IRS Grants One More Day For The Tax Deadline. The Reason? "System Issues"

Tax Day 2018 has been awful for a lot of folks, including those at the Internal Revenue Service.That's why the IRS is going to take another run at it today, April 18!

Late Tuesday, April 17, afternoon, the tax agency announced that it's going to give everyone an additional day to file and pay their taxes following what it's calling "system issues that surfaced early on the April 17 tax deadline."

The new Tax Day deadline for individuals and businesses who originally were to file on April 17 is now midnight on Wednesday, April 18.

The good news is that you don't have to do anything to receive this extra time. Just go through the filing and paying process again and keep your fingers crossed that we don't have, as the saying goes, déjà vu all over again.

Debacle: As taxpayers begin trying to meet their 2017 tax year obligations by the already extended deadline on April 17, many got the disconcerting message "This service is currently unavailable" on several key IRS.gov pages.

Among the options that were out of service for much of filing day were online tools where taxpayers had planned to check their outstanding balances, make direct payments of tax owed and set up a payment plan for tax bills they couldn't immediately cover.

The system outage, however, did not affect the ability of taxpayers were to electronically file their tax returns via their own software providers or tax professionals or Free File.

But as the filing time kept clicking away, you could sense some frustration on social media. Reports were posted frequently on Twitter, all still bearing the bad news that the services remained non-operational.

IRS exec addressing Congress: Acting IRS Commissioner David Kautter was appearing before the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee on Tax Day.

His testimony was the latest in the annual rite around each Tax Day where the agency's head reports to Capitol Hill on how the season has gone. Today, the news Kautter had to pass along to lawmakers was not good.

In his written testimony, Kautter had lauded what, until today, had been a smooth tax filing season. "I’m pleased to report that the 2018 filing season began on schedule on January 29 and has gone well in terms of tax return processing and the operation of our information technology systems," according to his prepared remarks.

"This is the busiest tax day of the year, and the IRS apologizes for the inconvenience this system issue caused for taxpayers," Kautter said in the statement announcing the extension. "The IRS appreciates everyone's patience during this period. The extra time will help taxpayers affected by this situation."

If, however, you just want your taxes over with today as you had planned, go ahead and file, electronically or on paper, says the agency. The IRS is happy to take it.

And if one more day won't help you with your taxes, then you can file for an extension today. That will give you six more months to finish your 2017 return.

Andy TurpenWolf Tax