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IRS OK’d to delay deadlines after state disaster declarations

 

President Donald Trump signed into law July 24 recently passed legislation allowing the IRS to more quickly provide federal filing and payment deadline relief to taxpayers in areas struck by disaster.

 

The Filing Relief for Natural Disasters Act (H.R. 517) authorizes the agency to make this decision based on a qualified state- or territory-declared disaster, upon written request by the governor (or, in the case of Washington DC, the city’s mayor), whereas previously the IRS could postpone filing deadlines only for federal disaster declarations. Qualified disasters include natural catastrophes, fires, floods or explosions that cause damage “of sufficient severity and magnitude” to warrant a postponement request. State declarations are often made more quickly than those at the federal level, so this will enable the IRS to move more swiftly.

 

The bill also will increase from 60 days to 120 days the mandatory extension of federal tax deadlines for certain relief workers, individuals killed or injured in a disaster, and taxpayers whose principal residence, business or tax records are in a federally declared disaster area.

 
 

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