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Can you really “Collect a ‘Cash Rebate’ on Nearly EVERY Single Purchase Made in 2017?”

What's Oxford Club's $42.4 BILLION “Consumer Rebate Program?”

By Travis Johnson, Stock Gumshoe, November 28, 2017

Ed note: this article was first published in 2015, but the ad continues to run and readers continue to ask about it, so we’re re-posting this teaser solution for you today.

What follows has not been meaningfully updated or revised since it was originally published on March 14, 2015, though some minor updates have been made to keep up with the changes in the ad (they no longer claim that “April deadline,” for example, since that has long passed and they’ve moved on from talking up 2016 to 2017 for this ‘rebate’ on your taxes).. and the original comments from readers are still appended. The focus of the ad seems to be largely unchanged (the latest version being sent out now is still dated January 2017), though they’re now focusing on the “rebate” for your 2017 spending instead of 2015 or 2016 in previous versions…. perhaps it will keep popping back up, since it seems to be working to spark interest — which is, of course, the prime intent of any newsletter ad.

Are you really going to get a big ol’ check from the government?

Well, maybe. But it’s not so secret as the Oxford Club folks would like you to believe… and you don’t need them (or their $49 subscription) to learn about it.

You probably don’t need me for that, either, free or not, but quite a few readers have been asking this morning so I’ll try to quickly explain what they’re talking about.

The ad comes from George Rayburn at the Oxford Club…. here’s the basic idea from their ad that got everyone excited:

“119 Million Taxpaying Americans Can Now Get a Cash Rebate on Virtually EVERY SINGLE PURCHASE Made in 2017…

Bloomberg estimates it could put as much as $42.4 BILLION back in the pockets of the 119 million eligible taxpaying Americans.

“Others predict it could be even more.

“According to an article on Fox Business News, there is ‘no limit’ to the size of your ‘cash rebate.’

“If you have a huge spending year in 2017 (even on credit), in rare cases you could conceivably claim upward of $100,000.”

And then they make it sound even more fantastic…

“This is not a joke.

“I’m talking about an opportunity to collect a ‘cash rebate’ on virtually anything you pay for this year.

“A new pair of shoes…

“Your vacation hotel bill…

“Lunch with friends…

“A new leather sofa…

“Plane tickets…

“Christmas presents for the kids…

“Even big-ticket items like an engagement ring… a wedding… or a new car, boat or RV…

“The government is willing to send you cold hard cash for all of it.”

So what are they really talking about? Can you actually get a “cash rebate” from the government just for buying stuff?

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freemoney2Well, sort of. What the Oxford Club is talking about here is the fairly recent opportunity to choose to deduct either state and local income taxes or state and local sales taxes when you file your return with the IRS…. but by “fairly recent” I mean, “passed into law a little over ten years ago.”

This isn’t new.

Wait, but they said Obama just signed it in December!

Yes, but what was signed in December (of 2015) was the “permanentization” of that tax break. For the past ten years, this has been an exception that Congress has voted in each year — but it wasn’t part of the “permanent” tax code, so Congress had to renew it each year.

Now, it’s a permanent part of the tax code.

Which doesn’t mean your tax calculation will be any different this year than it was last year or the year before… but it does mean that you should be able to have more confidence that the tax break will remain on the books.

(There’s a summary of this omnibus/extender tax bill here if you’re interested in more detail… it made a few deductions like this permanent, and extended others for a year or more, but there’s nothing big or new in the bill that I’m aware of beyond that.)

What does this “rebate” (sales tax deduction) really mean?

Well, this is mostly a way that Congress has tried to make Federal taxes more fair — those who itemize deductions on their Federal returns have always been able to deduct state and local income taxes and real estate taxes when calculating what we owe to the Feds (at least, for as long as I’ve been paying attention), but for many folks without state or local income taxes there wasn’t a Federal tax deduction to offset what they pay to keep their local government services running.

Every state has bills they have to pay, and, just as with the Federal government, that money overwhelmingly comes from individual taxpayers (except maybe for you, Delaware… and you, Alaska) — but states can mix up the way they collect taxes, whether they want to put a larger burden on sales, or on property, or on income, or some combination of the three. Florida, for example, can make itself attractive to retirees by not taxing income… and make up for a lot of that with a sales tax that is partially paid by their huge numbers of tourists (though they do have above-average property taxes as well).

