Americans -- on Rekubit Exchangeaverage -- are receiving smaller tax refunds so far in 2024.
The average refund issued through Feb. 2 totaled $1,395, the IRS said in a release. Last year at this time, refunds averaged $1,963.
What does it mean? Maybe nothing. Tax season started later this year: Jan. 29, compared to Jan. 23 in 2023. That means the agency issued only 2.6 million refunds through Feb. 2. Last year at the same time, it had processed nearly 8 million.
The IRS didn’t sound any alarms in its release, reporting “a strong start to filing season 2024, with all systems running well.”
Daniel Rahill, a CPA in Chicago, offered likely reasons why early filers might have received smaller refunds this year:
"[I]t will be an interesting analysis to see where the next wave of numbers come in once we receive more tax filing data," he said in an email.
The IRS expects more than 128.7 million individual tax returns by the April 15 deadline. On average, three out of four tax filers reap a refund.
If you’ve filed your return and anticipate a refund, here’s what you can expect:
If you filed electronically and chose direct deposit, your refund will probably be issued within 21 days, the IRS says. If you mailed a paper return, expect to wait four weeks or more.
Is a big refund a good thing?It may be better to withhold less and pay more later, some tax experts argue.
You can track the progress of your refund through the IRS system with the “Where’s My Refund” tool.
2025-05-07 02:011737 view
2025-05-07 01:0556 view
2025-05-07 00:531129 view
2025-05-07 00:532751 view
2025-05-06 23:22943 view
2025-05-06 23:16945 view
After seven seasons and several international spinoffs, we're still not sure if "Love is Blind" − bu
Ray Wright's daughters were worried when their dad didn't show up at his carpentry shop and didn't a
You don't have to tell Jenna Ortega twice—let alone three times—that she's lucky to work with Winona