BALTIMORE
— Telephone customers can still request this year’s
one-time excise tax refund, according to the
Internal Revenue Service.
Most phone customers, including most cell-phone
users, qualify for the refund. The refund covers the
three-percent tax paid on long-distance and bundled
service. It can add $30 to $60 — or even more — onto
a taxpayer’s refund. So far this year, 92.1 million
taxpayers, 71.6 percent of all individual tax return
filers, have requested telephone tax refunds
totaling $4 billion.
Eligible phone customers can request the refund on
their 2006 income-tax return. This includes those
who haven’t filed yet or those who obtained a
tax-filing extension earlier this year.
People who don’t need to file a regular income-tax
return can use a special short form — Form 1040EZ-T—
to request the refund. Individuals with low income,
including many senior citizens, may qualify to use
this special form.
The government stopped collecting the long-distance
excise tax last August after several federal court
decisions held that the tax does not apply to
long-distance service as it is billed today. The tax
continues to apply to local-only phone service.
Federal officials also authorized a one-time refund
of the three-percent tax collected on long-distance
or bundled service billed after Feb. 28, 2003, and
before Aug. 1, 2006. Bundled service is local and
long-distance service provided under a plan that
does not separately list the charge for local
service.
Bundled service includes, for example, phone plans
that provide both local and long-distance service
for either a flat monthly fee or a charge that
varies with the time for which the service is used.
It is the type of service provided by many
cell-phone companies.
If you paid the tax and haven’t filed yet, here are
some tips to help you figure the refund correctly
and get it quickly:
·
Consider using the standard-refund
amount. About 99 percent of returns requesting the
telephone-tax refund are choosing the standard
amount. Though the standard amount is optional, it
is easy to figure and approximates the eligible
amount for most telephone customers. You only have
to fill out one line on your return, and you don’t
need to present proof to the IRS. The standard
amount, ranging from $30 to $60, is based on the
number of exemptions you can claim on your return.
If you can be claimed as a dependent on someone
else’s return, you cannot use the standard amount.
·
If
you paid more than the standard amount, you may
figure your refund using the actual amount of tax
shown on your phone bills and other records. Base
your refund request on the three-percent federal tax
paid, not the total phone bill. Do not count tax
paid on local-only service. You must have the phone
bills or other records adequate to support the
amount you are requesting. These documents should
not be sent along with the refund request but should
be retained in case the IRS questions the amount
requested.
·
If you’re not sure whether you paid
the tax, check the portion of your telephone bill
that relates to long-distance or bundled service.
Service providers use a number of different terms to
identify the tax. Phrases to look for include:
English-language phone bills -- Federal, Federal
Excise 3%, Federal Excise
@ 3%, Federal Excise Tax, Federal Tax, Fed Excise
Tax and FET; Spanish-language phone bills -- Impuesto
Indirecto Federal and Impuesto federal. Typically,
this federal tax amount is not combined with any
other tax or surcharge on a customer's bill. In
other words, it is normally shown as a separate line
item.
·
Do not file duplicate requests. If
you file a regular income-tax return, do not file
Form 1040EZ-T. Designed exclusively for requesting
the telephone-tax refund, this simple form is for
people who don’t need to file a regular income-tax
return. If you want to take advantage of the
retirement savers credit or earned income tax credit
for low and moderate income workers, the child tax
credit or other tax breaks, file a regular return
and include your telephone-tax refund request on
that return.
·
If you already filed your return but
failed to request the telephone-tax refund, you can
file an amended return using Form 1040X. This form,
available on IRS.gov, cannot be e-filed; it must be
filed on paper. To avoid delaying a refund request,
mail your completed Form 1040X at least three weeks
after you filed your original return (if it was
e-filed) or at least eight weeks later (if filed on
paper).
·
File electronically.
Electronic-filing software flags often overlooked
tax breaks, such as the telephone-tax refund, and
helps you figure them accurately and report them
properly. If you use a professional tax preparer,
ask that person to e-file your return.
·
E-file for free. If your income is
$52,000 or less, use the Free File link on IRS.gov
to connect to a private-sector company offering free
e-file services.
·
Choose direct deposit. Whether you
file electronically or on paper, you can get your
refund at least a week sooner by having it deposited
directly into your checking or savings account.
·
Stay away from tax preparers who
falsely claim that many, if not most, phone
customers can get hundreds of dollars or more back
under this program.
·
Use the
Telephone Excise Tax Refund section on the front
page of IRS.gov. Here, you can download forms, find
answers to frequently-asked questions and link to
participating Free File partners.