When Is Tax Day 2026?

Illustration of a verified source calendar and document.

Direct answer

Tax Day 2026 for most calendar-year individual filers

Wednesday, April 15, 2026

IRS Publication 17 lists April 15, 2026 as the due date for filing a 2025 federal income tax return if you use the calendar year. As of June 5, 2026, this date is already past.

What the date covers

For most calendar-year individual taxpayers, April 15, 2026 was the filing due date for the 2025 federal income tax return. It was also the first 2026 estimated tax payment date listed on IRS Form 1040-ES.

If you requested an extension

The IRS extension page says taxpayers who need more time to file should request an extension by the April filing due date. IRS Publication 17 gives October 15, 2026 as the example extension date for a return originally due April 15, 2026. The IRS also states that an extension to file is not an extension to pay.

Common confusion points

  • State income tax deadlines can differ from federal dates.
  • Fiscal-year taxpayers do not use the same calendar-year filing date.
  • Special IRS relief can apply after certain disasters or for combat-zone situations.
  • People outside the United States or nonresident taxpayers may need to check separate IRS rules.

Related Punilog pages

Verification path

When checking this date again, use IRS Publication 17 for the calendar-year filing date, the IRS extension page for extension language, and IRS disaster relief pages if a location-specific postponement might apply. Punilog keeps those source roles separate so a reader can see what each official page actually supports.

Depth review

How to use this deadline safely

Tax Day is a calendar answer first. For most calendar-year individual filers, IRS Publication 17 supports April 15, 2026 as the filing date for 2025 Form 1040 and Form 1040-SR returns. That date is useful for planning, but it does not decide whether a specific reader must file, which forms apply, whether a payment is due, or whether a state deadline is different. Punilog keeps the page focused on the verified federal date and the official places to recheck it.

The safest way to use this page is to separate three questions. First, confirm the federal filing date from the IRS source named in the source box. Second, check the IRS extension page if you requested or plan to request an automatic extension. Third, look for any IRS relief notice if a disaster, official postponement, or other broad relief announcement could affect your location or filing situation. Those checks are separate because one source may confirm the ordinary date while another source changes the practical deadline for a narrower group.

What this page does not decide

Filing requirement

This page does not determine whether you personally have to file a federal return. That can depend on income, filing status, dependency status, and other facts outside a public calendar page.

Payment amount or penalty risk

The page does not calculate tax, estimate a balance due, decide whether a penalty applies, or tell you how much to pay. It only identifies the source-reviewed deadline path.

State and local tax dates

State income tax agencies can publish their own filing calendars, payment rules, extensions, and relief notices. A federal IRS date should not be treated as a state deadline.

Reader workflow before the deadline

  • Confirm the current IRS page. Use Publication 17 or the current IRS filing page for the regular federal individual filing date.
  • Keep extension and payment questions separate. The IRS extension source supports extra filing time, but the payment question still needs the IRS payment or extension instructions.
  • Check for official relief if location matters. Disaster relief and other IRS announcements can create date changes for affected taxpayers without changing the ordinary national date.
  • Use the correction path if the public source changes. If an IRS source changes after this page was last reviewed, send the source through the Corrections Policy so the page can be rechecked.

Sources and verification

Official sources

Last verified: June 5, 2026. Jurisdiction: United States federal. Cycle: 2025 return filing and 2026 estimated tax year.

This page is informational and is not tax, legal, financial, or professional advice. Verify deadlines and personal filing requirements with the IRS or a qualified professional. Corrections Policy