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State stimulus checks: IRS plans to rule whether these payments are taxable this week

The Internal Revenue Service is expected to provide more guidance this week on whether stimulus checks that states issued in 2022 are considered taxable income on federal returns.

The agency urged taxpayers who are uncertain about the taxability of their state’s payments to hold off on filing their federal taxes until guidance is released, according to the agency’s announcement.

How these payments are treated could affect residents in at least 19 states that issued tax rebates after a revenue surplus or relief payments to help folks weather higher prices last year.

“The IRS is aware of questions involving special tax refunds or payments made by states in 2022,” the agency said in its release. “We are working with state tax officials as quickly as possible to provide additional information and clarity for taxpayers.”

How state stimulus payments are treated could affect residents in <a data-i13n="cpos:1;pos:1" href="https://www.forbes.com/advisor/personal-finance/states-gas-stimulus-checks/" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank" data-ylk="slk:at least 19 states;cpos:1;pos:1;elm:context_link;itc:0;sec:content-canvas" class="link ">at least 19 states</a>
How state stimulus payments are treated could affect residents in at least 19 states (Gabe Ginsberg via Getty Images)

In general, stimulus checks are not usually taxed by the government that issues them. For example, the Middle Class Tax Refund checks issued by California in 2022 are not treated as taxable income by the state, while the federal government’s Economic Impact Payments — or stimulus checks it sent out during the pandemic — were not considered taxable income on federal returns.

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But the issue gets more complicated when taxability crosses jurisdiction.

The IRS likely will consider the purpose and the nature of each state’s relief package to determine the federal tax treatment. For instance, that means the type of relief California provided last year could be taxable by the IRS.

“I think the design of [the law that authorized California’s] payments makes it difficult for the IRS to provide the tax relief that people are seeking,” Anette Nellen, CPA and professor at San Jose State University’s Master of Science in Taxation program, wrote to Yahoo Finance. “[California’s law] added a provision that the payments are not a tax refund. There is also a statement that the ‘relief’ is for more than COVID. If it had stated it was solely COVID relief, there is a federal law that would have made the payments non-taxable.”

The IRS likely will consider the purpose and the nature of each state’s relief package to determine the federal tax treatment.
The IRS likely will consider the purpose and the nature of each state’s relief package to determine the federal tax treatment. (designer491 via Getty Images)

Another reason California’s payments could be taxable on the federal level is that high-income individuals also qualified for the checks. Joint filers earning up to $500,000 received as much as $600, while single filers making up to $250,000 could get up to $400 in the program.

“Providing the payments to individuals with high income levels where there is no financial or other need likely means that no one receiving the payments under the program can get relief under the general welfare exclusion,” Nellen said.

California’s two previous stimulus checks that were issued in 2021 were not taxable for federal purposes as they were considered “disaster relief payments,” according to Gregory Kling, CPA and associate professor at University of Southern California’s Leventhal School of Accounting.

This year, though, taxpayers should probably assume the worst when it comes to the taxability of relief payments, he said.

“My approach is always to assume that state stimulus checks are taxable unless we are told otherwise,” Kling wrote in an email to Yahoo Finance. “Tax law says that income from whatever source derived is taxable unless there is a specific provision in the tax law that says it is not taxable.”

Besides California, 18 other states issued state stimulus and rebate checks last year, including Alaska, Colorado, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Maine, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oregon, Rhode Island, South Carolina, and Virginia, according to an accounting from Forbes Advisor.

Rebecca is a reporter for Yahoo Finance.

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