Democratic Reps. Bill Pascrell of New Jersey and Richard Neal of Massachusetts, the chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, said that the new deadline would be May 17. The IRS late Wednesday put out a statement confirming the date change.
There has been growing bipartisan support to extend the deadline. Lawmakers, led by Pascrell along with Democratic Rep. Jamie Raskin of Maryland and Republican Sen. Mike Crapo of Idaho, had urged the move, citing the pandemic.
“Almost a year later, we are still grappling with the massive economic, logistical and health challenges wrought by this devastating pandemic,” wrote Raskin and Pascrell in a letter sent to the IRS earlier this week.
In a separate statement, Crapo noted that major Covid stimulus bills passed by Congress over the past year have made several changes to the tax system.
“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,” Crapo said.
Delays are already piling up
The IRS has yet to provide guidance to the jobless who have already filed their 2020 tax returns. If the agency can’t come up with an automatic way to adjust returns reporting unemployment income, filers may have to send in amended returns, although the IRS is not recommending they do so at this time.
Backers of this provision are among those who urged the IRS to delay the filing deadline.
Still working through last year’s backlog
“They are already behind,” said Nina Olson, who previously served as the IRS’ national taxpayer advocate and is now executive director of the Center for Taxpayer Rights.
“They didn’t get through all of the 2020 work before they had to start the 2021 filing season. So this year is going to be a real challenge,” she added.
The IRS further extended the federal tax deadline to June 15 for people in Texas, Oklahoma and Louisiana who were hit hard by February storms.
Even though the IRS extended its deadline, that doesn’t mean individual states will. If they don’t, that means that filers in those states may need to file by April 15 anyway, unless they file for an automatic extension.
That’s because states often use one’s federal adjusted gross income or federal taxable income as the starting point to determine a filer’s income subject to state taxes.
At the moment, Maryland is the only state to have extended its filing deadline, to July 15. Other states have stuck with their original filing date, which is April 15 in most instances, according to the Federation of Tax Administrators.
Some states’ current dates differ. They are Hawaii, April 20; Delaware and Iowa, April 30; Virginia, May 3; and Louisiana, May 17.
This story has been updated with additional details Wednesday.