Unfortunately I can’t put the envelope into the mail until the morning, due to bad foresight on my part. (left checks at home, won’t be home till late)
I owe $16 bucks on my New York State taxes. Yep, but the whopper of a check won’t get sent till the morning. Should I even care? Will there be a fine? Will they even care?
Should I be worried about the storm troopers beating down my door?
You may incur a fine. Many post offices are open until midnight tonight for this exact reason. Call you local one and find out. As long as the envelope is postmarked TODAY, you’re OK. It could be 11:59:59 April 15, 2003 and you’re in the clear.
Most envelopes that arrive around the correct date are not even checked to see if they’re marked the 15th or the 16th. They probably won’t notice. Cecil addresses this fascinating subject here.
They won’t do anything. All this exactitude around matters that relate to the IRS is, I am driven to surmise, just a heritage we carry with us of our paranoid suspicion and fear of the jackboot in Washington, and is really ridiculous. Just pop it in the mailbox when you get to it–don’t wait for months, however.
Or, if you run into a problem finishing them, file an extension. There’s a simple form you can print and send in; you do have to estimate tax and try to pay some percentage of what you owe, but you can get 4 months (federal, state varies) without needing a justification. You should also be able to get by with the ‘about the right time’ bit (for anyone who’s pulling out their hair over missing paperwork right now) and avoid any serious problems if you’re a normal taxpayer. (If you haven’t had tax witheld for the year and put off filing, interest and penalites can be severe even if you do things properly).
That really saved me a lot of stress one year when I discoved that I had misplaced pretty much all of my tax records on 4/15. I panicked and worried about all kinds of dire consequences, then a friend mentioned filing an extension. I guessed a tax amount based on my pay stub, and my dire consequences ended up being a ~ $3 interest charge.