There are only nine states that don’t have state income taxes, but some of them are big (or politically powerful), like Texas and Florida, and all of them except New Hampshire and Alaska have state sales taxes… so for residents of those states there is now a new (since 2004, at least) tax deduction: They can deduct their sales taxes just like most of the country deducts their state and local income taxes. It’s right there on your form 1040, Schedule A — question 5 that asks what you paid in state and local taxes, and you enter either (a) income taxes or (b) general sales and use taxes, whichever is higher.

And yes, as you can imagine, the recordkeeping obligation could easily be overwhelming if you were expected to keep all your receipts for stuff on which you paid sales taxes… 18 cents at CVS for that box of tissues, $11.83 for your dinner at the restaurant, etc. — but the IRS, thankfully, has made it quite a bit more simple than that. They have a website with a handy-dandy calculator that you can use to provide an estimated and “IRS approved” number for your state and local sales taxes, based on your income level and your zip code. You can even add on to that for a few specified large purchases — primarily vehicles or homes (ie, cars, boats, planes, RVs, new home or substantial addition or renovation if you pay normal sales tax on it… not all places tax homes and construction the same way). Or, of course, you can actually try to figure the real number on your own if you think your spending is well above average… but for that, you’d need to have documentation since you’re not going with the average estimates the IRS calculates for you.

It might even be worth looking into for folks who do pay state and local income taxes, since it’s possible that if your taxable income was relatively low but your purchases were relatively large the sales tax burden could have been larger than the income tax burden for any given year.

I am NOT NOT NOT a tax expert — I hire an accountant to do my taxes, and when my tax situation was simpler I used TurboTax. If you use any sort of assistance, either human or software, to do your taxes, then you’ll very likely have already had these numbers checked for you in past years and it will be part of your calculations for 2015. This is, I assume, a very basic consideration for almost anyone who itemizes their deductions, it’s not a secret or a surprise…. though I suppose some folks might have overlooked it.

My guess (again, NOT an expert) is that the biggest group who might have missed this tax break over the past decade are those who retired to Florida recently and who do their own taxes without any help or computer support and aren’t accustomed to the sales tax deduction… or those who have relatively low taxable income (like some retirees, for example) but who made a large purchase, like a retired couple who lives in Massachusetts and pays state income tax but has relatively low income because their investments didn’t do well and they withdrew the minimum from their retirement accounts. If they use some of their nest egg to buy a $100,000 RV, they could have higher sales taxes than income taxes for that given year and perhaps skipped over that “did you buy anything big this year” question from their preparer at H&R Block because they didn’t think it was important (assumptions: a couple with $55,000 in income would pay about $2,500 in income tax in MA and only about $500 in calculated sales taxes… but the $6,000 sales tax on a $100,000 RV would push them to the sales tax deduction for that year). Both those hypothetical examples are well within the core marketing demographic for the Oxford Club, which, like all investment newsletters, doubtless finds its most fertile hunting ground among the relatively affluent Americans who are retired or near-retirement.

You do have to itemize your deductions to get this tax deduction — just as you do with the existing real estate or income tax deductions. Most Americans with low-to-medium income levels don’t itemize deductions on their taxes (only about 30% of households itemize, on average) — and in some cases might overpay just because they’re unaware of existing breaks that could push some of them over the standard deduction, or simply don’t have the time or acumen to follow TurboTax (or other) instructions for a couple hours to see if there’s something they’re missing. It’s really not until you get to incomes of close to $100K that everyone (or 95%+, at least) takes full advantage of itemizing. The sales tax deduction is probably not likely to be enough to push you over the line from “standard deduction” to “itemizing” all by itself if you’re “average,” though it might help push you over the line if you also do have a mortgage or other substantial deductions (medical costs, theft, property damage by natural disaster, etc.)

I just did the IRS sales tax calculations for myself — and, as expected, the IRS calculates that I pay far more in state income taxes than I do in sales taxes… and I haven’t made any massive purchases to erase the difference (no Ferrari, no RV, etc.), so no surprises: I still deduct my state income taxes. (I live in Massachusetts, state sales tax is about 6.25% and income tax 5.15% — you don’t need to know that for the calculator, the IRS knows your state tax rates).

And you’ll be pleased to know that this is one case where the calculating is pretty easy — just go to the IRS Calculator here and follow the steps. They say it will take five to 20 minutes, but you’d have to read pretty slowly or look up all the numbers from your files to have it take more than five minutes — getting a rough estimate will take you no time at all.

