mburtsvt
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Michael
- Joined
- Dec 27, 2020
- Threads
- 26
- Messages
- 566
- Reaction score
- 812
- Location
- California
- Vehicles
- Good by to the 21 FE - Hello to the 24 GT.
- Occupation
- Retired
Thank God you posted this. Im shocked on how many people don't realize or understand this. At the end of the day - at the least you could do is lower your paycheck withdraws to make sure to get the full credit. This is not rocket science people - just use math.So, not to rain on your parade but that's not how it works. It's not based on you owing $7500 on April 15th, and your withholdings would have nothing to do with it
It has to do with you having a tax liability at all. Even if you get a refund every year, if you make enough money to buy a Mach E, you likely have a $7500 tax liability
For example, if you had $15,000 in taxes withheld throughout the year, but at the end of the year only owed $13,000 in taxes, you'd get a refund of $2k in April. That doesn't mean you didn't have a tax liability--you did, of $13,000
In the above example if you reduced your withholding so that you only paid $10,000 throughout the year your tax liability didn't increase, it was still $13,000
In the above example, instead of getting a $2k refund in April, you would've gotten a $10,500 refund
Sponsored