How long do I have to send my income tax payment to the IRS? The 2019 Stack Overflow Developer...

How to change the limits of integration

What is this 4-propeller plane?

I looked up a future colleague on LinkedIn before I started a job. I told my colleague about it and he seemed surprised. Should I apologize?

Output the Arecibo Message

Could a US political party gain complete control over the government by removing checks & balances?

On the insanity of kings as an argument against monarchy

What is the motivation for a law requiring 2 parties to consent for recording a conversation

What can other administrators access on my machine?

Realistic Alternatives to Dust: What Else Could Feed a Plankton Bloom?

Pristine Bit Checking

Inflated grade on resume at previous job, might former employer tell new employer?

Geography at the pixel level

Extreme, unacceptable situation and I can't attend work tomorrow morning

A poker game description that does not feel gimmicky

Why can Shazam do this?

Carnot-Caratheodory metric

What does Linus Torvalds mean when he says that Git "never ever" tracks a file?

Is three citations per paragraph excessive for undergraduate research paper?

Spanish for "widget"

Does light intensity oscillate really fast since it is a wave?

How to manage monthly salary

What tool would a Roman-age civilization have to grind silver and other metals into dust?

How to answer pointed "are you quitting" questioning when I don't want them to suspect

Should I write numbers in words or as numerals when there are multiple next to each other?



How long do I have to send my income tax payment to the IRS?



The 2019 Stack Overflow Developer Survey Results Are InWhat are the consequences of filing personal income tax return past the deadline of April 15th (i.e. filing late)? [US]What is the Canadian Income Tax Day?Paying Federal Income Tax without WitholdingDo I need to file a tax return on zero income in the US if I became a resident late in December?Does making credit card tax payment through service provider constitute IRS form 4868 extension request?How would IRS treat reimbursement in a later year of moving expenses?Do I have to file California tax return for worldwide income?Do I have to pay tax on my last pay check which is the first of the tax year?How can I file this year's tax return if I haven't got the refund from last year's return?Germany - Tax implications for a full-time contract in the same year of a HiWi contract





.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty{ margin-bottom:0;
}







10















If I file my income tax on April 15th and plan to pay with a check, it will take a few days for the check to be delivered. Will I face interest and penalties for those few days for the check in the mailing system?










share|improve this question































    10















    If I file my income tax on April 15th and plan to pay with a check, it will take a few days for the check to be delivered. Will I face interest and penalties for those few days for the check in the mailing system?










    share|improve this question



























      10












      10








      10








      If I file my income tax on April 15th and plan to pay with a check, it will take a few days for the check to be delivered. Will I face interest and penalties for those few days for the check in the mailing system?










      share|improve this question
















      If I file my income tax on April 15th and plan to pay with a check, it will take a few days for the check to be delivered. Will I face interest and penalties for those few days for the check in the mailing system?







      united-states income-tax






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited 36 mins ago









      Ben Voigt

      3,33821518




      3,33821518










      asked 14 hours ago









      daviddavid

      785




      785






















          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          21














          When sending a tax return to the IRS by mail you need to have the envelope post-marked by 15 April. The fact it may take a week or more for them to receive it, open it, and process the return and check is not important and doesn't cause you to owe interest or penalties.



          When US mail was the only way to file, some post offices stayed open until midnight for those last minute filers. If you are going to wait that long to take it to the post-office before they close on the 15th. mDon't drop it in a box on the street, or in front of your house.



          Those who are filing electronically need to push the button before midnight on the 15th.






          share|improve this answer



















          • 1





            I will be filling it electronically, but I will be sending the check by mail

            – david
            14 hours ago






          • 6





            The same applies; the check mailing just has to be postmarked by the deadline.

            – chepner
            14 hours ago






          • 20





            Note that it has to be the US Postal Service. If you use a private company (eg, FedEx or UPS), then the IRS has to receive it by April 15th.

            – Teepeemm
            13 hours ago











          • A week? Are you on the alternate Earth where the IRS is fast this time of year?

            – Harper
            12 hours ago






          • 7





            @Harper My experience is that local, state, and federal tax authorities cash checks for taxes owed within a week to ten days after me mailing them. Issuing a refund can easily take a month or longer ...

            – njuffa
            12 hours ago



















          2














          You must fully pay or overpay by April 15.



          A postmark is good enough if it is sent by US Mail (which it has to be anyway since it goes to a PO box). If you're mailing past about April 8, make sure it gets a postmark (not everything does). I recommend handing it to a counter.



