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Thanks, but I'm still unclear. You filed manually via the system, or manually on paper? And then you had to remove what it put in and type in the right answer yourself? Or you could change what it had on the system?
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I recently did a couple of IR3's that included a rental property on line and the mix of information collected has changed a bit.
Previously the details required were the properties address, income, expenses and months available. A further breakdown of the income and expenditure wasn't required in the online version.
This time round on the online system the property address wasn't required but a lot more information was collected around the expenses claimed. This included a fields for the regular expenses (Interest, rates, insurance, property management fees) and selectable additional fields for maintenance expenses. It also details on each of the assets creating depreciation charges (or at least the provision to supply this - I'm not sure if it was optional or necessary). After entering it all, the refunds were paid out within a couple of days.
The IR3 dividend/imputation fields were pretty much as before.
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Member
For the IR3 I filed manually on the IRD system. I have done my own return for years and it is straight forward.What they have on the system doesn't reconcile with the certificates I had so I filed what I had received. I split all my income with my wife so I just enter half of all interest or dividends received for each of us as well as half of all RWT or Imputation credits.
Hope that helps.
Originally Posted by simla
Thanks, but I'm still unclear. You filed manually via the system, or manually on paper? And then you had to remove what it put in and type in the right answer yourself? Or you could change what it had on the system?
Last edited by Waiuta; 28-05-2019 at 04:43 PM.
Reason: additions
A quote attributed to Margaret Thatcher goes along the lines of
"The problem with socialism is that eventually you run out of other people's money."
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Thanks. I think you must be saying that it does not force the information it has into the IR3 when you file, so you can just enter what you want when filing the IR3 online, so getting it right?
Last edited by simla; 28-05-2019 at 05:09 PM.
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Member
That's what has worked for me. I understand all Interest and RWT certificates will be entered by Link /Computershare type companies as well as all divies and imputation credits. I'm unsure when it's mandatory for them and if you are able to split the income. No doubt it will all work out.
Originally Posted by simla
Thanks. I think you must be saying that it does not force the information it has into the IR3 when you file, so you can just enter what you want when filing the IR3 online, so getting it right?
A quote attributed to Margaret Thatcher goes along the lines of
"The problem with socialism is that eventually you run out of other people's money."
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Thanks for your patience in answering. I did not want to get trapped halfway through filing, unable to enter the right answer and yet unable to back out either. But you are saying I can just enter the right answer without hindrance, so that is reassuring. Thanks.
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Originally Posted by simla
Thanks for your patience in answering. I did not want to get trapped halfway through filing, unable to enter the right answer and yet unable to back out either. But you are saying I can just enter the right answer without hindrance, so that is reassuring. Thanks.
You can do it without submitting it. It will just save as a draft until you are happy to hit the submit button.
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Member
I completed the wife and myself last Monday the 20th, all other income except dividends (Aust / NZ) was already on file, the wife received her return the next day, received the claimed amount of $700 odd, I claimed $3100, and still waiting a week later. Other years it has been around similar sum, and it has turned up in my account within a few days.
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Originally Posted by waikare
I completed the wife and myself last Monday the 20th, all other income except dividends (Aust / NZ) was already on file, the wife received her return the next day, received the claimed amount of $700 odd, I claimed $3100, and still waiting a week later. Other years it has been around similar sum, and it has turned up in my account within a few days.
Ensure it is not just sitting as a draft.
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Member
Originally Posted by waikare
I completed the wife and myself last Monday the 20th, all other income except dividends (Aust / NZ) was already on file, the wife received her return the next day, received the claimed amount of $700 odd, I claimed $3100, and still waiting a week later. Other years it has been around similar sum, and it has turned up in my account within a few days.
I think there is a undisclosed threshold beyond which refunds are NOT paid automatically. I had it on a few occasions that I waited
and waited for my due refund. When I finally rang up the IRD I got put onto someone who went through my tax return over the
phone line by line with me until it was all ticked off. I got my refund a few days after that. So smaller refunds (< 2k maybe??) may
be automatic, but for bigger ones some extra verification might be required to get the money released.
N.B. nobody advised me that I had to do that, they just let me hang there until I picked up the phone!
Last edited by sideline; 28-05-2019 at 07:59 PM.
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