IRS to Test Free Tax Filing Service in 2024

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The IRS has announced that it will be testing a new service in 2024 that will allow taxpayers to electronically file their taxes directly with the agency at no cost. Direct File, as the new service is called, will be available to select taxpayers in as many as 13 states, including Arizona, California, Massachusetts, and New York, according to a press release that the IRS shared today describing the “innovative” project, said to be a mobile-friendly, interview-based service that will work as well on a mobile phone as it does on a laptop, tablet, or desktop PC. Turbotax, H&R Block, and other paid tax prep services are presumably not amused.

“This is a critical step forward for this innovative effort that will test the feasibility of providing taxpayers a new option to file their returns for free directly with the IRS,” said IRS Commissioner Danny Werfel. “In this limited pilot for 2024, we’ll be working closely with the states that have agreed to participate in an important test run of the state integration. This will help us gather important information about the future direction of the Direct File program.”

Arizona, California, Massachusetts and New York have decided to work with the IRS to integrate their state taxes into the Direct File pilot for filing season 2024. Taxpayers in nine other states without an income tax – Alaska, Florida, New Hampshire, Nevada, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Washington and Wyoming — may also be eligible to participate in the pilot. Washington has also chosen to join the integration effort for the state’s application of the Working Families Tax Credit. All states were invited to join the pilot, but not all states were in a position to join the pilot at this time.

People in those 13 states may be eligible to participate in the 2024 Direct File pilot, a new service that will provide taxpayers with the choice to electronically file their federal tax return directly with the IRS for free.

Taxpayer eligibility to participate in the pilot will be limited by the state in which the taxpayer resides and will be limited to taxpayers with certain types of income, credits and deductions – taxpayers with relatively simple returns. The IRS today announced it anticipates specific income types, such as wages on a Form W-2, and important tax credits, like the Earned Income Tax Credit and the Child Tax Credit, will be covered by the Direct File pilot.

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Tsing Mui
News poster at The FPS Review.

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