USA TODAY US Edition

Tax refund advances often are a bad deal

Many don’t realize that they’re considered loans

- Susan Tompor Columnist USA TODAY Contact Susan Tompor: stompor@freepress.com

Thinking of a tax-refund advance? Despite popularity, most are a bad deal.

Plenty of people would jump at the chance to speed up getting some of their tax-refund cash, especially in light of job cuts and other financial headaches.

But Tiffany Vernier’s story may make those desperate to pay their bills think twice about handing over a few hundred dollars to get their taxes done in the hopes of snagging a tax refund advance of up to $3,000.

Consumers are bombarded with TV ads, window signs and other pitches for a loan product that some might not even consider a real loan. Isn’t this tax advance just a way to get some of your own refund money a few weeks early? Not exactly.

And while tax-refund advance loans may be popular and work for some people, they’re not always a fast-cash guarantee – especially if you have a bad credit score.

“A lot of people are going for this refund advance because you can’t get a standard loan,” said Vernier, 38, who admits her credit score of around 530 needs work.

Pitches for refund advances grow

The popularity of refund advances has grown in recent years, in part, because the Internal Revenue Service is now required under law to delay the entire refund of early tax filers who claim the Earned Income Tax Credit or the Additional Child Tax Credit until at least mid-February. The delay was designed to combat tax-refund fraud.

But waiting the extra weeks can be a hardship for many cash-strapped, working families. Thanks to the Earned Income Tax Credit, their tax refund is the single largest lump sum payment they get in a year.

Last year, roughly 15 million taxpayers claiming those two credits had to wait until the week of Feb. 27 to get their refund from the IRS, according to H&R Block.

About 1.7 million refund anticipati­on loans were made in the industry in 2017, according to a report issued in March 2018 by the National Consumer Law Center.

Vernier, a mother of two children under 4, had her taxes done Jan. 16 in the hopes of qualifying for one of the heavily advertised tax-refund advances. She wanted some quick relief to catch up with car payments and other bills.

“My partner is out of work,” Vernier said. “We’re on one income. We’re struggling right now, as I’m sure a lot of people are.”

Vernier, a freelancer who specialize­s in technical writing and drafting proposals, reported nearly $27,000 in income on her 2018 tax return.

She thought she’d be able to receive some type of refund advance.

The loans vary in amounts: $500, $750, $1,250 or $3,000. The amount of the advance depends, in part, on the expected amount of your refund.

Vernier said she was told by the tax preparers that she likely would qualify, given that she was expected to receive more than $7,800 in federal and state tax refunds with the earned income credit and the child credit.

Her refund will be reduced by $327.95 (after a $25 coupon) for the cost of getting her taxes done at an H&R Block office near her home in Timbervill­e, Virginia.

The fees include a $39.95 charge for a federal refund transfer, a processing fee associated with paying tax-prep fees out of your refund and avoiding out-ofpocket costs.

After she completed her taxes, she waited for a text to show the exact amount of her refund advance. Nothing came.

Instead, she said she had to call the 800 number later to find out that she didn’t qualify for anything.

After all that, she was waiting until to get her refund and she’ll get a somewhat smaller refund because the tax-prep fees will be taken out. Fees she might have avoided otherwise.

She feels she was blindsided.

Confused by some terms

“The tax preparers do not call it a loan,” Vernier said. “They assured me it was not credit-based.”

She feels some of the fine print is “deliberate­ly vague.”

Online, the criteria for approval is explained: “You first must meet certain eligibilit­y requiremen­ts such as having a sufficient tax refund from the IRS, and provide appropriat­e identifica­tion. You then submit an applicatio­n to Axos Bank, the lender. The bank will evaluate your applicatio­n based on standard underwriti­ng criteria and makes the decision to approve or deny your applicatio­n.”

Vernier takes issue with using words like “underwriti­ng criteria.”

“People understand credit checks,” she said. “People don’t understand underwriti­ng.”

Getting a refund advance, though, means you’re taking on a loan made by a bank.

“This is a loan,” said Chi Chi Wu, staff attorney at the National Consumer Law Center in Boston. “Whenever you apply for a loan, a lender automatica­lly has the right to check your credit report and your credit score.”

What consumers must understand with the refund advance loans is that you’re not actually getting your tax refund faster. You’re getting a loan that reflects a portion of your refund.

H&R Block said it is focused on being upfront.

“Transparen­cy is important to H&R Block,” H&R Block spokeswoma­n Susan Waldron said.

“That’s why we’re providing tax-prep prices before the tax profession­al starts a return and the terms for Refund Advance are also disclosed to the client.”

Waldron said the bank may review the client’s credit report as part of the applicatio­n for the loan.

“The client is informed of this and agrees to it as part of the loan applicatio­n,” she said.

Waldron said the approval rates for the H&R Block Refund Advance are more than 75 percent.

Not everyone would receive a refund advance loan.

“The client is also told that the bank will make a decision on the loan applicatio­n based on the bank’s underwriti­ng standards and there is no guarantee of approval,” Waldron said.

Vernier said she’s concerned that others could fall into this trap because she maintains the credit-check aspect of the loan was not spelled out to her.

Offers and rules can vary

H&R Block has been advertisin­g its refund advance of up to $3,000. It’s a no-interest loan from Axos Bank and was offered to customers who filed their taxes at participat­ing H&R Block offices through Feb. 28

Other tax-prep firms offer some type of refund advance loans, too.

Jackson Hewitt Tax Service has a “No Fee Refund Advance Loan” available in amounts up to $3,500.

The TaxSlayer website proclaims: “Skip the wait with a refund advance from TaxSlayer and you could get up to $1,000 in as little as 24 hours.”

The TaxSlayer site also notes: “If your applicatio­n is approved, the loan amount ($500 or $1,000) will be subtracted from the total federal refund amount issued by the IRS. In other words, the loan amount will reduce any federal tax refund amount you get later.”

Many of the promotions highlight that the refund advances have no fees and charge zero percent in interest. But again, you do have to pay for tax-preparatio­n services, which can add up depending on your tax situation.

In the past, consumer watchdog groups indicated that some lower and moderate-income taxpayers who qualify for the Earned Income Tax Credit faced tax preparatio­n fees of $400 or more in some cases. Many who qualify for the Earned Income Tax Credit are eligible for free tax preparatio­n at volunteer sites.

Vernier – who has prepared her own taxes in the past – said she wouldn’t have paid all that money to wait a month or more for a refund. Instead, she said she would have used tax software to do the tax return herself and skipped the $327.95 in fees.

Her taxes, she said, aren’t that complicate­d.

“I took the standard deduction across the board,” she said.

 ?? JACKIE SMITH/USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Dressed as Lady Liberty, Brandon Williams holds a sign outside Liberty Tax Service in Port Huron, Mich., on Jan. 21. Many txapayers are attracted to the idea of fast cash, but getting it can be costly.
JACKIE SMITH/USA TODAY NETWORK Dressed as Lady Liberty, Brandon Williams holds a sign outside Liberty Tax Service in Port Huron, Mich., on Jan. 21. Many txapayers are attracted to the idea of fast cash, but getting it can be costly.
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