When the season opened and why it matters
The Internal Revenue Service said in an early January announcement that it would begin accepting 2025 individual income tax returns on Monday, Jan. 26, 2026. The agency then confirmed in a separate opening-day release that returns were being accepted and processed that day. That timing matters because many taxpayers prepare returns before the IRS opens its systems. Tax software may allow someone to finish and transmit a return earlier in January, but the IRS does not begin processing those submissions until the official start of filing season. For taxpayers expecting a refund, that start date is the true beginning of the countdown. The IRS said it expects about 164 million individual returns to be filed before the regular deadline. That makes the opening week one of the most important periods of the tax calendar not just for households, but also for payroll departments, accountants, software providers and banks that issue year-end forms.April 15 remains the main deadline for most filers
What an extension does, and what it does not do
The IRS says taxpayers who request an extension by the April deadline generally have until Oct. 15, 2026, to file their return. Its extension guidance and Free File extension page both make the same point: the extra time applies to filing, not to paying tax due. Americans living abroad get different treatment. The IRS says qualifying U.S. citizens and resident aliens outside the country usually receive an automatic two-month extension to June 15, 2026, without having to file Form 4868 right away. Even so, the agency notes that interest still applies to unpaid tax from the regular due date. Taxpayers abroad who need still more time can generally seek an additional extension to October. The IRS outlines those rules in its international filing guidance. For readers, the practical lesson is simple: an extension can protect against a late-filing penalty, but it is not a free pass to postpone the bill.E-file windows can matter late in the season
Most mainstream tax coverage stops at April 15, but electronic filing has its own deadlines behind the scenes. The IRS publishes a 2026 Form 1040 e-file schedule showing when live transmissions begin, when timely filed returns must be sent, and how long taxpayers have to retransmit rejected returns. For this filing season, the IRS says live electronic filing for individual returns began Jan. 26. It also lists April 15 as the last day for transmitting timely filed returns and timely filed extension requests, with a short grace period after that for retransmitting rejected filings. That may sound technical, but it has real-world consequences. Someone who waits until the last possible evening to e-file and gets a rejection because of a typo, a mismatch in a Social Security number, or incorrect prior-year information can quickly find that the calendar has become far less forgiving.Refund timing and IRS tools to watch
For early filers, refund timing is usually the next question after the return is submitted. The IRS says it issues most refunds in fewer than 21 days, though some returns need additional review. Taxpayers claiming the Earned Income Tax Credit or Additional Child Tax Credit often wait longer because of statutory fraud checks, and the agency said those refunds would generally not be available before early March. The IRS points taxpayers to Where’s My Refund?, the IRS2Go app and the Individual Online Account portal for updates. The agency has also pushed online tools more aggressively this season. On its main website, the IRS directs individuals to options for filing, payment plans, account transcripts and refund tracking, while business users can access the Business Tax Account platform for certain tax records, payments and notices. For taxpayers, the message is less about racing to file on opening day and more about knowing which deadlines actually affect them. Jan. 26 is the start. April 15 is the deadline most people cannot afford to miss. And for anyone who expects complications, the smartest move is usually to act before the calendar gets tight.
Paul Anderson is a finance writer and editor at The Financial Wire. He has spent seven years writing about investment strategies and the global economy for digital publications across the US and UK. His work focuses on making sense of economic policy, cost-of-living issues, and the stories that affect everyday Americans.


