UNDER PRESSURE, IRS MOVES TAX DEADLINE BACK 1 MONTH
Tax filings are due May 17 instead of April 15 after disruptive year.
The IRS will push back its filing and payment deadlines to May 15, according to a House Democratic aide briefed on the decision.
The agency had been under pressure for weeks from congressional Democrats to extend the filing and payment deadlines as it did last year as the coronavirus pandemic’s first wave swept the country. Senate Finance ranking member Michael D. Crapo, R-Idaho, on Wednesday joined the clamor of those seeking a delay.
“There is growing bipartisan support for the IRS to extend the filing deadline,” Crapo said in a statement Wednesday. “The various coronavirus relief programs created over the last year, including the bill signed into law just last week, have resulted in a large amount of extra paperwork for taxpayers this year and have required tax preparation firms to constantly update their systems.”
Democrats have been pushing for an extension for a month. A Feb. 18 request from House Ways and Means Chairman Richard E. Neal to push deadlines back had by March 8 become a demand from the Massachusetts Democrat “as the pandemic continues to impose titanic strain on the agency and on taxpayers.”
In that March 8 statement, Neal noted there had been large declines in processing returns and in customer service at the agency during the current filing season compared with last year’s.
Democrats also pointed out a new wrinkle affecting 2020 tax returns for those who received unemployment benefits last year. That’s a new provision in the $1.9 trillion coronavirus aid package signed into law last week making the first $10,200 in unemployment compensation tax-free.
Word of the filing deadline delay comes as IRS Commissioner Charles P. Rettig is scheduled to appear today before the House Ways and Means Oversight subcommittee to discuss the agency’s performance during this filing season.
The IRS has been praised for taking on extra duties during the pandemic; in particular, for getting out two rounds of direct payments amounting to about 307 million checks and $412 billion, according to an IRS press release.
As a result of this year’s late start, the IRS had processed 49 million tax returns as of the week ending March 5, down 25 percent from the 65 million returns processed as of the week ended March 6, 2020.
The average refund is about the same — $2,990 this year vs. $3,012 last year.