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By Rocky Mengle, Tax Editor
April 27, 2020
If you’re a disabled, blind, or elderly person who receives Supplemental Security Income (SSI) benefits, you’ll automatically get a $1,200 electronic stimulus payment if you didn’t file a 2018 or 2019 tax return. (If you did file a return for one of the last two years, the amount of your payment will be based on information contained on your most recent return). However, non-filers who receive SSI benefits, and have (or take care of) children 16 years old or younger, can get an extra $500-per-child added to their stimulus check—if they act before May 5.
SEE ALSO: Your 2020 Stimulus Check: How Much? When? And Other Questions Answered
To get the additional stimulus payment, use the IRS’s “Non-Filers: Enter Your Payment Info Here” tool to send the IRS information about your dependent children. (Go to irs.gov/coronavirus/non-filers-enter-payment-info-here to access the tool.) But you need to do this by May 5 in order to get the extra $500-per-child added to your stimulus check.
SEE ALSO: Social Security Recipients Will Start Getting Stimulus Checks This Week
If the IRS doesn’t have the dependent information in time, your stimulus payment will be for the standard $1,200 amount. However, you will be able to claim the additional $500-per-child amount when you file your 2020 tax return next year.
Non-filers who receive SSI benefits should receive their automatic payments by mid-May, according to the IRS.
SEE ALSO: Who’s Not Getting a Stimulus Check