You cannot get your actual Federal Tax Return. That is issued from the U.S. Treasury.
If you go to H&R Block, Jackson Hewitt, Liberty etc (even on-line), you may be eligible for a gawd-awful high interest loan against you anticipated refund.
Good luck
2007-03-27 09:30:02
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answer #1
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answered by Wood Smoke ~ Free2Bme! 6
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Tax return loans are a rip off! Besides, you can have your refund within two weeks if you e-file and use direct deposit! Simply e-file and get it over with. Next year, file as soon as you get all of your W-2's in! You'll get your refund back so fast, that your head will spin...
Also, check out the following link to find out how you can save money on your filing expenses this year!
2007-03-25 15:37:52
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answer #2
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answered by John M 2
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Not really. There are a number of firms that will prepare your taxes and give you a high-fee, high-interest short term loan for the amount of your refund. You'll pay a lot for that, since you'd get your refund in a couple weeks anyway without paying extra if you have it direct-deposited. But whether to try for the loan or not is obviously your call.
2007-03-23 11:50:42
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answer #3
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answered by Judy 7
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Some of the tax prep mills can get you a refund anticipation loan in a couple of days. But you'll pay some outrageously high interest rates for it -- upwards of 2,533% APR!
Nobody is going to give you cash, and nobody is going to get it to you today.
BTW, you don't "get" a return, you file a return. You might get a REFUND if you've overpaid your taxes, but the return is the thing you send to the IRS.
2007-03-23 10:04:10
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answer #4
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answered by Bostonian In MO 7
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Even if you file directly with irs.gov, it will still take about two weeks to receive a direct deposit, and that is the fastest way. Some companies will give you a partial loan against your refund, but they require a large fee to do this.
2007-03-23 09:34:14
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answer #5
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answered by smartypants909 7
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Only the Treasury Department can give you your actual refund. There are many places that will offer a loan against your expected refund. The rates are high enough that you are better off getting a cash advance on your credit card. I've known bounced checks to be less expensive.
2007-03-23 12:49:41
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answer #6
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answered by STEVEN F 7
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