Personal Finance

IRS Clarifies Whether 2022 RI Inflation Relief Payments Are Taxable

The IRS said after a review Friday that it would not challenge the taxability of payments made in most states.

RHODE ISLAND — The Internal Revenue Service has given Rhode Islanders who received state-issued inflation relief payments the go-ahead to file their 2022 tax returns without worrying they’ll have to pay taxes on the income.

The agency had asked taxpayers in multiple states to hold off on filing if they received an inflation relief payment or refund from their state in 2022.

About 115,000 Rhode Islanders were eligible for this tax relief in 2022. Rhode Island's inflation relief targeted residents with children. The relief provided rebates of $250 per child for up to three children for Rhode Island residents making $100,000 a year or less and for joint filers making up to $200,00o.

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The IRS said after a review Friday that it would not challenge the taxability of payments made in California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Maine, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, Pennsylvania and Rhode Island.

Some Alaska taxpayers may also be able to avoid paying federal income taxes on certain payments.

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In those states, the agency said, state payments are not taxable because they were made “for the promotion of the general welfare or as a disaster relief payment.”

Some people who live in Georgia, Massachusetts, South Carolina and Virginia will have to report state payments as income. It depends on whether they claimed the standard deduction, or itemized deductions but did not receive a tax benefit, the agency said.

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