Philadelphia — Tax experts and local news outlets reported that the federal tax filing deadline is Wednesday, April 15, urging filers across the United States to submit returns or request six-month extensions (Form 4868) if they cannot file on time and to verify direct-deposit account details to avoid refund delays. Across reports this week, specialists emphasized immediate actions: claim eligible credits such as the child tax credit (up to $2,200 per qualifying child) and the Earned Income Tax Credit (over $8,000 for families with three or more children), consider payment plans to reduce failure-to-pay penalties, and remain alert to AI-driven scam calls impersonating IRS agents during the busy tax period.
Prepared by Christopher Adams and reviewed by editorial team.
The April 15 tax deadline affects your wallet. Don't overlook credits like the child tax credit or Earned Income Tax Credit. If you can't file on time, request a six-month extension. Check your bank details to avoid refund delays. Beware of AI-driven scam calls.
Tax season is here. File on time, claim your credits, and stay vigilant against scams. If you're late, request an extension. Remember, your refund depends on accurate bank information. Worth forwarding if you know someone who's yet to file.
Taxpayers who claim refundable credits, set up IRS payment plans, or timely request extensions benefit by reducing immediate tax liabilities, lowering penalties, and preserving refund timing.
Filers who miss deadlines, fail to provide bank account details, cannot pay owed taxes, or fall for AI-driven scam calls may face delayed refunds, penalties, added interest, and potential financial loss.
No left-leaning sources found for this story.
Experts Warn Filers Ahead of Federal Tax Deadline
6abc Action News WBRZ https://www.atlantanewsfirst.com KTVB 7No right-leaning sources found for this story.
Comments