So there you have it — I expect lots of you were already fully aware of this, or blissfully unaware because it will never impact on your lives or your tax obligations, but it is real and it has certainly made a difference for folks in no-income-tax states and a few other folks in non-typical circumstances. And it’s also been the law of the land for about ten years, and has recently been made permanent so you won’t have to be on pins and needles each Winter as you watch to see if Congress extends the break another year.

To reiterate: I am not a tax expert, I don’t even do my own taxes… but this particular one is fairly simple. And no, it is not a “rebate to 119 million Americans”… but for at least the 24 million or so households in “no income tax” states (or the ~8 million of them who itemize deductions, anyway) it could certainly make (and in all cases where they’ve been paying attention since 2004, probably already has made) a difference on their tax returns.

So there’s your quick answer for the day — yes, there are newly permanent tax deductions out there that you can call “cash rebates” if you want to do some exaggerating… and no, it’s probably not anything new for you (but it will only take five minutes to double check).

And that is, of course, not the only “special secret” the Oxford Club folks are peddling — they’ve come up with a few dozen things that seem, on the face of it, to be exaggerated variations on things that any financial planner or retirement advisor would tell you…

401(k) Secret #4: How to Keep the Government From Taking a 20% Cut of Your 401(k)” is presumably the quite common advice, “don’t cash out your 401(k) instead of rolling it over, because it will cost you 20%.” I hope most folks know that, but I know plenty of folks who left jobs when they were young and let their employer send a check to them for their small 401(k) balance instead of rolling it over into an IRA, and they missed out on more retirement savings and did pay a tax penalty.

401(k) Secret #2: How to Add $155,000 to Your Account Total” is indeed a tease for anyone nearing retirement — that’s basically their way of saying “read the fee disclosures on your 401(k), because you’re probably getting ripped off by high fees”… which is particularly important for younger workers or those thinking about leaving their 401(k) with an old employer’s plan instead of rolling it over — but if you’ve been paying into a 401(k) for thirty years, you’re not getting those fees back. Here’s a quick piece about that.

401(k) Secret #1: How to Become a 401(k) Millionaire on a $35,000-per-Year Salary” is just a reminder of the common-sense rule: Save more, and regularly, and you can end up with a lot even if your salary isn’t huge. The story that most folks quote about this was in Smart Money four or five years ago, you can see it here… here’s a quote from that article to let you know what that “secret” is:

“Though many savers may be scarred by the past decade of lousy returns, getting to $1 million over the course of a 40-year career should be a manageable goal — even for some lower-income employees, says Greg Burrows, vice president of Principal Financial. Someone who earns $35,000, saves 12 to 13%, including a company match, gets an annual raise of 3.5%, and annual returns of 7% would save a million dollars.”

And there are lots of other hinted-at “free money” kinds of programs, the kind of stuff they used to hawk in late night infommercials as ways to legally steal from Uncle Sam… like this:

Easy Money Secret #4: Get up to $7,500 to Fix Up Your House if You’re Over 62

“If you’re over 62 and planning any sort of specific upgrades to your house… the government might actually GIVE you up to $7,500 to get it done.”

Which, of course, is kinda true — as long as you’re too poor to repay a loan for that kind of work to modernize or renovate your home. That’s the Section 504 Home Loan (and grant) program described here.

And there’s this one: “Easy Money Secret #1: How to Get up to $401,982 in ‘Unclaimed Money’ From the State Treasury” …

… which is just about the unclaimed funds that are often listed in the newspaper or can be searched through state-controlled websites (and some commercial sites that charge fees, so be careful). The Feds have a website linking to various sources here… but the key, of course, is that it has to be YOUR unclaimed money. The example they give for that $401,982 is a butcher outside of DC who got a surprise life insurance settlement and was featured on Inside Edition, though presumably that’s not normal (his father had passed away a decade ago and had a life insurance policy that was never claimed).

We had an unclaimed funds “windfall” a couple years ago as well, which amounted to about an hour of paperwork and something like $50 from some old account that had been forgotten… so there is money out there, but it has to actually be yours and you have to do a little work to search for it and claim it, and oftentimes the amount of money is relatively small (which, perhaps, is why you or your relatives forgot about it at the time). I don’t know what the odds might be of huge amounts of money, but presumably life insurance payments and old retirement accounts would be among the larger sources of the big “surprise” unclaimed funds — so while you’re at it, check out the Insurance Institute’s best practices for updating your own policy, telling your beneficiaries about it, and telling your insurer where to find those beneficiaries.

