10 last-minute tips to help you file your tax return

April 17, 2023
Woman looking at big pink alarm clock-2_pexels-koolshooters-7346141

Tax filing time is ticking away. Make the most of these dwindling hours leading to the Tax Day deadline. (Photo by KoolShooters)

If you've put off your tax filing until now, the day before your return is due, don't panic. You've still got time — but not much — to do the tax job right.

These 10 last-minute filing tips can help you get the job done by tomorrow's April 18 deadline.

1. Determine whether you need to file.
Most Americans who earn money, be it through full-time jobs or self-employment or investment income, do have to fill out a tax return. But some don't. Make sure before you put yourself through the hassle.

Whether you must file depends on your income, filing status, age and whether you can be claimed as a dependent on someone else's return. If you're not sure whether you need to send the Internal Revenue Service a tax return, check out the tax agency's online Do I Need to File a Tax Return? online tool.

You also can find more about filing requirements in IRS Publication 17, as well as in my post on who does, and doesn't, have to file a tax return, and my other post on why you might want to file a tax return even if you don't have to.

2. Gather your tax documents.
OK, you have to or decided you must or should file. To fill out your taxes properly you need all your tax statements. This checklist and filing questions and answers also helps, but here are some highlights that bear repeating.

Start with earnings data. It is, after all, an income tax.

You'll need W-2s from employers and assorted 1099 forms from any side-hustles or regular self-employment, as well as investment earning statements. Even if you didn't get an official notification of earnings, you're still responsible for reporting all your income and paying the appropriate amount of tax.

If you're self-employed, you'll also need supporting receipts for all the expenses you can claim. Even if you're not a full-time entrepreneur, this also applies to earnings from side hustles and gig work you took on to supplement your wages.

For deductions and credits, you'll want to make sure you have the documentation for tax claims such as mortgage interest and tuition payments, as well as confirmation of your charitable contributions or medical expenses.

And if you made quarterly estimated tax payments, be sure you have a record of how much you paid and when.

3. Decide which deduction method to use.
Your tax document will help you decide whether this tax year you'll claim the standard deduction or itemize your expenses. You'll want to use the method that gives you the best tax results.

Most taxpayers claim the standard amount, especially since 2017's tax reform law greatly increased those amounts. For 2022 returns, the standard deduction is —

  • $12,950 for individual filers, including those who are married and file separately,
  • $19,400 if you're a head of household taxpayer, and
  • $25,900 if you and your spouse file a joint tax return.

If, however, you have enough expenses to exceed your standard deduction amount, such as a lot of medical costs, then by all means itemize them on Schedule A.

4. Don't overlook tax breaks.
Regardless of which deduction amount you choose, make sure you don't shortchange yourself. Every year too many taxpayers overlook tax breaks. Don't be one of them. Check out these tax breaks that many filers overlook, as well as these 24 tax deductions available to qualifying filers regardless of which deduction method they use.

5. Don't make common mistakes.
Similarly, lots of taxpayers end up owing more because of errors on their returns. Don't join this unnecessarily large club. Double check your 1040 to ensure you don't make any of these 10 common tax filing mistakes.

6. Contribute to an IRA or HSA.
Putting money into a tax-advantaged savings account may potentially lower your tax liability. Even better, money contributed now pays off down the road.

IRA nest egg retirement

You have until the April filing deadline to contribute to an individual retirement account, better known as an IRA, either Roth or traditional, for the prior tax year. The 2022 maximum contribution amount for either type of IRA is $6,000. You can add another $1,000 if you're 50 or older. If your traditional IRA contribution is deductible, designating that it applies to the 2022 tax year by April 18 could reduce your tax bill.

The same deadline applies to a Health Savings Account, or HSA. This medical account can be opened fi you have a high deductible health plan, or HDHP. The HSA funds provide a tax-saving way to pay for that medical insurance's larger out-of-pocket costs. For the 2022 tax year, you can contribute up to $3,650 to your HSA if you have individual HDHP coverage. For families with an HDHP, the amount is $7,300.

7. File electronically.
The IRS will process your tax return more quickly if you e-file. That means if you're getting a refund, you'll see that money sooner. You'll get it even more quickly if you also tell the IRS to directly deposit your refund into a financial account.

You can file electronically in one of three ways. First, directly through the IRS with Free File or fillable forms. Second, by using tax preparation software. Third, by hiring a tax preparer who's an IRS-authorized e-filer.

8. Pay what you owe.
While the IRS wants your tax return, it also definitely wants any tax you owe. Even if you can't pay your full amount due with your 1040, pay as much as you can.

Again, the IRS recommends that you use one of its various payment options, most of which can be completed electronically.

And if your tax bill is just too large to handle in one lump sum, the IRS offers various options if you can't pay your tax bill in full.

9. File your state taxes.
Residents of 42 states and the District of Columbia also face income taxes in those jurisdictions. Most of those state returns follow the federal filing calendar, meaning they are also due on April 18.

The five states that have filing deadlines that don't line up with Uncle Sam's April 18 Tax Day are —

  • Hawai'i, which wants state flings by April 20;
  • Delaware and Iowa, each with a tax deadline of April 30;
  • Virginia, with a May 1 tax due date; and
  • Louisiana, which has a May 15 filing deadline.

In most cases you'll need to finish your federal return first, since states tend to use that information as a starting point for their tax return computations.

The good news for taxpayers who must file state returns, is that most states also offer free online tax filing options.

And who is lucky enough not to deal with double tax duty? In addition to me and my fellow Texans, you won't face any state income tax at all if you live in Alaska, Florida, Nevada, South Dakota, Tennessee, Washington, or Wyoming.

10. Get an extension.
OK, reality has arrived. You just can't finish your 1040 and all the accompanying forms and schedules by tomorrow, April 18.

No worries. Get six more months to do so by filing Form 4868, either electronically or by mailing the paper form so that it's postmarked April 18. This extension will give you until Oct. 16 to finish filling out and submitting your return.

Remember, though, as tip #8 notes you still need to pay your tax bill or as much as you can when you file your extension.

You can find more tax filing help at IRS.gov and, of course, in the ol' tax blog's monthly collections of featured tax tips.

 

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Hello Tax Season 2026

Happy New Tax Year! Are you ready to file your 2025 tax return? I know, too early to ask. But Tax Day 2026 will be here before we realize it. The Internal Revenue Service deadline to file and pay any tax we owe is the regular April 15 date this year. It’s also Tax Day for most of the states that collect income taxes from their residents, which is most of the states! If that seems too far away right now, don’t worry. As is the case every tax season, the ol’ blog’s tips and other tax reminders should help all of us meet our state and federal responsibilities. Procrastinators also will want to keep an eye on the countdown clock just below. It tracks how much time we have until April’s Tax Day, just in case we put off our annual tax task until the absolutely final hours and decide we need to instead get an extension request into the IRS by that date. (Note: I’m in the Central Time Zone, so adjust accordingly for where you live.)

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