The Columbus Dispatch

When will $1,400 aid arrive in the bank?

- Michael Collins

WASHINGTON – Millions of Americans should see checks of up to $1,400 land in their bank accounts in a few weeks.

The one-time payments are part of President Joe Biden’s $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief package.

The Internal Revenue Service hasn’t indicated how soon it will start to distribute the money. Analysts said the checks should appear in bank accounts via direct deposit in a couple of weeks, based on the distributi­on timeline from the last round of coronaviru­s aid payments late last year.

“My understand­ing is that it’s going to be a very similar timeline to what we saw with the second round of payments in December,” said Garrett Watson, senior policy analyst at the Tax Foundation, a Washington-based think tank.

Biden said last week that many Americans can expect to see their checks by the end of the month. White House spokeswoma­n Jen Psaki said Monday the administra­tion is still working through the “mechanics” of distributi­ng the checks.

The IRS will be tasked with sending out the checks in the middle of tax season, which could slow down the distributi­on. But the agency’s experience sending out two prior rounds of checks last year should make the process go smoothly, Watson said.

Not everyone who got a relief check last time will be eligible this round. Lawmakers changed the eligibilit­y rules after complaints from Republican­s and some moderate Democrats, who argued the money should go to those who need it most.

The legislatio­n calls for checks of up to $1,400 to go to individual­s with an adjusted gross income of $80,000 or less ($160,000 for joint filers), plus an additional $1,400 for each dependent child. The payments would start to phase out for individual­s earning $75,000 and cut off completely for anyone who makes more than $80,000. For

couples filing jointly, the phaseout would start for those making $150,000 and cut off at $160,000.

The new eligibilit­y rules mean the checks would phase out more quickly than during the two previous rounds, when the cutoff was $99,000 for individual­s and $198,000 for joint filers with no children.

The faster phaseout will mean that as many as 6.5 million Americans who got checks in the first two rounds would be left out this time, Watson said. Other analysts put the number of people who would be excluded even higher – as many as 8 million.

The IRS would probably use tax returns on file to calculate how much money people would get. For those who’ve already filed a return for 2020, the aid check would probably be based on their income from last year. Otherwise, 2019 returns would probably be used to determine the amount.

Those with direct deposit – most Americans – would get the money quickest. Paper checks would be sent to Americans who don’t have direct deposit informatio­n on file with the IRS, but those take longer to distribute.

More than 160 million payments totaling $270 billion were distribute­d during the first round of coronaviru­s relief last spring, the IRS said. More than 147 million payments totaling more than $142 billion were delivered during the second allotment that started in December.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Analysts said checks should appear in bank accounts in a couple of weeks, based on the distributi­on timeline from the last round of aid payments late last year.
GETTY IMAGES Analysts said checks should appear in bank accounts in a couple of weeks, based on the distributi­on timeline from the last round of aid payments late last year.

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