IRS

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Using Claimyr will:

  • Connect you to a human agent at the IRS
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  • Call the correct department
  • Redial until on hold
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  • Give you free callbacks if the IRS drops your call

If I could give 10 stars I would

If I could give 10 stars I would If I could give 10 stars I would Such an amazing service so needed during the times when EDD almost never picks up Claimyr gets me on the phone with EDD every time without fail faster. A much needed service without Claimyr I would have never received the payment I needed to support me during my postpartum recovery. Thank you so much Claimyr!


Really made a difference

Really made a difference, save me time and energy from going to a local office for making the call.


Worth not wasting your time calling for hours.

Was a bit nervous or untrusting at first, but my calls went thru. First time the wait was a bit long but their customer chat line on their page was helpful and put me at ease that I would receive my call. Today my call dropped because of EDD and Claimyr heard my concern on the same chat and another call was made within the hour.


An incredibly helpful service

An incredibly helpful service! Got me connected to a CA EDD agent without major hassle (outside of EDD's agents dropping calls – which Claimyr has free protection for). If you need to file a new claim and can't do it online, pay the $ to Claimyr to get the process started. Absolutely worth it!


Consistent,frustration free, quality Service.

Used this service a couple times now. Before I'd call 200 times in less than a weak frustrated as can be. But using claimyr with a couple hours of waiting i was on the line with an representative or on hold. Dropped a couple times but each reconnected not long after and was mission accomplished, thanks to Claimyr.


IT WORKS!! Not a scam!

I tried for weeks to get thru to EDD PFL program with no luck. I gave this a try thinking it may be a scam. OMG! It worked and They got thru within an hour and my claim is going to finally get paid!! I upgraded to the $60 call. Best $60 spent!

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Ask the community...

  • DO post questions about your issues.
  • DO answer questions and support each other.
  • DO post tips & tricks to help folks.
  • DO NOT post call problems here - there is a support tab at the top for that :)

Jamal Harris

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Does anyone use separate credit cards for business vs personal expenses? I'm struggling to keep everything organized and wondering if that would help.

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Mei Chen

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ABSOLUTELY get a separate card just for business! It made my life 1000x easier. I just export the year-end summary directly to my tax software. Also helps if you ever get audited - clean separation between business and personal expenses.

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Ravi Patel

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Honestly, you're asking all the right questions! I went through the exact same panic when I started freelancing two years ago. Here's what I wish someone had told me from day one: First, yes you absolutely need to make quarterly payments with that income level. The IRS expects you to pay as you go, not wait until April. Missing them isn't the end of the world, but the penalties add up. For the percentage to set aside, I'd actually recommend starting at 30-35% until you get a feel for your actual tax situation. Better to over-save and get a refund than scramble to find money you don't have. I learned this lesson the expensive way my first year. Home internet is definitely deductible based on business use percentage. Same with your phone, utilities for your home office space, even part of your rent/mortgage if you have a dedicated workspace. The biggest game-changer for me was getting everything automated. Separate business checking account, business credit card, and I literally transfer 30% of every payment the day it hits my account. No thinking, no "I'll do it later" - just automatic. Also, keep ALL your receipts and document everything. Even small stuff like coffee during client meetings or parking when visiting clients. It adds up fast over a year. One last tip - consider finding a good CPA who works with freelancers. Mine costs about $800/year but saves me way more than that in deductions I wouldn't have known about.

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Could the IRS be trying to serve me legal papers? How to find out who's summoning me

So I'm in a pretty stressful situation and could use some advice. I'm a US citizen but I've been living in Peru for the last couple years with my wife (who's Peruvian) and our little one. I still maintain my US citizenship and residency status, and use my cousin's address in the States for all my official mail, banking, and tax documents. Here's my problem - I've fallen behind on some financial obligations. Due to work disruptions, I haven't been able to keep up with my tax payments for about 14 months, and I've also got outstanding balances on two credit cards (Discover and Capital One) that I haven't touched in almost a year. I've been considering bankruptcy as an option but haven't committed yet. Yesterday, my cousin called saying someone showed up at their house trying to deliver court papers addressed to me. The delivery person wouldn't tell my cousin what it was about and mentioned they couldn't legally leave the documents since I don't actually live there permanently. I'm freaking out a bit since I've never been summoned to court before. I'm thinking it has to be either the IRS or one of the credit card companies coming after me for the debt. I checked the IRS website and my account shows it's "at risk of a lien" but doesn't indicate any legal action has actually been filed yet. I've done some research - checked my name in the state court database and found nothing. My uncle who practices law also ran my name through federal court records and came up empty. What should I do next? How can I figure out who's trying to serve me? Should I call local courts? Could it be the IRS but their website hasn't updated yet? And how do I handle this while living abroad in Peru?

Asher Levin

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I'm actually more concerned about the attempt to serve papers at an address where you don't permanently live. From my understanding (not a lawyer), proper service usually requires delivering documents to your actual residence. If you're officially residing in Mexico, there are international protocols for serving US legal papers to someone in Mexico. It sounds like they're trying to serve you at a US address of convenience, which might not constitute proper service. You might want to research the "Hague Service Convention" which covers international service of process between the US and Mexico.

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Serene Snow

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That's a really good point. I had a similar situation when I was living in Germany but still had a US mailing address. A creditor tried to serve me at my US address, but my lawyer successfully argued improper service since my actual residence was abroad. The court ended up requiring them to follow proper international service procedures, which bought me several more months to negotiate a settlement.

