Get Ready for the 2026 tax filing season (for tax year 2025).

The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) will begin accepting and processing income tax returns on Monday, Jan. 26, 2026, for the 2026 tax filing season. This is when taxpayers can start filing their 2025 federal tax returns. The IRS provided the following information, including simple steps to prepare for filing:

Tax Tip 2026-03: Next steps to Get Ready for 2026 tax filing season

Create or access their IRS Individual Online Account.
IRS Individual Online Accounts are available 24/7 to view account information, make payments, manage communication preferences, and protect tax information.

Gather and organize records.
Organized tax records make it easier to prepare complete and accurate tax returns. Some examples of tax records can include:

Review the new 2025 tax law changes
The One, Big, Beautiful Bill has brought many changes, including new deductions and credits that may reduce tax bills or increase refunds. Beginning in 2025, to be eligible to claim certain credits for other dependents, the taxpayer and their spouse, if filing jointly, must have valid Social Security numbers or Individual Taxpayer Identification Numbers issued on or before the due date of their returns (including extensions).

Understand reporting documents and requirements.
Income from part-time work, gig work, or the sale of goods and services is generally taxable. Form 1099-K, Payment Card and Third-Party Network Transactions, will be issued by payment card companies for any amount, and by payment apps or online marketplaces (also called third-party settlement organizations, or TPSOs) when payments to a payee exceed $20,000 and more than 200 transactions occur in a year.

Additionally, taxpayers who bought, sold, or received digital assets, including cryptocurrency, stablecoins, or NFTs, may be required to report those transactions. Some taxpayers may receive Form 1099-DA from brokers. Whether you receive a Form 1099-DA or not, all taxpayers must answer the digital asset question on Form 1040 and report any related income, gains, or losses.

Check the status of the individual tax identification number ITIN
An ITIN must be renewed only if it has expired and is required on a U.S. federal tax return. If a taxpayer’s ITIN wasn’t included on a U.S. federal tax return at least once for tax years 2022, 2023, and 2024, it would have expired on Dec. 31, 2025, and will need to be renewed.

Use direct deposit
The IRS is phasing out paper tax refund checks under the executive order Modernizing Payments To and From America’s Bank Accounts. The IRS encourages taxpayers without a bank account to open one so they can receive refunds by direct deposit.

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