I've been told by locals in the tax prep business that IRS is cutting down its turnaround time on refunds that are electronically filed. I've been telling my customers to look for theirs in around 11 days, but I noticed last year some of them were getting their money back in 8-9 days.
In the course of the last several years, there have been countless discussions on the board about whether RALs are ethical or not. Most of you know my position, but I have several friends in the business that offer them, and I do not think they personify moral turpitude. I don't smoke either, but if I had a store I would probably sell cigarettes if I wanted to stay in business.
I don't necessarily want to start another moral discussion about this, but I would like to draw your attention to the purported intention of the IRS to eventually cut the turnaround time to 3 days. Obviously, there has to be some question as to whether this is even possible. The drains would have to increase to almost daily. Maybe if someone posts who is with the leviathon IRS can speak to the logistics of this, and whether this aggressive idea even has a chance.
My obvious interest is to reduce demand for RALs. My stubborn position in denying RALs has cost me customers. In particular, I've grown my business by working with families and personal referrals, and have several children of older clients. I'm losing younger members as they leave the nest, start lives of their own, and flush big bucks down the toilet just so they can leave their tax appointment with a check that they'll spend within 24 hours. I can be as smug in my principles as I care to, but the fact is I could have many more younger customers than I do.
Do any of you have information about the IRS intentions of reducing their turnaround time? And if they succeed, what will happen to RALs?
In the course of the last several years, there have been countless discussions on the board about whether RALs are ethical or not. Most of you know my position, but I have several friends in the business that offer them, and I do not think they personify moral turpitude. I don't smoke either, but if I had a store I would probably sell cigarettes if I wanted to stay in business.
I don't necessarily want to start another moral discussion about this, but I would like to draw your attention to the purported intention of the IRS to eventually cut the turnaround time to 3 days. Obviously, there has to be some question as to whether this is even possible. The drains would have to increase to almost daily. Maybe if someone posts who is with the leviathon IRS can speak to the logistics of this, and whether this aggressive idea even has a chance.
My obvious interest is to reduce demand for RALs. My stubborn position in denying RALs has cost me customers. In particular, I've grown my business by working with families and personal referrals, and have several children of older clients. I'm losing younger members as they leave the nest, start lives of their own, and flush big bucks down the toilet just so they can leave their tax appointment with a check that they'll spend within 24 hours. I can be as smug in my principles as I care to, but the fact is I could have many more younger customers than I do.
Do any of you have information about the IRS intentions of reducing their turnaround time? And if they succeed, what will happen to RALs?
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