Add Bank Info. By Noon, Or Wait Weeks For Your Paper Stimulus Check
FROM WIRE SERVICE
AREAWIDE -- If you want your stimulus check directed deposited into your bank account, you have to add your bank information by noon today.
If you don’t, you’ll have to wait to receive a paper check. That could take weeks.
More than 85% of people who are eligible for stimulus money have already gotten the cash. About 130 million payments were made as of last week. Many of those people didn't have to update their bank account information because the IRS already had it on file from a 2018 or 2019 tax return.
Learn how to register below....
How to add bank account information
An online IRS tool called "Get My Payment" allows people to upload their bank account information if the agency didn't already have it on file from a 2018 or 2019 tax return.
It will request some basic information, including your Social Security number as well as adjusted gross income as reported on your most recent tax return.
Once you add your bank account information, the tool should update with a scheduled payment date. If it's entered before noon on Tuesday, a payment date should be available on Saturday. If it's after noon on Tuesday, a user would have to wait until the following Saturday.
What if you don't normally file taxes?
Social Security recipients, Supplemental Security Income recipients, as well as some low-income veterans receiving pension benefits who don't usually file a tax return do not need to upload their bank account information. Their stimulus payment will be automatically sent to them however they normally receive those benefits.
But there are millions of other low-income people who are not normally required to file taxes. They aren't facing the Wednesday deadline, but they do need to take action before receiving their money.
They must use a separate online tool for non-filers that asks for basic information including names, date of births and Social Security numbers for the person filing and his or her dependents. They won't have to provide any income information.
Who's not eligible?
Eligibility is largely based on income, and it excludes individuals earning more than $99,000, head of household filers with one child who earn more than $136,500, and married couples without children earning more than $198,000.
Families earning a little more may still be eligible if they have children. The phase-out limit depends on how many children they have. For a typical family of four, the amount is completely phased out for those with incomes exceeding $218,000.
Those who can be claimed as a dependent for tax purposes, like many college students, are also ineligible for the payments, as well as undocumented immigrants who don't have Social Security numbers.
Payments are worth up to $1,200 for individuals, and $2,400 for couples -- plus $500 per dependent.