I didn’t look into all of the “secrets,” but presumably they’re similar in nature — and heck, if you’ve got a favorite “free money” secret, feel free to share it with a comment below.

I can’t imagine you want to discuss taxes, and I can’t provide any great insight, but our friendly little comment box is available below for that, too, if you’re interested in using it… enjoy!

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Dan Wilkins
September 8, 2016 9:22 am

It sounds to good to be true. If it has any worth, how come only a certain few have the knowledge and wherewithal to collect?

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Guest
September 20, 2016 6:06 pm
Reply to  Dan Wilkins

The IRS is so overloaded I think you could put down any figure you want to and get it refunded. I’m not kidding,, they are overworked and underpaid. With our (now) 28 trillion dollar deficit) what difference does it make. We are going to see a recession that will make 08 look like a picnic. Invest in real estate,gold, silver, ammo, anything that will be in demand and can’t be taken by the government. It’s called minus interest. Have you noticed that the dollar buys less and less all the time? No nation ever printed their way out of a depression and we are no exception. Should be an interesting year, you can find me in either central America or S. America. Some countries still have privacy laws that prevent the U.S. from knowing every penny you spend. Many years ago I opened a credit card a/c in Costa Rica and the next tax return I received said at the bottom. Is this being filed from another country? A little credit card a/c and they noticed. Let’s face it we’re screwed.

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Rena Schneider
September 8, 2016 3:18 pm

The post on Facebook said he wanted to send out the book for free even no shipping would be asked to for. It disappeared before I could request one! Sneaky!

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Guest
September 12, 2016 11:50 am
Reply to  Rena Schneider

These ads are written by Indian ‘Social media’ hacks who mostly ‘get it wrong’ when their customers submit specs. Sorry !

Member
Scott
September 8, 2016 3:19 pm

(1) Any Massachusetts couple of a certain age and wisdom ought to k ow enough to buy their RV just over the state line in New Hampshire and thereby simply avoid any sales tax in the first place!
(2) Turbo Tax already makes this comparison between the standard deduction and sales tax totals and further, it assumes you want the lowest tax number and annotates accordingly, so this is not some new “secret hidden government benefit” you have to be tipped on (and I would hazard a guess that other tax software packages work similarly).

Irregular
Hugo
September 8, 2016 6:12 pm

Thanks for this article and the many others that has saved us all time and money. I encourage everyone to become an IRREGULAR member here at Gumshoe. You will NOT find another site anywhere better and the $49 is the bargain of the year.
Now, having said that, the next best bargain, and I have in the past bought many newsletters, is The Oxford Club. They actually have many Newsletters, and before you join the club my advise is to explore their site and read their information. They have helped me grow my portfolio many times over my starting position.
Some of their newsletters may not be to your liking,but for me, and I am an Oxford Club Chairman’s Circle Member, they publish great information, second only to become an IRREGULAR member.
Respectfully, Hugo

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Jack Lewis
September 9, 2016 2:34 pm

I saw the Oxford promo on my home page last night. It was very well done. I even pulled out my CC but, i then decided to do some research today. I’m glad I did. Why do i not get what’s FREE free. I’ll be 70 next week, getting older i know, but $49 ain’t Free.

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Wayne\'s World
September 10, 2016 7:10 pm

Come on!!! IT’S FREE—- Just send me $49.00 for the SHIPPING and HANDLING or get 2 copies just PAY an extra $49.00 for SHIPPING and PROCSSING

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ted theodore holtgrewe
September 11, 2016 2:24 pm

what if your retired still get a check

Guest
ted theodore holtgrewe
September 11, 2016 2:25 pm

retires get money from fed gov dec 18 / 2016

Member
barry1315
September 11, 2016 5:14 pm

$49.00 is not free it is FRAUD !!!! I recorder presentation and it says you would like to send the 13 ways FREE

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Ann Thorpe
September 11, 2016 11:34 pm

He also talked about Social Security loop holes. Any truth to that?

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Heike Mackenzie
September 20, 2016 7:53 pm
Reply to  Ann Thorpe

I bought this paper and it discusses if you took Social Security benefit early, like I did and want to later get the higher amount of a 70 year old. If you have the money you can stop your SS and repay what they paid you in 4 years from age 66 ton70. Than your benefits restart at the higher rate of a 70 year old. Not to many people know that or can afford to do this unless you use your 401 k

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John Broughton
September 20, 2016 11:00 pm

Heike – Here’s the Social Security page on repayment: https://www.ssa.gov/planners/retire/withdrawal.html . Note that the decision to repay must be made within **12 months** of getting benefits. That’s a relatively recent change – until December 2010 there was no time limit (as discussed here – http://time.com/money/3592414/social-security-rule-change-benefit-withdrawals/ )

It sounds like the paper you bought may have been published before December 2010, and is out of date.

