San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

STIMULUS PAYMENTS ARE ON THE WAY: WHAT TO WATCH FOR

- BY RON LIEBER & TARA SIEGEL BERNARD Lieber and Bernard write for The New York Times.

For the third time in less than a year, the federal government is sending stimulus payments to millions of Americans, no small logistical feat. But that doesn’t mean it will go smoothly for everyone.

Some 90 million payments — totaling about $242.2 billion — landed in bank accounts via direct deposit Wednesday, the Treasury Department said. An additional 150,000 payments should also arrive shortly, in the form of paper checks. And still more will go out in the coming weeks.

The payments — a maximum of $1,400 — are the largest issued to date, and eligibilit­y has been expanded to dependent adults, including college students. As with previous rounds of pandemic stimulus, many banks are making the full amount of the payments available to customers, even if the money went into overdrawn accounts.

There could still be bumps ahead for some recipients. The fast phaseouts of payments mean people might receive less than they would have under prior rounds, or no payment at all. The legislativ­e process that Congress used to pass the bill has left payments vulnerable to private debt collectors. Your payment could arrive in a different form this time.

For this round, payments top out at $1,400 per person, including children and adult dependents. To qualify for the full amount, a single person must have an adjusted gross income of $75,000 or below. For heads of household, adjusted gross income must be $112,500 or less, and for married couples filing jointly that number has to be $150,000 or below.

Partial payments are available to people who earn more, but they fall quickly to zero. For single filers, the checks stop at $80,000. For heads of household, the cutoff is $120,000. And for joint filers, it’s $160,000.

The payment amounts depend on the most recent informatio­n on file with the IRS, which could be from your 2019 tax return if you haven’t yet filed for 2020. (If you’re newly eligible for a payment based on your 2020 income but haven’t yet filed your return, the IRS will be able to continue making payments until September. And if you still don’t end up with a payment by then, you can make a claim when you file your 2021 taxes.)

You can find informatio­n on the status of your payment by using the IRS’S Get My Payment tool. If the agency has your bank account informatio­n, the money should show up automatica­lly if you’re eligible. If you receive veterans’ benefits or Social Security payments, whether for retirement or disability, the IRS will generally send payments the same way you normally get that money. The agency said it planned to announce a payment date for these groups “shortly.”

People who don’t regularly file a tax return that includes any bank account informatio­n should keep an eye on the mail for a paper check or a debit card. But just because your previous two payments arrived one way doesn’t mean this one will arrive the same way, according to the IRS, which may send debit cards to ensure that payments are available to recipients more quickly. (If you received a payment on a debit card before, the IRS has already said that it would issue new cards for this payment instead of adding money to the old one.)

In prior stimulus rounds, some recipients have been confused to see their payments destined for unfamiliar accounts — often because they used tax-preparatio­n services that created temporary accounts to receive their refunds. Both H&R Block and Intuit’s Turbotax have posted messages attempting to reassure customers who previously experience­d glitches or delays.

Another problem some people encountere­d in prior rounds: payments addressed to deceased relatives. If your spouse or dependent died this year, even before Biden signed the bill, you can keep the payment that arrives for them, according to an IRS spokesman. But if they died in 2020, they are not supposed to be eligible. For instructio­ns on how to return any payment that neverthele­ss arrives for them, visit the IRS website on the page with the phrase “Returning the Economic Impact Payment.”

The bill that authorized this round of payments shields government-ordered seizure — for example, if you’re in default on your federal student loans or late with child support payments.

But private debt collectors can still make a run at the money, which wasn’t the case with the first two rounds of payments. Sen. Ron Wyden, D-ore., chairman of the Senate Finance committee, said Senate rules had prevented the inclusion of such a provision in the bill. A committee spokeswoma­n said there could be a vote on standalone legislatio­n to fix the problem in the coming week.

 ?? MANDEL NGAN AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? President Joe Biden signed the American Rescue Plan on March 11, which included $1,400 stimulus payments to many Americans.
MANDEL NGAN AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES President Joe Biden signed the American Rescue Plan on March 11, which included $1,400 stimulus payments to many Americans.

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