Wednesday, July 16, 2014

Day 867 - All's Well That Ends Well

Credit Score: 752


One whole year in our house today and I have updates for you!

First off, my credit score is back to "Excellent" according to Credit Karma:




It even says I've "done an excellent job" managing my debts. : ) And I'm now only 7 points below my original credit score from over two years ago.




I pulled my TransUnion report just this month to check how everything shook out. (I check all three evenly throughout the year - TransUnion was coincidentally July AND the report that Credit Karma reads.) It does show the foreclosure, lots of months of missed/late payments and now shows them as "derogatory marks," but also shows 100% on-time payment history. OK. Fine by me!

As for the two IRS arguments I mentioned in the last post, they're both FINALLY resolved, as of last week. How opportune. I didn't record when the first argument got resolved, but the IRS did finally agree with me last year sometime that I did not owe them the $500 for the final payment of the First Time Home Buyer's Credit for 2012 taxes. I continued to exchange letters (with varying levels of politeness) over the issue of amending my 2011 taxes and my extremely foolish pre-payment of half the credit. NEVER give the IRS more money than you have to, guys! I've no idea what possessed me. But after months of arguing with them, half a dozen letters from me to them, and more than a dozen letters from them to me including three denials and two different spellings of my last name, I finally got an interesting letter a few months ago.

They did not have "enough evidence" to determine either way. Not enough evidence? Really? Perhaps a result of them spelling my name two ways, or perhaps bad government record keeping, or just a consequence of being a large bureaucracy, but evidence is something I can fix! I printed up a copy of every single paper related to the First Time Home Buyer's Credit, my pre-payment of it, my original 2011 return, my 2011 amendment, a letter of what I again wanted, and little ink arrows and circles all over each page so they couldn't miss my point. (It had to be paper because you can't email these guys; you can't fax them; and when you do call, you just get customer service who only reads notes on their computers and can't make decisions.)

And it worked! Or they just got sick of me. Two weeks ago, I got a letter saying they agreed with me, and one week ago I got a check for the full return of my overpayment PLUS interest. Apparently I'm entitled to interest for the time the IRS had "my" money.

Other than buying the sad little condo in the first place, pre-paying the IRS $3000 was probably the biggest financial mistake I'd ever made. But now, after a year in my wonderful home and a refund check safely deposited, I've recovered from both and I sure hope I don't make any more.

I also hope that this blog has helped you avoid some financial mistakes of your own. Thank you so much for reading!


Sincerely,
Jane