(1) A refund application must be filed with the department within the time specified by s. 215.26.
(2) A refund application shall not be processed until it is determined complete. A refund application is complete if it is filed on a permitted form and contains:
(a) The taxpayer’s name, address, identifying number, and signature.
(b) Sufficient information, whether on the application or attachments, to permit mathematical verification of the amount of the refund.
(c) The amount claimed.
(d) The specific grounds upon which the refund is claimed.
(e) The taxable years or periods involved.
(3) Within 30 days after receipt of the refund application, the department shall examine the application and notify the applicant of any apparent errors or omissions and request any additional information the department is permitted by law to require. An application shall be considered complete upon receipt of all requested information and correction of any error or omission for which the applicant was timely notified, or when the time for such notification has expired, whichever is later.
(4) Interest shall not commence until 90 days after a complete refund application has been filed and the amount of overpayment has not been refunded to the taxpayer or applied as a credit to the taxpayer’s account. However, if there is a prohibition against refunding a tax overpayment before the first day of the state fiscal year, interest on the tax overpayment shall not commence until August 1 of the year the tax was due. If the department and the taxpayer mutually agree that an audit or verification is necessary in order to determine the taxpayer’s entitlement to the refund, interest shall not commence until the audit or verification of the claim is final.
(5) If a tax is adjudicated unconstitutional and refunds are ordered by the court, interest shall not commence on complete applications until 90 days after the adjudication becomes final and unappealable or 90 days after a complete application has been filed, whichever is later.
(6) Interest shall be paid until a date determined by the department which shall be no more than 7 days prior to the date of the issuance of the refund warrant by the Chief Financial Officer.
(7) If the department intends to pay a refund claim prior to completion of an audit, the department may condition its payment of the refund claim upon the person filing a cash bond or surety bond in the amount of the refund claimed or making such other security arrangements satisfactory to protect the state’s interests. The department may impose this condition only when it has reasonable cause to believe that it could not recover the amount of any refund paid in error from the person claiming the refund. The cash or surety bond shall be endorsed by a surety company authorized to do business in this state and shall be conditioned upon payment in full of the amount of any refund paid in error for any reason. The department shall provide a written notice of its determination that a cash or surety bond is required as a condition of payment prior to audit, in which event interest shall not commence until the person filing the claim satisfies this requirement. Such bond shall remain in place while the department retains a right pursuant to s. 95.091(3) to audit the refund claim. Upon completion of an audit of the claim, the department shall agree to a reduction in the bond amount equal to the portion of the refund claim approved by the department.
(8) Nothing in this section is intended to alter the department’s right to audit or verify refund claims either before or after they are paid.
(9) In the event that the department pays a refund claim that is later determined to have been paid in error, the person to whom the refund was paid shall be assessed interest on the amount of the erroneous refund payment, commencing with the date of the erroneous payment and continuing until the erroneous payment amount is repaid to the department. If the department determines that the erroneous refund claim was not due to reasonable cause, there shall be added a penalty in the amount of 10 percent of the erroneously refunded tax. If the department determines that the erroneous refund claim was due to fraud, there shall be added a penalty in the amount of 100 percent of the erroneously refunded tax.
(10) The provisions of this section shall apply with regard to refund claims filed on or after January 1, 2000, and beginning July 1, 2000, shall apply with regard to any then-pending refund claims that were filed with the department prior to January 1, 2000.
(11) The department is authorized to adopt such rules, not inconsistent with the provisions of this section, as are necessary for the implementation of this section including, but not limited to, rules establishing the information necessary for a complete refund application, the procedures for denying an incomplete application, and the standards and guidelines to be applied in determining when to require a bond under the provisions of subsection (7).
(12) The rate of interest shall be the adjusted rate established pursuant to s. 213.235, except that the annual rate of interest shall never be greater than 11 percent. This annual rate of interest shall be applied to all refunds of taxes administered by the department except for corporate income taxes governed by ss. 220.721 and 220.723.
History.—s. 9, ch. 99-239; s. 35, ch. 2002-218; s. 191, ch. 2003-261; s. 21, ch. 2011-76.
Structure Florida Statutes
Title XIV - Taxation and Finance
Chapter 213 - State Revenue Laws: General Provisions
213.018 - Taxpayer Problem Resolution Program; Taxpayer Assistance Orders.
213.025 - Audits, Inspections, and Interviews.
213.05 - Department of Revenue; Control and Administration of Revenue Laws.
213.051 - Service of Subpoenas.
213.053 - Confidentiality and Information Sharing.
213.0532 - Information-Sharing Agreements With Financial Institutions.
213.0535 - Registration Information Sharing and Exchange Program.
213.0537 - Electronic Notification With Affirmative Consent.
213.055 - Declared Emergency; Waiver or Suspension of Specified Revenue Laws and Other Requirements.
213.06 - Rules of Department; Circumstances Requiring Emergency Rules.
213.071 - Certification Under Seal of Certain Records by Executive Director.
213.10 - Deposit of Tax Moneys Collected.
213.13 - Electronic Remittance and Distribution of Funds Collected by Clerks of the Court.
213.131 - Clerks of the Court Trust Fund Within the Department of Revenue.
213.21 - Informal Conferences; Compromises.
213.22 - Technical Assistance Advisements.
213.2201 - Publications by the Department.
213.23 - Consent Agreements Extending the Period Subject to Assessment or Available for Refund.
213.235 - Determination of Interest on Deficiencies.
213.24 - Accrual of Penalties and Interest on Deficiencies; Deficiency Billing Costs.
213.25 - Refunds; Credits; Right of Setoff.
213.256 - Simplified Sales and Use Tax Administration Act.
213.26 - Contracts With County Tax Collectors.
213.27 - Contracts With Debt Collection Agencies and Certain Vendors.
213.28 - Contracts With Private Auditors.
213.29 - Failure to Collect and Pay Over Tax or Attempt to Evade or Defeat Tax.
213.295 - Automated Sales Suppression Devices.
213.30 - Compensation for Information Relating to a Violation of the Tax Laws.
213.345 - Tolling of Periods During an Audit.
213.37 - Authority to Require Sworn Statements.
213.69 - Authority to Issue Warrants.
213.692 - Integrated Enforcement Authority.
213.70 - Taxpayers’ Escrow Requirement.
213.73 - Manner and Conditions of Sale of Property Subject of a Levy by the Department of Revenue.
213.731 - Collection Action; Notice; Taxpayer’s Protest and Review Rights.
213.732 - Jeopardy Findings and Assessments.
213.733 - Satisfaction of Warrant.
213.74 - Certificate of Sale; Deed of Real Property; Legal Effect.
213.75 - Application of Payments.
213.755 - Filing of Returns and Payment of Taxes by Electronic Means.
213.756 - Funds Collected Are State Tax Funds.
213.757 - Willful Failure to Pay Over Funds or Destruction of Records by Agent.