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IRS seeks thousands for refunds
Friday, November 06, 2009

Wouldn't it be great if the IRS were looking for you to give you money?

For nearly 108,000 taxpayers nationwide, that's exactly the case.

The agency is holding federal income tax refunds totaling about $124 million that it tried to distribute this tax season but were returned as undeliverable.

For 450 taxpayers in the nine-county Pittsburgh region, there's about $337,000 waiting to be claimed, or an average of about $749 per refund. Statewide, the Internal Revenue Service has about $3.71 million owed to 3,200 taxpayers.

The checks were returned by the Postal Service because of incorrect or outdated addresses. The only way taxpayers can get that money, which the IRS holds indefinitely, is by coming forward.

Anyone who is owed a refund or may be the heir to one should visit the "Where's My Refund?" section at www.irs.gov to update his or her address. To access the phone version of "Where's My Refund?" call 1-800-829-1954.

To use either system, a taxpayer must submit his or her Social Security number, filing status and amount of refund shown on the 2008 tax return.

Taxpayers can help avoid future mix-ups by signing up to have refunds electronically deposited into a savings or checking account.

Even taxpayers who file paper returns can have refunds automatically deposited by choosing the direct-deposit option on the returns.

Patricia Sabatini can be reached at psabatini@post-gazette.com or 412-263-3066.
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First published on November 6, 2009 at 12:00 am