Saturday, August 22, 1998
Uncle Sam to accept credit cards for tax bills
By CURT ANDERSON
Associated Press
WASHINGTON -- Beginning next year, the federal government will
accept credit cards for Americans' income tax bills.
Although taxpayers will be charged a yet-to-be-determined "convenience
fee" for the privilege, the Internal Revenue Service hopes
the move will encourage more people to file returns electronically.
About 24.5 million did so this year.
"Our responsibility, we believe, is to give folks the
widest possible array of payment options," said Steve Holden,
the national electronic program director at the IRS. "Many
consumers will find it convenient to use their credit cards."
One major question is whether Visa International -- the world's
largest credit card issuer -- will get on board. Company officials
there will decide this fall whether to give the program a try.
Under the plan, taxpayers next year will be able to pay IRS
bills two ways with credit cards:
--Holders of MasterCard, American Express, Discover -- and
possibly Visa -- cards will be able to charge their balances due
by calling a toll-free number. It won't matter whether the tax
returns are done manually, through a paid preparer, or electronically.
This phone system is being run by US Audiotex of San Ramon, Calif.
--Holders of Discover or Private Issue cards issued by Novus
Services Inc., using Intuit's popular TurboTax or MacInTax preparation
software, will be able to complete and file their returns and
pay their taxes using personal computers.
In both cases, taxpayers will be charged fees for the service
based on the size of their tax bills. Officials at Audiotex and
Novus said they have not determined how much the fees will be
or how they will be calculated.
But one factor in how those fees are determined is whether
Visa will join the other card issuers on the Audiotex system.
Visa, with about 600 million cards in circulation, wants taxpayers
to be charged a flat fee rather than a fee based on the tax bill
-- an arrangement Audiotex believes would cost it money, said
Steve Johnson, Audiotex senior vice president.
The company said in a statement today it is "evaluating
a number of alternatives" regarding use of its cards to pay
IRS taxes.
"We expect a resolution in the near future," the
Visa statement said.
Johnson, however, said the company's board of directors is
likely to vote in October on whether to try the program.
Many believe Visa, which has about half the U.S. credit card
business, will find it difficult to ignore such a potentially
huge market.
"There's too many chips on the table for them not to do
it," said Frank O'Leary, treasurer in Arlington County, Va.,
which had the first credit-card taxpaying system in the country.
The IRS previously was hamstrung in setting up such a payment
system for federal tax bills because of the issue of fees that
merchants normally pay to credit card issuers.
In the 1997 tax reform law, Congress said the federal government
should not pay such fees, which forced the IRS to implement the
floating-scale plan that shifts the fees to taxpayers.
In Arlington County, the credit-card system has proved popular
for paying property and personal taxes, O'Leary said. About 10
percent of the suburban county's taxpayers used credit cards in
1997, the plan's first full operational year.
For tax collectors, less paper is cheaper. Credit card transfers
occur much more quickly and reduce the need for extended business
hours or extra personnel to process thousands of last-minute returns.
Also, it won't matter if a tax deadline falls on a weekend.
Some experts worry that taxpayers who already have steep credit-card
debt might neglect to save for their tax bills and simply use
the credit method, digging their financial hole deeper.
Taxpayers who can't pay their bills up front now must request
an installment arrangement with the IRS, subject to heavy penalties
and interest if they fail to keep up.
"Money management is a big issue. It's clearly not for
everyone," said Johnson of Audiotex. "It's for people
who see this as an alternative."
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