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Guest
October 20, 2016 11:38 am
Reply to  John Broughton

This is true. Many SS rules were changed this year 2016 specifically to close the loopholes that allowed people to collect thousands of extra $ under certain circumstances. This is a good thing and will stop some of the bleeding. If the government will keep their hands off the SS money and pay back what they have taken out to finance “projects”, maybe our children won’t lose all the money they have paid in. Money paid to folks (other than our disabled dependents) who have never paid in to SS should come from a Federal Funded Medicaid program and not our SS!

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Julie Mancini
September 12, 2016 7:44 am

This is a very good article to read. Got here because I keep seeing this Oxford ad on Facebook. I had been doing tax returns and I was not sure what “rebate” he is talking about. Yep. It’s in the tax form since 2004. And I am very pleased to see your explanation to the their “bullet points”. Nothing new, but a sales pitch. Hey, with just 1000 subscribers, that’s $49,000… How much did it cost to post on Facebook? Got me to notice it. Hope others find you here before responding to Oxford.

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Guest
September 12, 2016 11:30 pm

So where is this link to the IRS’ sales-tax deductions page?

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John Broughton
September 13, 2016 12:20 am

The IRS page that Travis links to doesn’t do a really good job of explaining what the page is about. It correctly says “If you saved your receipts throughout the year, you can add up the total amount of sales taxes you actually paid and claim that amount.” What it should say, next, is something like “Alternatively, you can use the IRS calculator to determine, based on your income and other factors, the sales tax amount you can claim.”

Very, very few people actually save all their receipts. Almost everyone who takes the sales tax deduction uses the IRS calculator to determine the amount of the deduction.

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PeteZerria
September 13, 2016 7:30 am
Reply to  John Broughton

This is all verrry interesting, we’ve been using Turbotax since before 2004 and I never once noticed questions or a discussion about general purchases, the resultant sales tax and their deductibility. Looking forward to tax season…nah not really. Will definitely talk to some accountant friends who should know all about this.

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Gary
September 30, 2016 2:54 am
Reply to  PeteZerria

It’s been in TurboTax and TaxCut since the temporary (now permanent) tax laws went into effect. If you didn’t get to that point in the software, it had likely already determined you didn’t have enough to itemize, or you didn’t notice the section based on the wording which sort of diverts you away if you live in a state with state income tax. The software programs automatically calculate the state income tax and standard sales tax deductions and include that in the overall calculations as a default.

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Barbara legg
September 14, 2016 6:17 pm

Is there a rebate on 2016 purchases?

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S Thatchef
September 14, 2016 11:03 pm

When things sound too good to be true ….

I wanted to believe this, so I wasted 30-45 minutes on it. That is the hook. You really want to believe it and invest hope and time.

I just printed off the pages at the end of the program and waited a few hours. That gave me time to wipe the bs off from myself … then I could straighten my brain out and investigate.

I wound up here and you guys verified my suspicions. Thank you soooo much for your help.

Guest
September 16, 2016 7:08 pm

What about an airline ticket purchase? Would the taxes be considered a deductible?

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John Broughton
September 16, 2016 9:11 pm

Airline taxes are excise taxes, not sales taxes. So, no, they are not includible on Schedule A, even if you keep receipts of everything you bought, and use that approach to calculate total sales taxes paid.

https://ttlc.intuit.com/questions/2755802-can-i-claim-taxes-paid-on-airline-flights-under-sales-tax

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Joy
September 17, 2016 10:09 am

Thank you for shedding light that what Oxford Plan is referring to is the already existing Sales Tax option on 1040 tax returns.

Guest
September 19, 2016 1:02 pm

The Oxford club article is a waste of time on the internet, They should start out by saying if you don’t Itemize deductions this does not apply. I have not for the last 20 years, so to even to start to look into this is a waste of time. Anyone advertising savings due to this rule should start off by saying you have to Itemize Deductions b4 anything else. I is very upsetting to waste time listening to this and not be able to use it.

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Guest
September 29, 2016 6:06 pm
Reply to  Michael

Actually some of them do apply. The change in the law allows you to claim it even if you do not itemize. The same is true of property tax. I am grateful for this post, it is a time saver and maybe a money saver.