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The international service of process angle is crucial here, but I want to clarify something - you mentioned you're in Peru, not Mexico. The Hague Service Convention does apply between the US and Peru, so if you're truly residing there permanently, any US legal action would need to follow proper international service procedures. However, there's an important distinction to consider. If you've been using your cousin's address as your official address for taxes, banking, and other legal purposes, courts might consider that your legal domicile for service purposes, even if you physically reside abroad. This is called "substituted service" and many jurisdictions allow it when the defendant has designated an address for official correspondence. Given that you mentioned maintaining US residency status and using the cousin's address for "all official mail," you might have inadvertently created a situation where service at that address could be considered proper. I'd recommend consulting with an attorney who handles international service issues before assuming you have protection under improper service rules. The key question is whether you've been filing taxes as a US resident (using that address) or as a US citizen abroad. This designation could significantly impact how courts view proper service in your case.

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Evelyn Kelly

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I had this exact same thing happen to me about 2 weeks ago! The verification request appeared overnight just like yours did. I was super worried at first, but it turned out to be totally normal - just part of their increased security measures for 2024. The whole process took about 30 minutes through ID.me and my refund processed normally after that. Don't stress too much about it, but definitely don't ignore it either since it can delay your refund if you wait too long. Good luck!

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Thanks for sharing your experience! That's really reassuring to hear it went smoothly for you. Did you have to upload any additional documents during the ID.me verification process, or was it just the basic identity verification? I'm trying to prepare myself for what to expect when I go through it.

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Andre Dubois

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This verification request is becoming really common this year - you're definitely not alone! I went through the same thing about a month ago and it was nerve-wracking at first. The key thing is that you're seeing it in your legitimate IRS account on the official website, which is a good sign. When I did my verification, it was pretty straightforward - just had to confirm my identity through ID.me with a driver's license photo and a quick video selfie. The whole thing took maybe 15-20 minutes. My refund came through about a week later with no issues. One thing I'd recommend is to tackle it sooner rather than later. I've heard from others that waiting can sometimes cause longer delays in processing. Also, make sure you have good lighting and a clear background when you do the ID.me verification - it can be picky about photo quality!

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Don't forget to track ALL your business expenses as a contractor! I do photography on the side with my regular job and the deductions make a huge difference. You can write off a portion of your home for office space, equipment, software, mileage for business travel, professional development, health insurance premiums, and retirement contributions.

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Paolo Longo

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Is it worth itemizing all these deductions though? I heard the standard deduction is so high now that most people don't benefit from tracking everything.

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Actually, business deductions for self-employment are completely separate from the standard deduction decision! Even if you take the standard deduction on your personal taxes, you still get to deduct all your legitimate business expenses on Schedule C against your 1099 income. So tracking your business expenses is definitely worth it - things like your design software subscriptions, computer equipment, portion of your home office, professional courses, etc. These reduce your self-employment income before calculating both income tax and self-employment tax, which can save you quite a bit. The key is keeping good records and making sure expenses are legitimately for your graphic design business. I use a simple spreadsheet to track everything monthly - takes maybe 30 minutes but usually saves me hundreds or even thousands come tax time.

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This is super helpful! I had no idea business deductions were separate from the standard deduction. As someone just starting out with contractor work, what would you say are the most important expenses to track right from the beginning? I want to make sure I'm not missing obvious deductions but also don't want to overcomplicate things while I'm still learning the ropes.

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Here's a quick cheat sheet for Form 5329 and Roth distributions that might help: 1. Qualified Roth distribution (over 59½ + 5-year rule met) = No Form 5329 needed 2. Early distribution with exception (education, first-time home buyer, etc.) = Form 5329 needed to claim exception 3. Early distribution with no exception = Form 5329 needed to calculate 10% penalty 4. Contribution issues (excess contributions) = Different part of Form 5329 Hope this helps!

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What about if you're taking substantially equal periodic payments (SEPP/72t distributions)? Do those require Form 5329 even though they're exempt from the penalty?

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For 72t/SEPP distributions, you do need to file Form 5329 even though you're exempt from the 10% penalty. You'll report the early distribution on Form 5329 and enter exception code "02" to show you're taking substantially equal periodic payments. This is important documentation to maintain for the IRS because if you break the SEPP plan before the required timeframe (generally 5 years or until age 59½, whichever is longer), you could face retroactive penalties on all previous distributions.

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LongPeri

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Don't forget that you might need Form 8606 even if you don't need Form 5329! Form 8606 is used to track the basis in your Roth IRA and to determine how much of a distribution is taxable if it's not fully qualified.

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Oscar O'Neil

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I always get confused between these forms! Which one do I use if I'm taking out contributions early but not earnings?

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Great point about Form 8606! For Roth IRAs, you generally don't need Form 8606 since Roth contributions are made with after-tax dollars. Form 8606 is mainly for traditional IRAs with non-deductible contributions. @Oscar O'Neil - If you're withdrawing Roth contributions early (but not earnings), you typically don't need either Form 5329 or 8606. Roth contributions can be withdrawn anytime without taxes or penalties since you already paid tax on that money. You only run into issues if you withdraw earnings before meeting the qualified distribution requirements. The key is making sure your brokerage properly tracks what portion of your distribution is contributions versus earnings on your 1099-R.

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