          If you are not ready to file, you can just pay using Form 4868, which is the correct payment slip and also grants a filing extension*. I like to overpay by a margin just in case I missed something; IRS is very reliable about giving refunds.



          * The 4868 filing extension is fairly meaningless. If you still owe after April 15, you're still in trouble. If IRS owes you, the penalty for late filing is $0. The only other penalties are




          • you don't get your refund until you file, obviously

          • After too long, electronic tax services like TurboTax stop supporting that tax year and you must then hand file.






          share|improve this answer





















          • 1





            Are you sure about that last point. I use H&R Block's software, and I know it asks me a question related to late filing at some point in the wizard; I always assumed that meant it supported doing so.

            – Dan Neely
            9 hours ago











          • Yeah, what? You can absolutely file for an extension in April, then use tax software from the likes of TurboTax and H&R Block to file your return before October 15th, whether you owe or not.

            – Zach Lipton
            8 hours ago











          • @DanNeely I never meant to say TurboTax et.al. would lock you out on April 16. Heck, 4868 filers and those overseas officially have til October 15 (but that is not an extension to pay.) But the companies cut you off if you push it too far, typically less than a year. They won't help with 2017 taxes or 2015, which you can still file and get a refund. I had occasion to file 2 years late (the numbers were waiting on a Tax Court verdict on the previous year's filing).

            – Harper
            8 hours ago














          Your Answer








          StackExchange.ready(function() {
          var channelOptions = {
          tags: "".split(" "),
          id: "93"
          };
          initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

          StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
          // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
          if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
          StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
          createEditor();
          });
          }
          else {
          createEditor();
          }
          });

          function createEditor() {
          StackExchange.prepareEditor({
          heartbeatType: 'answer',
          autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
          convertImagesToLinks: true,
          noModals: true,
          showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
          reputationToPostImages: 10,
          bindNavPrevention: true,
          postfix: "",
          imageUploader: {
          brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
          contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
          allowUrls: true
          },
          noCode: true, onDemand: true,
          discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
          ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
          });


          }
          });














          draft saved

          draft discarded


















          StackExchange.ready(
          function () {
          StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fmoney.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f107578%2fhow-long-do-i-have-to-send-my-income-tax-payment-to-the-irs%23new-answer', 'question_page');
          }
          );

          Post as a guest















          Required, but never shown

























          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes








          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          21














          When sending a tax return to the IRS by mail you need to have the envelope post-marked by 15 April. The fact it may take a week or more for them to receive it, open it, and process the return and check is not important and doesn't cause you to owe interest or penalties.



          When US mail was the only way to file, some post offices stayed open until midnight for those last minute filers. If you are going to wait that long to take it to the post-office before they close on the 15th. mDon't drop it in a box on the street, or in front of your house.



          Those who are filing electronically need to push the button before midnight on the 15th.






          share|improve this answer



















          • 1





            I will be filling it electronically, but I will be sending the check by mail

            – david
            14 hours ago






          • 6





            The same applies; the check mailing just has to be postmarked by the deadline.

            – chepner
            14 hours ago






          • 20





            Note that it has to be the US Postal Service. If you use a private company (eg, FedEx or UPS), then the IRS has to receive it by April 15th.

            – Teepeemm
            13 hours ago











          • A week? Are you on the alternate Earth where the IRS is fast this time of year?

            – Harper
            12 hours ago






          • 7





            @Harper My experience is that local, state, and federal tax authorities cash checks for taxes owed within a week to ten days after me mailing them. Issuing a refund can easily take a month or longer ...

            – njuffa
            12 hours ago
















          21














          When sending a tax return to the IRS by mail you need to have the envelope post-marked by 15 April. The fact it may take a week or more for them to receive it, open it, and process the return and check is not important and doesn't cause you to owe interest or penalties.



          When US mail was the only way to file, some post offices stayed open until midnight for those last minute filers. If you are going to wait that long to take it to the post-office before they close on the 15th. mDon't drop it in a box on the street, or in front of your house.



          Those who are filing electronically need to push the button before midnight on the 15th.






          share|improve this answer



















          • 1





            I will be filling it electronically, but I will be sending the check by mail

            – david
            14 hours ago






          • 6





            The same applies; the check mailing just has to be postmarked by the deadline.

            – chepner
            14 hours ago






          • 20





            Note that it has to be the US Postal Service. If you use a private company (eg, FedEx or UPS), then the IRS has to receive it by April 15th.

            – Teepeemm
            13 hours ago











          • A week? Are you on the alternate Earth where the IRS is fast this time of year?

