Where do I mail my Form 1040X?
| IF you are filing Form 1040X: | THEN mail Form 1040X and attachments to: |
|---|---|
| In response to a notice you received from the IRS | The address shown in the notice |
| With Form 1040NR or 1040NR-EZ | Department of the Treasury Internal Revenue Service Austin, TX 73301-0215 |
Where do I mail my form 8379 to?
the Internal Revenue Service Center
Where To File
| IF you file Form 8379… | THEN mail Form 8379… |
|---|---|
| with your joint return | and your joint return to the Internal Revenue Service Center for the area where you live.* |
| by itself after you filed your original joint return on paper | to the same Internal Revenue Service Center where you filed your original return.* |
Can you file form 8379 electronically?
Yes, you can file Form 8379 electronically with your tax return. If you file Form 8379 with a joint return electronically, the time needed to process it is about 11 weeks. If you file Form 8379 with a joint return on paper, the time needed is about 14 weeks.
Do you attach Form 8379 to 1040X?
File Form 8379 with Form 1040X only if you are amending your original return to claim a joint refund. If you file Form 8379 with your joint return, attach it to your return in the order of the attachment sequence number (located in the upper right corner of the tax form).
How long does it take to file Form 8379?
Time Needed To Process Form 8379. Generally, if you file Form 8379 with a joint return on paper, the time needed to process it is about 14 weeks (11 weeks if filed electronically). If you file Form 8379 by itself after a joint return has been processed, the time needed is about 8 weeks.
What’s the purpose of the IRS Form 8379?
Purpose of Form. Form 8379 is filed by one spouse (the injured spouse) on a jointly filed tax return when the joint overpayment was (or is expected to be) applied (offset) to a past-due obligation of the other spouse. By filing Form 8379, the injured spouse may be able to get back his or her share of the joint refund.
When to file Form 8379 for an injured spouse?
Form 8379 is filed by one spouse (the injured spouse) on a jointly filed tax return when the joint overpayment was (or is expected to be) applied (offset) to a past-due obligation of the other spouse. By filing Form 8379, the injured spouse may be able to get back his or her share of the joint refund. Are You an Injured Spouse?