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IRS Expects Minimal Delays to Tax Refunds After Server Crash The glitch has blocked providers from sending the returns to government since yesterday

By Steve Dent

entrepreneur daily

This story originally appeared on Engadget

Mark Van Scyoc | Shutterstock.com

If you're desperate to get tax refund cash via the IRS's e-file system, a server crash may delay it, though not by much. The agency said that it's "still assessing the scope of the outage," but thinks any disruptions will be minimual, adding, "we continue to expect that 9 out of 10 taxpayers will receive their refunds within 21 days." This year, the IRS launched a new version of the Free File system aimed at consumers that earned $62,000 or less, a jump of $2,000 over last year.

The system has new security safeguards that the IRS implemented in conjunction with its 13 tax software providers. That follows an embarrassing breach that resulted in the theft of data from 100,000 taxpayers, which the IRS blamed on Russians hackers.

Customers can still file returns, since they're first sent to companies like Intuit, H&R Block and other members of the Free File alliance via free software. However, the glitch has blocked providers from sending the returns to government since yesterday. Filing has been open since January 19th, so if you've already submitted your return, the crash shouldn't affect you.

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