            – Harper
            12 hours ago






          • 7





            @Harper My experience is that local, state, and federal tax authorities cash checks for taxes owed within a week to ten days after me mailing them. Issuing a refund can easily take a month or longer ...

            – njuffa
            12 hours ago














          21












          21








          21







          When sending a tax return to the IRS by mail you need to have the envelope post-marked by 15 April. The fact it may take a week or more for them to receive it, open it, and process the return and check is not important and doesn't cause you to owe interest or penalties.



          When US mail was the only way to file, some post offices stayed open until midnight for those last minute filers. If you are going to wait that long to take it to the post-office before they close on the 15th. mDon't drop it in a box on the street, or in front of your house.



          Those who are filing electronically need to push the button before midnight on the 15th.






          share|improve this answer













          When sending a tax return to the IRS by mail you need to have the envelope post-marked by 15 April. The fact it may take a week or more for them to receive it, open it, and process the return and check is not important and doesn't cause you to owe interest or penalties.



          When US mail was the only way to file, some post offices stayed open until midnight for those last minute filers. If you are going to wait that long to take it to the post-office before they close on the 15th. mDon't drop it in a box on the street, or in front of your house.



          Those who are filing electronically need to push the button before midnight on the 15th.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered 14 hours ago









          mhoran_psprepmhoran_psprep

          69.9k897176




          69.9k897176








          • 1





            I will be filling it electronically, but I will be sending the check by mail

            – david
            14 hours ago






          • 6





            The same applies; the check mailing just has to be postmarked by the deadline.

            – chepner
            14 hours ago






          • 20





            Note that it has to be the US Postal Service. If you use a private company (eg, FedEx or UPS), then the IRS has to receive it by April 15th.

            – Teepeemm
            13 hours ago











          • A week? Are you on the alternate Earth where the IRS is fast this time of year?

            – Harper
            12 hours ago






          • 7





            @Harper My experience is that local, state, and federal tax authorities cash checks for taxes owed within a week to ten days after me mailing them. Issuing a refund can easily take a month or longer ...

            – njuffa
            12 hours ago














          • 1





            I will be filling it electronically, but I will be sending the check by mail

            – david
            14 hours ago






          • 6





            The same applies; the check mailing just has to be postmarked by the deadline.

            – chepner
            14 hours ago






          • 20





            Note that it has to be the US Postal Service. If you use a private company (eg, FedEx or UPS), then the IRS has to receive it by April 15th.

            – Teepeemm
            13 hours ago











          • A week? Are you on the alternate Earth where the IRS is fast this time of year?

            – Harper
            12 hours ago






          • 7





            @Harper My experience is that local, state, and federal tax authorities cash checks for taxes owed within a week to ten days after me mailing them. Issuing a refund can easily take a month or longer ...

            – njuffa
            12 hours ago








          1




          1





          I will be filling it electronically, but I will be sending the check by mail

          – david
          14 hours ago





          I will be filling it electronically, but I will be sending the check by mail

          – david
          14 hours ago




          6




          6





          The same applies; the check mailing just has to be postmarked by the deadline.

          – chepner
          14 hours ago





          The same applies; the check mailing just has to be postmarked by the deadline.

          – chepner
          14 hours ago




          20




          20





          Note that it has to be the US Postal Service. If you use a private company (eg, FedEx or UPS), then the IRS has to receive it by April 15th.

          – Teepeemm
          13 hours ago





          Note that it has to be the US Postal Service. If you use a private company (eg, FedEx or UPS), then the IRS has to receive it by April 15th.

          – Teepeemm
          13 hours ago













          A week? Are you on the alternate Earth where the IRS is fast this time of year?

          – Harper
          12 hours ago





          A week? Are you on the alternate Earth where the IRS is fast this time of year?

          – Harper
          12 hours ago




          7




          7





          @Harper My experience is that local, state, and federal tax authorities cash checks for taxes owed within a week to ten days after me mailing them. Issuing a refund can easily take a month or longer ...

          – njuffa
          12 hours ago





          @Harper My experience is that local, state, and federal tax authorities cash checks for taxes owed within a week to ten days after me mailing them. Issuing a refund can easily take a month or longer ...

          – njuffa
          12 hours ago













          2














          You must fully pay or overpay by April 15.



          A postmark is good enough if it is sent by US Mail (which it has to be anyway since it goes to a PO box). If you're mailing past about April 8, make sure it gets a postmark (not everything does). I recommend handing it to a counter.



