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CONSUMER
ADVISORY February 2010 By Attorney General Tom Miller
Its tax season, and tax
preparers may invite you to get a Refund Anticipation Loan or RAL
a loan borrowed against your expected tax refund. Such a loan may come a few days faster than a
refund but you pay extremely high fees to borrow your own money.
A Refund Anticipation Loan is a very
short-term LOAN, arranged by a tax preparer and secured by your expected tax refund. You pay finance charges and tax-preparation fees. The loan is repaid when the IRS sends your full
refund to the lending bank.
Refund
anticipation loans are EXPENSIVE. According
to a 2009 report by the Consumer Federation of America and the National Consumer Law
Center, consumers paid over $833 million in loan fees on RALs in 2007. The average loan costs include a $34 to $130 loan
fee and administrative or application fees that can range from $25 to hundreds of dollars. With all costs and fees, the APR (annual percentage
rate) for RALs varies from 50% to 1300%! Thats
a bad bargain for an advance of just a few days.
Refund
anticipation loans encourage FRAUD. A 2008
IRS study found that RAL filings were 27% to 36% more likely to be non-compliant than were
returns without a loan.
Consumers need to ask
tough questions:
·
How much will I
pay for the loan? The typical
RAL finance charge for a $3,000 refund is $62-$110, or a 77%-140% APR. Those costs can double or triple with additional
fees for tax preparation, electronic filing, or check-cashing. ·
What does the fee
buy me? An RAL gets your refund
to you in 1-4 days, compared to just 7-10 days for an ordinary electronic refund deposit
to your bank.
Beware also
of pay stub RALs. Pay stub
RALs are based on a taxpayers estimated tax refund as indicated on his or her latest pay stub.
They are offered before a taxpayer receives a W-2 form. The estimated amount, however, may be
incorrect and the taxpayer will have to pay the full amount, whether or not the refund is
large enough to cover all costs and fees. Pay
stub RALs charge high fees just like other RALs.
IRS data shows that nearly one in fifteen taxpayers took out an RAL in 2007. Two-thirds of these were low-income workers or Earned Income Tax Credit recipients (EITC) who can receive free tax assistance. In February, a list of Volunteer Income Tax Assistance and Tax Counseling for the Elderly sites in Iowa will be available at . For more information, contact the Attorney General's Consumer Protection Division. Call 515-281-5926, or 888-777-4590 toll-free. Consumer
Protection Division ! Hoover
Bldg. ! Des
Moines, IA 50319 !
515/281-5926 !
888/777-4590
Avoid Rapid
Tax-Refund Loans
A very costly way to gain just a few days on tax refunds |
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