142/28/2014
February 23andMarch 01 20143/5/20143/7/2014
March 02andMarch 08 20143/12/20143/14/2014
March 09andMarch 15 20143/19/20143/21/2014
March 16andMarch 22 20143/26/20143/28/2014
March 23andMarch 29 20144/2/20144/4/2014
March 30andApril 05 20144/9/20144/11/2014
April 06andApril 12 20144/16/20144/18/2014
April 13andApril 19 20144/23/20144/25/2014
April 20andApril 26 20144/30/20145/2/2014
April 27andMay 03 20145/7/20145/9/2014
May 04andMay 10 20145/14/20145/16/2014
May 11andMay 17 20145/21/20145/23/2014
May 18andMay 24 20145/28/20145/30/2014
May 25andMay 31 20146/4/20146/6/2014
June 01andJune 07 20146/11/20146/13/2014
June 08andJune 14 20146/18/20146/20/2014
June 15andJune 21 20146/25/20146/27/2014
June 22andJune 28 20147/2/20147/4/2014
June 29andJuly 05 20147/9/20147/11/2014
July 06andJuly 12 20147/16/20147/18/2014
July 13andJuly 19 20147/23/20147/25/2014
July 20andJuly 26 20147/30/20148/1/2014
July 27andAugust 02 20148/6/20148/8/2014
August 03andAugust 09 20148/13/20148/15/2014
August 10andAugust 16 20148/20/20148/22/2014
August 17andAugust 23 20148/27/20148/29/2014
August 24andAugust 30 20149/3/20149/5/2014
August 31andSeptember 06 20149/10/20149/12/2014
September 07andSeptember 13 20149/17/20149/19/2014
September 14andSeptember 20 20149/24/20149/26/2014
September 21andSeptember 27 201410/1/201410/3/2014
September 28andOctober 04 201410/8/201410/10/2014
October 05andOctober 11 201410/15/201410/17/2014
October 12andOctober 18 201410/22/201410/24/2014
October 19andOctober 25 201410/29/201410/31/2014
October 26andNovember 01 201411/5/201411/7/2014
November 02andNovember 08 201411/12/201411/14/2014
November 09andNovember 15 201411/19/201411/21/2014
November 16andNovember 22 201411/26/201411/28/2014
November 23andNovember 29 201412/3/201412/5/2014
November 30andDecember 06 201412/10/201412/12/2014
December 07andDecember 13 201412/17/201412/19/2014
December 14andDecember 20 201412/24/201412/26/2014
December 21andDecember 27 201412/31/20141/2/2015

*These are only estimates, the I.R.S. has refused to give exact dates to new audit process. There are no guarantees with the I.R.S this year, but one thing is for sure. The earlier you file, the earlier you will receive a return. Contact us today for more details and to schedule your early tax appointment.

2012 IRS income Tax Refund Schedule.

IRS Income Tax 2014 news.



















irs refund schedule 2014
2014 tax refund cycle chart
tax chart for 2014
refund calendar

tax return payout schedule

2014 IRS Tax Refund Schedule Dates

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

IRS Delays Start of 2014 U.S. Tax Filing Citing Shutdown

IRS Delays Start of 2014 U.S. Tax Filing Citing ShutdownThe U.S. Internal Revenue Service delayed the start of the tax-filing season for one to two weeks, citing the recent 16-day federal government shutdown.

The IRS, which had been scheduled to open filing Jan. 21, 2014, will now begin accepting returns for tax year 2013 as early as Jan. 28. The agency will make a final decision on the date in December, according to a statement today.

“Readying our systems to handle the tax season is an intricate, detailed process, and we must take the time to get it right,” Danny Werfel, the acting IRS commissioner, said in the statement.

This is the second year in a row that the IRS has postponed the filing season. Returns for 2012 were accepted starting on Jan. 30 after Congress delayed setting some tax policies.

“Considering the IRS has dealt with much larger changes on far shorter notice over the past years without delay, its reasons are suspect,” Sarah Swinehart, a spokeswoman for the Republican-led House Ways and Means Committee, said in an e-mail.

The IRS furloughed more than 90 percent of its employees during the shutdown, which began Oct. 1 when Congress was unable to pass a spending bill and ended after midnight Oct. 17.

‘Adds Insult’


“This is yet another unfortunate effect of a shutdown that Republicans should have never caused,” Representative Sander Levin of Michigan, the top Democrat on the Ways and Means Committee, said in a statement. “This tax-filing delay just adds insult to injury for Americans hoping to get a jump-start on their tax refunds in January.”

The delay won’t alter the April 15 deadline for taxpayers to file their returns or seek extensions.

At the start of the filing season, the IRS largely issues refunds to taxpayers who file as soon as they can. This year, the IRS issued $135 billion in refunds from Jan. 30 to March 1. That’s more than was paid from March 2 to May 10, when the agency received 50 percent more returns.

Delaying refunds could have an additional consequence in 2014. The U.S. debt limit is suspended through Feb. 7, and changes in the government’s projected spending after that date will affect the timing of how long the Treasury Department’s extraordinary measures to prevent a default will last.

Because the government may issue more refunds after Feb. 7 than previously anticipated, a potential lapse in borrowing authority could come a few days sooner than projected, said Loren Adler, research director at the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget in Washington.

The delayed start of tax-filing season probably will create a backlog of potential returns for the start date, rather than delaying all returns equally.

“Those are folks who are trying to do this as soon as their books are in order,” Adler said.

The Bipartisan Policy Center projects that the U.S. will run out of borrowing authority between the end of February and mid-March 2014.

Discuss this and more in the Income Tax Forums.