Millions of Americans may be owed a tax refund from COVID. How to get it. - USA Today

USA Today
March 13, 2026
2 views
1 min read

Quick Insights

The Bottom Line

Millions of Americans may be owed tax refunds related to COVID.

AI Summary

I cannot provide a summary because the content provided only contains a URL link and headline, not the actual article text. The source material lacks the specific details needed to write an accurate summary about COVID-related tax refunds.

Following this story?

Get notified when new coverage appears

Should this be getting more attention?

You Might Have Missed

Related stories from different sources and perspectives

These 2 bills would erase income taxes for millions of Americans
Politics

These 2 bills would erase income taxes for millions of Americans

Two Democratic lawmakers are proposing tax reforms that would eliminate federal income taxes for millions of Americans.

CBS NewsMar 13
Trump DOJ quietly restores felons' gun rights, AZ lawmaker included - USA Today
Government Transparency

Trump DOJ quietly restores felons' gun rights, AZ lawmaker included - USA Today

<a href="https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMirgFBVV95cUxPbks4OG1wSXpSTmlEaUV4QUZVd25aTmp5WFRDaFFKdEVfdlNzaGdMYnd4UTdxVEJQcTAzekFiX0lZMHJUZzR1emRURVNiMUJiRTh1ZmZsUTl6SE5TTTRzYVduZ2o0bU1QQVJIR3hZVU9iV3JuY3B2QUJndzNOOWs1MmpKT29TRFFwMVY2c1JGYTZaWWdib1NZVWdfSVFrOGdmT3ZqVW5XQUdzd0hROEE?oc=5" target="_blank">Trump DOJ quietly restores felons' gun rights, AZ lawmaker included</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;<font color="#6f6f6f">USA Today</font>

USA TodayMar 10
Big beautiful refund? 5 tax code changes that may put more money in your pocket
Finance

Big beautiful refund? 5 tax code changes that may put more money in your pocket

Those who stand to benefit from the changes in tax code include workers who earn tips, those receiving overtime pay, purchasers of US-made autos, and seniors.

The ConversationMar 9
Meet the Americans withholding their federal income tax to protest against Trump
Politics

Meet the Americans withholding their federal income tax to protest against Trump

<p>Some US taxpayers are refusing to pay the federal government amid ICE surges, the war with Iran and more</p><p>“I’m not paying my federal income taxes this year,” Rachel Cohen declared in a recent <a href="https://www.instagram.com/p/DVbmBC3jwld/?hl=en">Instagram video</a> that received more than 140,000 likes.</p><p>The 31-year-old lawyer in Chicago plans to put the $8,800 she owes the federal government in a high-yield savings account instead. She doesn’t want to fund <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/world/us-israel-war-on-iran">wars in Iran</a> and <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/world/gaza">Gaza</a> or <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/usimmigration">immigration</a> agents detaining her neighbors, she said.</p> <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/mar/11/trump-income-tax-protest">Continue reading...</a>

The Guardian US NewsMar 11
In a time of war with Iran, Americans unite in aggravation over sticker shock at the gas pump - AP News
Finance

In a time of war with Iran, Americans unite in aggravation over sticker shock at the gas pump - AP News

<a href="https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMilwFBVV95cUxNbXBXMl9MOWRHYXZVZFVTakFXSVB3bTJRNXFUd2hzWmV4LTAzcGw4TzUteHZzTVZiWEVDV0VKUko4aWhXOENXTnFxVlcwV0FCWDVlck96ZlNFcWdNXzhWYl92WVhneEQ0V1B6RUw4dlFfWVp2dmg1TXJYQlYtb3RKeFN0LXhUVTlDckl4LVJUQ0cwMkVhNGl3?oc=5" target="_blank">In a time of war with Iran, Americans unite in aggravation over sticker shock at the gas pump</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;<font color="#6f6f6f">AP News</font>

AP NewsMar 10
How some states are reviving a push to tax the rich
Finance

How some states are reviving a push to tax the rich

Advocates across the U.S. are hoping a growing unhappiness of wage and wealth inequalities that have increased coming out of the COVID-19 pandemic will help more states adopt policies involve the rich paying more in taxes.

PBS NewsHourMar 11
Read Next
Economy showed cracks pre-Iran attack, data shows
Finance

Economy showed cracks pre-Iran attack, data shows

<p>The economy was flashing stagflation signals — tepid growth and high inflation — even before the <a href="https://www.axios.com/world/iran" target="_blank">Iran</a> conflict added an oil shock to the mix.</p><p><strong>Why it matters:</strong> What happens when geopolitical turmoil clogs up the world's oil supply chain, against a backdrop of a U.S. economy losing momentum amid sticky inflation?</p><ul><li>We're about to find out.</li></ul><hr><p><strong>Driving the news:</strong> A revision to fourth-quarter GDP shows the economy grew at only a 0.7% annualized rate in the final months of 2025, half as much as the 1.4% growth rate originally estimated.</p><ul><li>Real final sales to private domestic purchasers, an underlying measure of growth that sums up consumer spending and private investment, rose at a 1.9% annual rate in the fourth quarter — a downward revision of 0.5 percentage point.</li></ul><p><strong>By the numbers: </strong>Also Friday morning, the Commerce Department r...

Continue reading

Did this story change how you see things?

Stories like this only matter when people see them. Help us get verified journalism in front of more eyes.

Share this story

Get the daily digest

Save for later

The Verity Ledger curates verified investigative journalism from trusted sources only.

See our sources