When Joy Hays decided to get ahead on her 2025 taxes, she and her husband Kenneth figured they owed around $3,360. But a small slip of the pen nearly cost them 10 times that amount.

As she wrote out the check, Hays mistakenly wrote out “thirty-three thousand + 60” in the written portion of the check. The discrepancy went unnoticed by the IRS, which tried to withdraw the full $33,060 from the couple’s Chase account. When it bounced, the agency tried again. It bounced again.

The Hayses were stunned, and then hit with a $661 penalty from the IRS for what was labeled a “failure to pay on time.” Despite multiple attempts to explain the error, Joy says she hasn’t been able to speak with a live agent. After spending more than six hours on hold over the course of a month, she still hasn’t received a resolution.

Trending Now

A $30,000 mistake

Despite reaching out to the IRS multiple times to try and resolve the mistake, Joy has found that getting through to an actual IRS customer support agent is not an easy task.

According to tax attorney Chris Housh, the couple’s experience is becoming increasingly common.

“A human has probably not looked at what the actual situation is,” Housh told ABC 11. He explains that the IRS payment and return processing units are separate. “So the check got separated from all the paperwork … nobody has double-checked the two items together.”

Due to staffing cuts, including the loss of roughly a quarter of the IRS’s workforce in recent years, more systems have become automated. But automation isn’t perfect, and it can’t always catch red flags a person would spot, especially when it comes to handwriting mismatches on checks.

Housh warns that these types of snafus may only increase as the agency faces growing workloads with fewer people to handle them.

Read more: Robert Kiyosaki warns of a ‘Greater Depression’ coming to the US — with millions of Americans going poor. But he says these 2 ‘easy-money’ assets will bring in ‘great wealth’. How to get in now

Common check-writing mistakes that could cost you

While IRS staffing issues play a role, the Hayses’ ordeal also shows how a simple check-writing error can create chaos. Here are some of the most common check-writing mistakes that could cause problems and how to avoid them:

For the Hayses, what started as a well-intentioned early tax payment has become a frustrating saga involving bounced checks, penalties and seemingly endless wait times.

While their case remains unresolved, it serves as a cautionary tale: Even a small mistake can have big consequences, especially when dealing with an overwhelmed and increasingly automated system. So the next time you reach for your checkbook, taking a few extra seconds to triple-check every detail can save you from major headaches in the long run.

What to read next

Stay in the know. Join 200,000+ readers and get the best of Moneywise sent straight to your inbox every week for free. Subscribe now.

This article provides information only and should not be construed as advice. It is provided without warranty of any kind.

Related Posts

PROMPERÚ presents the campaign “My Peru Story...
Lima, Peru, September 26th, 2025, NewsDirectThe second iteration of this...
Read more
Biotech Stocks Positioned to Transform Treatment With...
Naples, FL, September 26th, 2025, NewsDirectBiotech is entering a new...
Read more
Fonterra and BioLumic Partner to Bring Light-Activated...
Breakthrough collaboration targets improved pasture performance, resilience, and climate-smart benefits PALMERSTON...
Read more