Finance

IRS tells 21 states how to handle last year’s special payments


After much outside criticism, the Internal Revenue Service basically told taxpayers in most — but not all — states that they do not need to report income from special state tax refunds or payments on their 2022 federal income tax returns.

Tens of millions of taxpayers in 21 states — not including Michigan — were told a week earlier to hold off filing their federal income tax returns until the IRS could give guidance. The IRS gave such guidance late Friday — and taxpayers should be able to move forward.

The National Taxpayer Advocate issued a highly critical blog Thursday that questioned why the IRS waited so long to address whether special tax refunds or payments will be treated as taxable income on a federal income tax return. Tax season began Jan. 23 but the tax filing deadline isn’t until April 18.

The IRS began accepting and processing 2022 federal income tax returns on Jan. 23, 2023.

In its statement late Friday, the IRS clearly spells out that people in 16 states do not need to report these state disaster relief payments on their 2022 federal income tax returns. The states are California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Maine, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, Pennsylvania and Rhode Island. The IRS said payments in these states are related to “general welfare and disaster relief.”





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