April 15th
2007-02-12 07:40:24
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Actually, this year it's April 17. The following is from the IRS website:
"Taxpayers will have extra time to file and pay because April 15 falls on a Sunday in 2007, and the following day, Monday, April 16, is Emancipation Day, a legal holiday in the District of Columbia.
"By law, filing and payment deadlines that fall on a Saturday, Sunday or legal holiday are timely satisfied if met on the next business day. Under a federal statute enacted decades ago, holidays observed in the District of Columbia have an impact nationwide, not just in D.C. Under recently enacted city legislation, April 16 is a holiday in the District of Columbia. The IRS recently became aware of the intersection of the national filing day and the local observance of the new Emancipation Day holiday after most forms and publications for the current tax filing season went to print."
2007-02-12 16:28:12
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answer #2
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answered by Judy 7
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Most people have it wrong on here. April 15th is on a weekend and April 16th is a holiday in Washington D.C. The deadline is April 17th this year.
If you want to file an extension you will need to do it by the 17th as well. If you are doing it because you owe the IRS you will need to submit that with the extension or face fines and penalties for not doing so.
2007-02-12 07:58:48
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answer #3
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answered by R Worth 4
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4/17/2007 -- normally it's April 15th but this year the 15th is on a Sunday. That would make it the 16th but there is a holiday in Washington DC so it's the 17th!
BTW, MOST people here are wrong! A "bookkeeper" saying it's the 15th -- dreadful!
2007-02-12 09:07:38
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answer #4
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answered by Dizney 5
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April 15
2007-02-12 07:40:28
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Usually U.S. Federal tax return is due on April 15 (we are talking about U.S. Federal taxes?).
But this year, April 15 is on a Sunday, and April 16 is a holiday in Washington D.C. -- so it's extended to April 17th.
2007-02-12 07:43:38
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answer #6
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answered by morningfoxnorth 6
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working for H&R Block some time ago, no penalties will accrue until after June 15th if you OWE taxes--if you expect a refund, file the extention form on line-really is not an issue if they owe YOU $'s.
If you owe some money-file the extention with a portion of what you feel is due, and then you have approx until October 15th to finish the filing. You may pay a penalty if what you sent in earlier is substantially less than what you really owe. Less chance of an audit also (filing in August or October).
2007-02-12 09:29:20
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answer #7
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answered by stlb_2000 2
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Depends which country. My country is April 30th.
-------- updated
How on earth does anyone give my answer a "thumbs down?" I could understand if this was a USA or other country forum, but it's classified simply in the business and finance section (taxes, general) without country. Someone needs to keep in mind that the world is bigger than the U. S. and A., and that many people around the globe read this forum, and many also write something that can be called "English."
2007-02-12 07:41:53
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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Without filing for an extension April 17 this year I believe.
2007-02-12 07:41:50
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answer #9
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answered by wizjp 7
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April 15 but this year it actually is April 17th as Monday the 16th is a government holiday.
2007-02-12 07:42:29
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answer #10
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answered by george 2 6
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April 15th unless that date falls on the weekend. Then it is the next (IRS deemed) business day. If you file an extension, you will get until August 15th (if it is not on the weekend). And if you need additional time then another 2 mos. puts you at October 15th (weekend thing again). FYI- You are more likely to get audited after the April 15th date.
2007-02-12 09:02:47
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answer #11
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answered by kam 5
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