Michigan Stimulus Update: In eight days, qualifying households will begin receiving payments from the Michigan Department of Treasury totaling $550 on average. This is a result of the working families tax credit’s recent increase.
According to the state, money will be distributed to over 700,000 families via an enhanced tax credit that will be distributed over the course of five to six weeks on a rolling basis starting on February 13.
Residents will receive a payment equivalent to the discrepancy between the 30% value of the credit under the new legislation adopted last year and the 6% working families tax credit included in an eligible resident’s 2022 tax refunds.
$12,000 Stimulus Check Eligibility: Who Qualifies for the Payment?
Michigan Stimulus Update
According to the state, qualified residents will immediately get the cheque; further documentation is not required of taxpayers.
According to state authorities, the enhanced tax credit is expected to provide qualifying individuals with an average tax return of $3,150 for 2022. Refunds of taxes will be adjusted for the higher 30% rate of the Working Families Tax Credit starting in 2023.
Governor Gretchen Whitmer (D-MI) announced the enhanced tax credit in a statement in December 2023. “By quintupling the working families tax credit, we’re putting an average of $550 back in the pockets of 700,000 Michigan families ahead of schedule,” Whitmer stated.
Half of Michigan’s children will directly benefit from this, she continued, and parents may utilise the additional cash they get during tax season to pay bills, put food on the table, and purchase school supplies.