I am filing a tax return on my own for the first time. When I was younger a relative would do it for me, and then I was unemployed for a while, and then I didn't make enough to have to file, but last year I made enough that it would make sense to file... so now, at the young age of 25, I am trying to figure this stuff out... The only problem is, I have no bloody idea how to do this sort of thing, and so I am just using TaxACT online. The only problem is, I don't think it did my taxes correctly, and so I am afraid to submit them.
[1] My parents claimed me as a dependent for 2007, but there was no where to designate that in my return. I filed as single.
[2] It told me, "An Earned Income Credit of $220 has been included in your return." but I am a dependent, and (unless I misread) the IRS website said that I don't get that if I am a dependent. This credit didn't change the refund amount it said I was owed though, so I'm not sure if it actually did anything (before I reached that screen, it told me I had the same refund amount.)
[3] Then, it has given me this as my summary:
Income: $2,867
Adjustments: $0
Adjusted Gross Income: $2,867
Deductions: $5,350
Exemptions: $3,400
Taxable Income: $0
Tax: $0
Alternative Minimum Tax: $0
Credits: $0
Other Taxes: $0
Payments: $366
Underpayment Penalty: $0
Refund: $366
I had "Federal income tax withheld: 145.50" and "State income tax: 29.21" on my W-2, and I entered it as this, and so how on Earth could my refund be $366???? How could the deduction be so much bigger than my income? I guess I don't even understand what it is...
[4] Where am I supposed to designate myself as a dependent? Am I supposed to designate myself as a dependent? I was 24 that year, and turned 25 like 2 days before the end of it. And I read somewhere that you can't claim someone as a dependent if they are 24. But my parents had my uncle, who is an actual accountant with a firm and everything (or whatever you call it), prepare their taxes so I don't think he would make such a simple mistake. I still live at home and everything, and go to school full time, and they paid for my tuition.
[5] I got a student loan and received a Pell Grant for that year. Does that count as a scholarship, because I didn't list it as one and maybe that is a mistake? It doesn't appear anywhere on my W-2 I don't think. And it's shocking that the government would give me so much money, but then it wouldn't have any relevance to my taxes.
[6] It said something about filing a state return too... I thought that we only had to do one tax thing, and that was to the federal government. Am I confused?
[1] My parents claimed me as a dependent for 2007, but there was no where to designate that in my return. I filed as single.
[2] It told me, "An Earned Income Credit of $220 has been included in your return." but I am a dependent, and (unless I misread) the IRS website said that I don't get that if I am a dependent. This credit didn't change the refund amount it said I was owed though, so I'm not sure if it actually did anything (before I reached that screen, it told me I had the same refund amount.)
[3] Then, it has given me this as my summary:
Income: $2,867
Adjustments: $0
Adjusted Gross Income: $2,867
Deductions: $5,350
Exemptions: $3,400
Taxable Income: $0
Tax: $0
Alternative Minimum Tax: $0
Credits: $0
Other Taxes: $0
Payments: $366
Underpayment Penalty: $0
Refund: $366
I had "Federal income tax withheld: 145.50" and "State income tax: 29.21" on my W-2, and I entered it as this, and so how on Earth could my refund be $366???? How could the deduction be so much bigger than my income? I guess I don't even understand what it is...
[4] Where am I supposed to designate myself as a dependent? Am I supposed to designate myself as a dependent? I was 24 that year, and turned 25 like 2 days before the end of it. And I read somewhere that you can't claim someone as a dependent if they are 24. But my parents had my uncle, who is an actual accountant with a firm and everything (or whatever you call it), prepare their taxes so I don't think he would make such a simple mistake. I still live at home and everything, and go to school full time, and they paid for my tuition.
[5] I got a student loan and received a Pell Grant for that year. Does that count as a scholarship, because I didn't list it as one and maybe that is a mistake? It doesn't appear anywhere on my W-2 I don't think. And it's shocking that the government would give me so much money, but then it wouldn't have any relevance to my taxes.
[6] It said something about filing a state return too... I thought that we only had to do one tax thing, and that was to the federal government. Am I confused?
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