Planning for your tax bill? How it can affect your credit score

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

(ARA) - Your resolutions are made and you even have a game plan to make sure 2012 is the year you stick to them. But before you can really get going on achieving your personal goals in the new year, you'll need to wrap up some unfinished business from 2011 - your taxes.

Even though tax season comes every year at the same time, many Americans face their tax bill with no plan for how to manage it. Facing unbudgeted debt is a situation that can lead you to make reactive, desperate decisions that could negatively affect your credit score and your finances long after April 15. Similarly, an unexpected tax refund that turns into "fun money" can be an opportunity lost when it comes to managing your credit and overall financial health.

Not sure if you'll owe? Visit IRS.gov for an online withholding calculator, or search for a free tax estimator. Many manufacturers of tax preparation software offer free estimators on their websites.

Once you have an idea of how much, if anything, you'll owe, evaluate your payment options. Take steps to understand your credit, and consider the relationship between tax bills, debt payments and credit before you decide how you will pay your taxes.

Cash: Of course, the payment method that will have the least amount of impact on your credit is to pay what you owe in full with cash. In this economy, that may not be a realistic option for many people.

Credit Cards: The IRS accepts credit card payments, an option that has become increasingly popular in the recent past. But before you use plastic to pay your taxes, make sure you know your credit score, credit status and how both might be affected if you use credit to pay your taxes.

Websites like freecreditscore.com can help you understand the potential impact of big credit expenditures or delayed payments on existing debts. The site's credit score estimator helps members plan ahead to see how major financial decisions, like maxing out a credit card (if necessary) to fund a tax bill might impact your personal credit.

Keep in mind that in addition to paying interest on the balance carried on your credit card, you may face other fees and conditions for using your card to pay your taxes. Check with both the IRS and your card issuer.

Previous Page|1||

Comments


Reader Poll

Which upcoming Creston event are you most looking forward to?

Relay for Life
Party in McKinley Park
Elm's Club Bike Night
Creston Fourth of July celebration
Other (Place your answer on the CNA Facebook page)

Top Ads