          If you are not ready to file, you can just pay using Form 4868, which is the correct payment slip and also grants a filing extension*. I like to overpay by a margin just in case I missed something; IRS is very reliable about giving refunds.



          * The 4868 filing extension is fairly meaningless. If you still owe after April 15, you're still in trouble. If IRS owes you, the penalty for late filing is $0. The only other penalties are




          • you don't get your refund until you file, obviously

          • After too long, electronic tax services like TurboTax stop supporting that tax year and you must then hand file.






          share|improve this answer





















          • 1





            Are you sure about that last point. I use H&R Block's software, and I know it asks me a question related to late filing at some point in the wizard; I always assumed that meant it supported doing so.

            – Dan Neely
            9 hours ago











          • Yeah, what? You can absolutely file for an extension in April, then use tax software from the likes of TurboTax and H&R Block to file your return before October 15th, whether you owe or not.

            – Zach Lipton
            8 hours ago











          • @DanNeely I never meant to say TurboTax et.al. would lock you out on April 16. Heck, 4868 filers and those overseas officially have til October 15 (but that is not an extension to pay.) But the companies cut you off if you push it too far, typically less than a year. They won't help with 2017 taxes or 2015, which you can still file and get a refund. I had occasion to file 2 years late (the numbers were waiting on a Tax Court verdict on the previous year's filing).

            – Harper
            8 hours ago


















          2














          You must fully pay or overpay by April 15.



          A postmark is good enough if it is sent by US Mail (which it has to be anyway since it goes to a PO box). If you're mailing past about April 8, make sure it gets a postmark (not everything does). I recommend handing it to a counter.



          If you are not ready to file, you can just pay using Form 4868, which is the correct payment slip and also grants a filing extension*. I like to overpay by a margin just in case I missed something; IRS is very reliable about giving refunds.



          * The 4868 filing extension is fairly meaningless. If you still owe after April 15, you're still in trouble. If IRS owes you, the penalty for late filing is $0. The only other penalties are




          • you don't get your refund until you file, obviously

          • After too long, electronic tax services like TurboTax stop supporting that tax year and you must then hand file.






          share|improve this answer





















          • 1





            Are you sure about that last point. I use H&R Block's software, and I know it asks me a question related to late filing at some point in the wizard; I always assumed that meant it supported doing so.

            – Dan Neely
            9 hours ago











          • Yeah, what? You can absolutely file for an extension in April, then use tax software from the likes of TurboTax and H&R Block to file your return before October 15th, whether you owe or not.

            – Zach Lipton
            8 hours ago











          • @DanNeely I never meant to say TurboTax et.al. would lock you out on April 16. Heck, 4868 filers and those overseas officially have til October 15 (but that is not an extension to pay.) But the companies cut you off if you push it too far, typically less than a year. They won't help with 2017 taxes or 2015, which you can still file and get a refund. I had occasion to file 2 years late (the numbers were waiting on a Tax Court verdict on the previous year's filing).

            – Harper
            8 hours ago
















          2












          2








          2







          You must fully pay or overpay by April 15.



          A postmark is good enough if it is sent by US Mail (which it has to be anyway since it goes to a PO box). If you're mailing past about April 8, make sure it gets a postmark (not everything does). I recommend handing it to a counter.



          If you are not ready to file, you can just pay using Form 4868, which is the correct payment slip and also grants a filing extension*. I like to overpay by a margin just in case I missed something; IRS is very reliable about giving refunds.



          * The 4868 filing extension is fairly meaningless. If you still owe after April 15, you're still in trouble. If IRS owes you, the penalty for late filing is $0. The only other penalties are




          • you don't get your refund until you file, obviously

          • After too long, electronic tax services like TurboTax stop supporting that tax year and you must then hand file.






          share|improve this answer















          You must fully pay or overpay by April 15.



          A postmark is good enough if it is sent by US Mail (which it has to be anyway since it goes to a PO box). If you're mailing past about April 8, make sure it gets a postmark (not everything does). I recommend handing it to a counter.



          If you are not ready to file, you can just pay using Form 4868, which is the correct payment slip and also grants a filing extension*. I like to overpay by a margin just in case I missed something; IRS is very reliable about giving refunds.



          * The 4868 filing extension is fairly meaningless. If you still owe after April 15, you're still in trouble. If IRS owes you, the penalty for late filing is $0. The only other penalties are




          • you don't get your refund until you file, obviously

          • After too long, electronic tax services like TurboTax stop supporting that tax year and you must then hand file.







