We've had this conversation before, but I just recevied a notice from a client and thought I'd run the current numbers just for grins. I was curious about what the actual cost might be for someone who owes IRS, given the current interest rates.
Client originally filed an extension and then filed the return in August. They owed $8,192 and paid nothing when the return was filed. They received a bill today for $8,542, an amount which is good until Oct 3. The $350 difference is $122 FTP penalty plus $139 interest. FTP penalty is 1/2 of 1% per month, or the equivalent of a 6% APR. Interest is 4% APR.
Since the payment is due by Oct 3, this means they received 5-1/2 months of forebearance from Apr 15. Dividing the $350 by the $8,192, then dividing by 5.5 and multiplying by 12 yields a true interest rate of 9.32% APR, with no compounding. (I think that's why the 10% actually drops to 9.32%)
Under these circumstances, why would anyone pay taxes with a credit card? I would certianly never advise them to do that, although I often hear that suggestion made. If they did a refi on their home to get the money, the transaction costs would make it impractical. They might imporove their rate if they had any cash available on a HELOC, but then they would be limiting their available cash for a true emergency.
So it seems to me that a taxpayer who owes money and doesn't have readily available cash might might be wise to just set up a payment plan with the IRS, at least until interest rates start to trend upward.
Client originally filed an extension and then filed the return in August. They owed $8,192 and paid nothing when the return was filed. They received a bill today for $8,542, an amount which is good until Oct 3. The $350 difference is $122 FTP penalty plus $139 interest. FTP penalty is 1/2 of 1% per month, or the equivalent of a 6% APR. Interest is 4% APR.
Since the payment is due by Oct 3, this means they received 5-1/2 months of forebearance from Apr 15. Dividing the $350 by the $8,192, then dividing by 5.5 and multiplying by 12 yields a true interest rate of 9.32% APR, with no compounding. (I think that's why the 10% actually drops to 9.32%)
Under these circumstances, why would anyone pay taxes with a credit card? I would certianly never advise them to do that, although I often hear that suggestion made. If they did a refi on their home to get the money, the transaction costs would make it impractical. They might imporove their rate if they had any cash available on a HELOC, but then they would be limiting their available cash for a true emergency.
So it seems to me that a taxpayer who owes money and doesn't have readily available cash might might be wise to just set up a payment plan with the IRS, at least until interest rates start to trend upward.
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