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February 1, 2024
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If my 2023 witholdings were under "single" when they should have been 'married/jointly'; prior to filing I want to know if I can make those changes?

  • February 1, 2024
  • 2 replies
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Best answer by Opus 17

Two separate things.

 

1. Your W-4 is used to estimate your correct withholding.  It has no bearing on how you file your return.  You file your tax return with your correct facts no matter what you put on the W-4.  If you had too much tax withheld, you will get that back as a refund, and if you had too little tax withheld, you will owe a payment.  Changing your W-4 will not get you any money back from last year, you have to file your tax return.

 

2. Going forward, you can change your W-4 as often as you like, so your withholding is accurate for your changing tax situations.  The IRS withholding estimator may be useful, especially if you have more than one job, a working spouse, or lots of kids or deductions. 

2 replies

JohnB5677
February 1, 2024

Yes, you can make these changes with your employer on a W-4 Form.  

This will not have any impact on your 2023 withholdings, but it may for 2024.

If I've misunderstood your question, and this does not completely answer it,

Please contact us again and provide some additional details.

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Opus 17Answer
Employee
February 1, 2024

Two separate things.

 

1. Your W-4 is used to estimate your correct withholding.  It has no bearing on how you file your return.  You file your tax return with your correct facts no matter what you put on the W-4.  If you had too much tax withheld, you will get that back as a refund, and if you had too little tax withheld, you will owe a payment.  Changing your W-4 will not get you any money back from last year, you have to file your tax return.

 

2. Going forward, you can change your W-4 as often as you like, so your withholding is accurate for your changing tax situations.  The IRS withholding estimator may be useful, especially if you have more than one job, a working spouse, or lots of kids or deductions.