July 31, 2018
133,000 Injured Veterans Entitled to Tax Refunds
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These tax refunds are owed to any veterans who received one-time (lump-sum) disability severance payments after January 17, 1991, and who included those payments as income on their tax returns. According to the IRS, most veterans who received such disability severance payments after ending their military service will receive letters from the Department of Defense to explain the process for claiming their refunds.
If the normal statute for claiming a refund has expired, the veterans have one year from the date when they received the Department of Defense letter to file a 1040-X and claim their refunds. They have two options to determine the amount of their refunds:
To claim this refund, veterans should write either “Veteran Disability Severance” or “St. Clair Claim” across the top of the front page of their Form 1040X and mail their returns to this address:
Internal Revenue Service
333 W. Pershing Street, Stop 6503, P5
Kansas City, MO 64108
Veterans who are eligible for refunds but who don’t receive the Department of Defense letters can still file Form 1040X to claim their refunds, but they need to include both of the following to verify that they received disability severance payments:
If you need assistance, please give this office a call.
- Combat-Injured Veterans Tax Fairness Act
- Disability Severance Payments
- Department of Defense Notice
- Standard Claim Amount
- Filing a Claim
- Lack of Documentation
These tax refunds are owed to any veterans who received one-time (lump-sum) disability severance payments after January 17, 1991, and who included those payments as income on their tax returns. According to the IRS, most veterans who received such disability severance payments after ending their military service will receive letters from the Department of Defense to explain the process for claiming their refunds.
If the normal statute for claiming a refund has expired, the veterans have one year from the date when they received the Department of Defense letter to file a 1040-X and claim their refunds. They have two options to determine the amount of their refunds:
- Amend the original return and use actual numbers from the original return.
- Claim a standard refund amount based on the calendar year of the severance payment. The standard should be entered on lines 15 and 22 of the 1040-X, and “Disability Severance Payment” should be entered on line 15. The standard amounts are as follows:
o $1,750 for tax years 1991–2005
o $2,400 for tax years 2006–2010
o $3,200 for tax years 2011–2016
To claim this refund, veterans should write either “Veteran Disability Severance” or “St. Clair Claim” across the top of the front page of their Form 1040X and mail their returns to this address:
Internal Revenue Service
333 W. Pershing Street, Stop 6503, P5
Kansas City, MO 64108
Veterans who are eligible for refunds but who don’t receive the Department of Defense letters can still file Form 1040X to claim their refunds, but they need to include both of the following to verify that they received disability severance payments:
- A copy of documentation that displays the exact amount of the disability severance payment and the reason for it; this could be a letter from Defense Finance and Accounting Services that explains the severance payment or a Form DD-214.
- A copy of either the letter in which the Veteran’s Administration confirmed the veteran’s disability or a determination that the injury or sickness was incurred as a direct result of armed conflict, while in extra-hazardous service, during a simulated war exercise, or due to an instrument of war.
If you need assistance, please give this office a call.
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