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited 8 hours ago

























          answered 12 hours ago









          HarperHarper

          25k63789




          25k63789








          • 1





            Are you sure about that last point. I use H&R Block's software, and I know it asks me a question related to late filing at some point in the wizard; I always assumed that meant it supported doing so.

            – Dan Neely
            9 hours ago











          • Yeah, what? You can absolutely file for an extension in April, then use tax software from the likes of TurboTax and H&R Block to file your return before October 15th, whether you owe or not.

            – Zach Lipton
            8 hours ago











          • @DanNeely I never meant to say TurboTax et.al. would lock you out on April 16. Heck, 4868 filers and those overseas officially have til October 15 (but that is not an extension to pay.) But the companies cut you off if you push it too far, typically less than a year. They won't help with 2017 taxes or 2015, which you can still file and get a refund. I had occasion to file 2 years late (the numbers were waiting on a Tax Court verdict on the previous year's filing).

            – Harper
            8 hours ago
















          • 1





            Are you sure about that last point. I use H&R Block's software, and I know it asks me a question related to late filing at some point in the wizard; I always assumed that meant it supported doing so.

            – Dan Neely
            9 hours ago











          • Yeah, what? You can absolutely file for an extension in April, then use tax software from the likes of TurboTax and H&R Block to file your return before October 15th, whether you owe or not.

            – Zach Lipton
            8 hours ago











          • @DanNeely I never meant to say TurboTax et.al. would lock you out on April 16. Heck, 4868 filers and those overseas officially have til October 15 (but that is not an extension to pay.) But the companies cut you off if you push it too far, typically less than a year. They won't help with 2017 taxes or 2015, which you can still file and get a refund. I had occasion to file 2 years late (the numbers were waiting on a Tax Court verdict on the previous year's filing).

            – Harper
            8 hours ago










          1




          1





          Are you sure about that last point. I use H&R Block's software, and I know it asks me a question related to late filing at some point in the wizard; I always assumed that meant it supported doing so.

          – Dan Neely
          9 hours ago





          Are you sure about that last point. I use H&R Block's software, and I know it asks me a question related to late filing at some point in the wizard; I always assumed that meant it supported doing so.

          – Dan Neely
          9 hours ago













          Yeah, what? You can absolutely file for an extension in April, then use tax software from the likes of TurboTax and H&R Block to file your return before October 15th, whether you owe or not.

          – Zach Lipton
          8 hours ago





          Yeah, what? You can absolutely file for an extension in April, then use tax software from the likes of TurboTax and H&R Block to file your return before October 15th, whether you owe or not.

          – Zach Lipton
          8 hours ago













          @DanNeely I never meant to say TurboTax et.al. would lock you out on April 16. Heck, 4868 filers and those overseas officially have til October 15 (but that is not an extension to pay.) But the companies cut you off if you push it too far, typically less than a year. They won't help with 2017 taxes or 2015, which you can still file and get a refund. I had occasion to file 2 years late (the numbers were waiting on a Tax Court verdict on the previous year's filing).

          – Harper
          8 hours ago







          @DanNeely I never meant to say TurboTax et.al. would lock you out on April 16. Heck, 4868 filers and those overseas officially have til October 15 (but that is not an extension to pay.) But the companies cut you off if you push it too far, typically less than a year. They won't help with 2017 taxes or 2015, which you can still file and get a refund. I had occasion to file 2 years late (the numbers were waiting on a Tax Court verdict on the previous year's filing).

          – Harper
          8 hours ago




















          draft saved

          draft discarded




















































          Thanks for contributing an answer to Personal Finance & Money Stack Exchange!


          • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

          But avoid



          • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

          • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.


          To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




          draft saved


          draft discarded














          StackExchange.ready(
          function () {
          StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fmoney.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f107578%2fhow-long-do-i-have-to-send-my-income-tax-payment-to-the-irs%23new-answer', 'question_page');
          }
          );

          Post as a guest















          Required, but never shown





















































          Required, but never shown














          Required, but never shown












          Required, but never shown







          Required, but never shown

































          Required, but never shown














          Required, but never shown












          Required, but never shown







          Required, but never shown







          Popular posts from this blog

          Fairchild Swearingen Metro Inhaltsverzeichnis Geschichte | Innenausstattung | Nutzung | Zwischenfälle...

          Pilgersdorf Inhaltsverzeichnis Geografie | Geschichte | Bevölkerungsentwicklung | Politik | Kultur...

          Marineschifffahrtleitung Inhaltsverzeichnis Geschichte | Heutige Organisation der NATO | Nationale und...