Officials from the Biden administration said Thursday that the IRS’s online tax-filing service will be back for next year’s tax season and will always be available to people who want to do their own taxes for free. This makes the government-run service an even better option than TurboTax and H&R Block.
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said Thursday that the online platform’s pilot run in 2024 went well enough and was well-liked by users that it will be brought back in 2025 and beyond.
This year, 12 states tried out a beta version of the free online tax-prep service. Now, all 50 states and Washington, D.C. are welcome to join the Direct File programme. Yellen also said that the IRS will add more types of tax situations that the platform can handle.
“Direct File will get better over the next few years so that it can handle all of the most common tax situations.” “I’m proud of how well Direct File did in its first year, and I’m excited to keep working to save time and money for American taxpayers,” she said.
It was made clear by Werfel that the programme is only one option for people who need to do their taxes. Like Yellen, he focused on how money affects people. Werfel said, “Adding Direct File to the list of filing options is a clear step towards the IRS’s goal of making taxes as easy as possible for Americans, which includes saving them time and money.”
When Direct File went live in March, it processed almost 141,000 tax returns, saving people about $5.6 million in tax preparation fees. The IRS says that people paid about $150 on average to have their taxes done last year.
The IRS paid $24.6 million to build and run the system, and Werfel said the U.S. Digital Service paid just over $7 million to build the site. He said that the IRS put in a “placeholder” budget request for $75 million for the programme before the decision was made.
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It’s true that Direct File isn’t the only free tax service out there. The IRS also has a programme called “Free File,” which is a partnership with some tax software companies. This programme is only for people who make less than a certain amount of money. Since the IRS announced last week that the Free File programme would last until 2029, it will now do so. Werefel said Thursday that the IRS is “committed” to the Free File programme.
However, a more advanced Direct File platform would make the IRS more involved in tax preparation for the general public, which is something that tax software companies don’t like the idea of.
H&R Block (HRB, -1.72%) and Intuit (INTU, -5.90%) have said in the past that the IRS should stay out of tax preparation because it’s not necessary and wasteful for them to do so.
At today’s meeting, Treasury and the IRS decided to make Direct File even bigger. However, Intuit spokeswoman Tania Mercado said that this programme is still a problem that needs to be solved and that every American can already file their taxes for free, at no cost to the government or the taxpayers.
They are better off when they have “an advocate” like Intuit making sure they pay only what they owe and get all the money they are owed in refunds, she said.
She said that the number of free returns TurboTax took care of was much higher than the number of Direct File users. “TurboTax has filed millions of tax returns for free every year and more than 124 million free tax returns in the last ten years.”
Even though both companies offer free tax filing options, federal regulators say they trick people into paying to file their taxes. The companies say the claims are false.
This year alone, almost 3.5 million people used H&R Block’s free service, the company said. “We still don’t think this programme is good for Americans,” the company said. “Neither the people who use it nor the people who pay for it with their tax dollars.”
Direct File could handle fairly simple income tax returns when it first came out this year in 12 states. For example, it could handle a return for someone with W-2 wage income, but not investment income or gig-job earnings.
Dan Werfel, the commissioner of the IRS, said it’s too early to say what the extra features will be or how many states will sign up next year. When a user files their federal income tax return, the Direct File programme takes them to a different website to finish their state return.
What will happen after the election in November?
A lot of Democrats in Congress want the Direct File option to stay in one place.
The White House made a big deal out of the news. National Economic Advisor Lael Brainard said, “President Biden is focused on lowering costs and making the tax system fairer for Americans. One way he plans to do this is by making it free and easy to file your taxes, with no expensive and unnecessary filing fees and no upselling.”
But Republicans in Congress and right-leaning critics wonder if the IRS should be involved in tax preparation. They think it’s an abuse of power by the taxman.
The top Republican in the Senate Finance Committee, Sen. Mike Crapo of Idaho, said, “The Direct File programme has serious privacy, security, and financial consequences for taxpayers.” “Having the IRS do all three of these jobs—prepare taxes, collect taxes, and enforce taxes—creates big conflicts of interest, and the so-called “free” programme is thought to cost billions of dollars to build and run.”
He said that the smarter thing to do would be to focus on customer service and bring attention to the free tax preparation services that are already out there.
Ways and Means Chairman Jason Smith, a Republican from Missouri, said in March, “This pilot programme is just a way to give the IRS more power that no one asked for, especially since Americans already have a lot of free ways to file their taxes.”
Analysts say that a Republican victory in the next six months could make people question the future of the Direct File programme and other efforts to strengthen the IRS.
Werfel said that Thursday’s news was a win for everyone, regardless of politics.
He said, “I really believe that the IRS has a vision for the future of tax administration that is not partisan.” “Also, we believe that taxpayers should have choices about how they file, and that the more choices there are, the better for all Americans, no matter what party they belong to.”