Member
John Broughton
September 30, 2016 12:04 am
Reply to  David

David – Could you provide the form, or line on Form 1040, where one enters information about property taxes, OTHER THAN Schedule A, which is used for itemization? I ask because you seem to think that property taxes paid can have a beneficial effect on one’s income tax (other than for rental property, which isn’t at issue here), somehow, without any itemization being done. I’ve prepared lots of tax returns for lots of people in the past four years, and I’ve never seen what you describe. I’d be delighted if you could be much more specific.

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Guest
September 21, 2016 11:40 am

Oxford club mentionEd just fill out a former and get money for anyone over 50 and for something else too.

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John Broughton
September 21, 2016 12:46 pm

Elizabeth – you probably need to be more specific about what the Oxford Club said, if you want someone to respond here with an analysis. Did they give any more information about filling out that form, other than it’s for anyone over 50. (For example, what do you if you fill out that form – a rebate? a credit? a refund?) And what is “something else too”?

Can you copy-and-paste whatever you read online, here? Or if what you read is on paper, can you type here exactly what the wording is? Or if you saw a video, at least provide a link to that video? (For a video, the ideal thing would be to type up a transcript of the relevant sentences.)

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Guest
September 26, 2016 5:15 pm
Reply to  John Broughton

They call it the Retiree Cash Rebate under section 408 of code.

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Guest
September 26, 2016 5:21 pm
Reply to  John Broughton

Here is the wording they use!! Copies off their website link “Retiree Cash Rebate”

This is a great one for anyone over 50.

It’s found in Section 408 of the tax code.

And it’s another one we like because it rewards people who deserve it.

In short, if you’re over 50 and either in retirement or about to enter retirement… you could receive up to $1,680 in extra cash every year at tax time.

You just fill out a single page along with your tax filing, and you can get back a full $1,680.

Then just keep doing it every year.”

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John Broughton
September 26, 2016 7:58 pm
Reply to  Debby Zahn

$1,680 is 28% of $6,000. I’m not sure, however, that’s very helpful (28% is one of the tax brackets that taxpayers can be in).

Anyway, section 408 is for Individual Retirement Accounts (see https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/26/408 ). If you make an IRA contribution (for which you need earned income – Social Security, pensions, interest, dividends, and capital gains don’t count), then there are two potential benefits:

* It reduces your taxable income, dollar for dollar, up to $6,500 (if age 50 and older; limited to $5,000 if younger). However, that doesn’t mean that you get a check from the IRS, it just means that you OWE less in taxes. And there is NOT any extra form to fill out; you just enter the amount on line 32 of your Form 1040. Plus the maximum benefit is MORE than $1,680, for taxpayers who are in tax brackets above 28%, so not exactly a perfect fit.

* IF you are relatively low income (income below $30,500 if single $45,750 if head of household; $61,000 if married filing jointly), and you’ve made an IRA contribution, AND you haven’t had any IRA withdrawals in that tax year or the prior two, then you can fill out IRS Form 8880 (https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/f8880.pdf ) and get a retirement savings credit. However, the credit is limited to a maximum of $1,000. This actually could generate an IRS refund check for someone in a very low income bracket, because such a person could be in a tax situation where he/she owed no taxes.

So maybe the $1,680 figure comes from some weird mash-up of the two benefits. I’d love to see a detailed explanation of where that number came from.

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Guest
September 26, 2016 5:23 pm
Reply to  John Broughton

Here is link if you need it explaining all of the programs discussed here. So glad I found this discussion….saved me $49!
http://oxfordclub.com/oc_embed_promo.php

Guest
September 23, 2016 1:21 pm

thanks for the tip! I new the info would be out there. Didn’t want to call my congressman, he knows nothing, zilch, nada. He didn’t even know what the TPP was so was I going to call him. Nope. Thanks again.

Member
nguyendo123
September 26, 2016 6:11 pm

Hello there…i didnt save all the my receipts but can i use my bank statment for the cash rebate??

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John Broughton
September 26, 2016 8:01 pm
Reply to  nguyendo123

It’s not a cash rebate – please read the information in the original post, and in comments. As for using your bank statement to justify your calculation on Schedule A, of sales taxes paid, that’s unlikely to stand up to an IRS audit (admittedly unlikely). For example, at a grocery store (in most states), some items have a sales tax assessed (cleaning supplies, for example), and some do not (food items). So the amount on a bank statement says nothing about how much sales tax was paid.

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