Eric Gillin
Rapid Tax Refunds Get Expensive Real Fast
03/27/02 - 07:10 AM EST
Instant gratification comes with a price. This year more than 11 million taxpayers will take out refund anticipation loans, or RALs, and receive tax refunds in as little as three days, a 16% increase over the 9.5 million in 1994, according to a study from the Consumer Federation of America and the National Consumer Law Center. But to do so, taxpayers will pay annual interest rates between 67% and 774% and more than $800 million in fees, the CFA and NCLC say. "They should be called 'consumer impulsive loans,'" says Steve Rhode, president of Myvesta.org, a financial crisis center. Indeed, many leap before they look at what RALs cost.
How It Works
Tax preparers partner with lenders to provide RALs. First, preparers, such as H&R Block and Jackson Hewitt, charge fees to prepare returns and electronically file them. Then lenders, such as Household Bank and Bank One, receive loan fees for the RAL itself. Finally, check-cashing fees are tacked on, increasing the total average bill to $267, according to the CFA and NCLC. On a 2,000 tax refund, $267 is 13.4% of what amounts to a three-week loan. That's an annual percentage rate of more than 230% -- a figure that might make credit card companies blush.| How the Hidden Costs Add Up What an advance on your $2000 refund could cost |
|
| Type of Fee | Cost |
| RAL loan fee | $75 |
| Electronic filing fee | 40 |
| Check-cashing fee | 67 |
| Tax preparation fee | 85 |
| Total | $267 |
| Source: CFA and NCLC | |
RALs Rising
The recession is a major factor behind the increase in RALs. People are counting on the refunds to help pay bills. "The economic downturn has caused a lot of people to need money today, and because they need the money today, they're willing to spend a great deal to get it," says Jim Southward, president of the California Society of Enrolled Agents. Ironically, the people who use RALs most are the same ones who can't afford them. Close to 40% of those who take out RALs are also recipients of the earned income tax credit, or EITC, the largest federal antipoverty program, which provided $30 billion to 18.4 million people last year. "They're the ones who don't have the deep pockets to wait five weeks. The creditors are calling," Southward says. People who use RALs tend to live paycheck to paycheck. As a result, they put too much importance on their refunds. "People use the IRS as a savings club," Rhode says. "They'll withhold too much, get $8,000 or $10,000 at the end of the year, but they can't pay their bills every month." Consumer groups say that people who must pay for tax preparation services with their refunds are particularly vulnerable. Unaware of alternatives and intimidated by intricate forms, such people can feel overwhelmed and make bad decisions. "Tax forms are complicated, and if you look at the EITC, it's a lot more complicated," says Shelley Curran, spokesperson with the Consumer's Union. "[Plus,] people don't really understand that because of e-filing and direct deposits, they can still get their refund very quickly."Performance -- and membership -- are down in tandem with the last two years of market doldrums.
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