How to Get a Tax Filing Extension

How to Get a Tax Filing Extension


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You say your dog ate your W-2 form? Your printer conked out while printing your 1040? You broke down sobbing while trying to figure out what tax breaks you qualify for?


Don't worry. If you haven’t filed your tax return by midnight on April 15, you can file for an automatic extension — but you still must pay the taxes you owe (more on that below).


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Here's what tax procrastinators need to know.

How to get an extension


In a recent TurboTax survey, around 1 in 4 Americans said they hate doing taxes so much, they put it off until the last minute.


If you need more time to finish your tax return — say, to gather financial documents or to calculate certain tax breaks — it's easy to request an extension.


The Internal Revenue Service will automatically grant you an extension to file your tax return by Oct. 15 — all you need to do is submit a request. You can file for an extension


electronically via an IRS Free File partner or have your tax preparer do it for you.


Want to file for an extension by paper? Go right ahead. Simply print out Form 4868 and mail it to the address listed on the form. Just make sure it’s postmarked by April 15.

Video: How


to Get a Tax Filing Extension Special conditions


If you live outside the U.S. and Puerto Rico, you’re allowed an extra two months to file your return and pay any amount due without requesting an extension, bringing your filing deadline to


June 15. The same is true for those in military or naval service outside the U.S. and Puerto Rico.


If you lived in a federally declared disaster area in 2024, you get an automatic extension. Many people living in Southern California who were affected by the wildfires in January, for


example, are allowed to file their taxes as late as Oct. 15. The IRS keeps a running list of disaster areas granted an extension.


You can also get an extension by paying all or part of your estimated income tax due and indicating the payment is for an extension using Direct Pay, the Electronic Federal Tax Payment


System (EFTPS), or a credit or debit card. This way, you won’t have to file a separate extension form, and you'll receive a confirmation number for your records.


But there is a caveat — and it's a big one. Even if you get an extension, the IRS still wants you to pay your income tax by April 15. You’ll need to estimate the taxes you owe and pay at


least 90 percent of those taxes by the April 15 deadline to avoid penalties.

Can’t pay your taxes by April 15? Still file for a tax extension


Even if you can’t pay your taxes on time, you should still file for an extension. By doing so, you'll avoid penalties for filing late, which amount to 5 percent of the taxes due each month.


(The penalty maxes out at 25 percent.) You'll still get hit with a monthly 0.5 percent penalty (up to 25 percent), plus interest, until you pay your taxes, but the sting won't be as bad.


If you’re unable to pay taxes because of financial hardship, you can ask the IRS for an installment payment plan. In most cases, you can arrange one with the online payment application 


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Former AARP editor John Waggoner contributed to this article.


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