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You Can Pay Taxes by Credit Card; Here’s Why You Shouldn’t

Thinking of racking up airline miles or getting cash back by paying your taxes with a rewards credit card? You could, but think again, because you'll pay more in fees than you'll earn in rewards.

You Can Pay Taxes by Credit Card; Here’s Why You Shouldn’t
Cleveland, OH, February 14, 2006 --(PR.com)-- Thinking of racking up airline miles or getting cash back by paying your taxes with a rewards credit card? You could, but think again, because you'll pay more in fees than you'll earn in rewards.

While the Internal Revenue Service will accept credit card payments for taxes due, the actual payment is made to one of several third-party service providers contracted by the IRS. These service providers generally charge a 2.49% fee for processing the transaction. (IRS credit card payments can be made by phone, online or when e-filing.)

Say you owe $4000 in taxes and want to pay by credit card. Given the service charge, you would actually pay $4099.60. So, if your goal was to earn rewards, you'd be paying almost $100 extra to gain only about $40 worth of rewards.

“Is the IRS charging a premium for credit card tax payments? Not really,” says Justin McHenry, Research Director of IndexCreditCards.com. “But to understand why, you need to know how a normal credit card transaction works and how an IRS payment is different.”

To illustrate, McHenry offers this scenario:

Say you go into a store and buy something that costs $100 with your credit card. Although you're paying $100, the store you're buying from might only get $97 or $98 of that money -- they're paying two or three percent to the credit card processor and your card's issuing bank for the convenience of accepting your credit card. In other words, the store is willing to eat a small chunk of the sale in order to allow credit card purchases. They do this because they know you're likely to buy more where credit cards are accepted. 

The IRS, on the other hand, is not interested in paying fees to accept credit cards as if it was a retail merchant. In fact, it can't. As stated on the IRS Web site: "The Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997 authorizes the Treasury to accept credit card payments for federal taxes but prohibits the IRS from paying a fee or consideration to credit card companies for processing these transactions."

So the IRS farms out the credit card transactions to third-party merchant processors. However, since the IRS won't pay the credit card companies that two or three percent that a retailer pays, guess who does? You -- in the form of the 2.49% fee.

Of course, that extra fee isn't the only reason to avoid putting tax payments on your credit cards. If you're not prepared to pay off your tax bill when it shows up on the next month's credit card statement, you'll be paying a whole lot more when the credit card interest kicks in. 

About IndexCreditCards.com
IndexCreditCards.com offers credit card news, research, and perhaps the most comprehensive index of credit cards available on the Internet today, with a master listing of over 700 credit cards as well as categorized lists based on interest rates, reward programs, business credit cards, student credit cards and credit cards for those with poor credit histories.

Information provided in this release may be reproduced free of charge, provided credit is given to http://www.IndexCreditCards.com.

CONTACT: Justin McHenry, 216.221.0312, j.mchenry@indexcreditcards.com

WEBSITE: http://www.IndexCreditCards.com

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