Report: Trump Reportedly To Do Away With IRS Direct File Program For No Discernible Reason

from the not-in-to-it dept

For three years now, a select group of states have had a pilot program through the IRS for its Direct File program. For years and years, companies like Intuit had gotten away with all kinds of shady tactics designed to lure people in with the promise of free tax prep filing using online software, only to have aggressive or deceptive methods for turning them into paying customers when they never should have been. Intuit’s tactics were so bad that the FTC ruled the company can’t advertise its services the way it had been previously along with nine-figure paybacks to the customers it had deceived.

Direct File and these shady doings by the tax-prep industry are directly related. The IRS already has all the information needed to prepare returns for a huge percentage of Americans that file simple tax returns and are typically in lower income brackets. Nobody has heard of any significant negative reaction to the Direct File pilot program, which expanded this year to more states, other than by the tax preparation industry themselves. If there was a problem with the program, we would have heard about it by now. By all accounts, it has been entirely successful.

So, of course, the Trump administration is reportedly planning to do away with it.

“The program had been in limbo since the start of the Trump administration as Elon Musk and the Department of Government Efficiency have slashed their way through the federal government,” the AP article said. “Musk posted in February on his social media site, X, that he had ‘deleted’ 18F, a government agency that worked on technology projects such as Direct File.”

The AP wrote that “two people familiar with the decision to end Direct File said its future became clear when the IRS staff assigned to the program were told in mid-March to stop working on its development for the 2026 tax filing season.” The IRS will lose about a third of its staff this year through layoffs and employees accepting resignation offers, The New York Times reported yesterday.

The House GOP, which pushed for this move, couched its request as combatting a conflict of interest at the IRS. Keep in mind as you read this that the IRS already has the information that is populating its Direct File returns.

As you know, during the last tax year, the IRS rolled out its Direct File pilot program in 12 states, through which taxpayers file their taxes directly to the IRS instead of through a trusted accountant or reputable third-party preparation service. Under the guise of offering a convenient “free-to-file” alternative preparation service, the IRS asserts itself as the tax assessor, collector, preparer, and enforcer—all in one—when the program is used.

This is deeply concerning and a clear conflict of interest. The IRS has little incentive to ensure hardworking Americans do not pay more than they owe in taxes and may instead benefit from families and small businesses paying greater amounts than they are required by law. Furthermore, it is highly inappropriate for the IRS to serve as a tax preparer for taxpayers while also being the final enforcer of tax violations.

The letter goes on to complain that the Direct File program amounts to costing taxpayers roughly $800 per return based on the program’s budget. You should be able to see immediately how deeply silly this all is, but here are a couple of highlights.

Again, the government already has the information used in the Direct File returns. That’s how they’re created in the first place. The taxpayer then goes in and validates the information the IRS has, gets some input on the return itself, denotes either payment or refund information, and then they’re done. The IRS is already the enforcer of tax payments and would use the same information it has in any audit it was going to conduct. The letter from the GOP worries out loud about the IRS ramping up tax audits on individuals, which is very strange since the use of Direct File would eliminate any audits for those using it, since it’s all based on information the government already has. Whatever conflict of interest the GOP claims to have identified is entirely undiscoverable by this writer.

The letter goes on to complain about the national debt, which is very odd to include in the same letter that complains about there being too much enforcement around tax collection audits. In its complaint about the cost-per-return, it also entirely ignores the economy of scale the program would benefit from as it is rolled out to even more taxpayers. Were it to do so, the cost per return would almost certainly drop, and drop significantly, as much of what powers the service would already be in place as a sunk cost.

As for the trust the American people had in this program and the IRS after using it? Well, from the Treasury Departments own website

  • 90 percent of respondents ranked their overall experience as Excellent or Above Average.
  • 90 percent of survey respondents who used customer support rated that experience as Excellent or Above Average.
  • When asked what they particularly liked, respondents most commonly cited Direct File’s ease of use, trustworthiness, and that it was free.
  • 86 percent of respondents said that their experience with Direct File increased their trust in the IRS.

And so what Trump is reportedly planning to do is take an IRS program that people enjoyed using, and one which caused them to have more trust in the IRS and government, and one which is still in pilot and which would become more cost efficient with wider use… and eliminating it. Without, mind you, any stated good reason.

Somewhere, in some ivory tower, the Intuit board is certainly cheering.

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Companies: intuit

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Comments on “Report: Trump Reportedly To Do Away With IRS Direct File Program For No Discernible Reason”

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19 Comments
Phoenix84 (profile) says:

I used Direct File for the last two years.
It’s an excellent service. I rushed to get my taxes completed in Feb this year once I heard DOGE was eyeing the IRS. I knew this was a target, I wanted to get mine done while the service was still operational.
Next year I might just fill out the forms myself. For a simple W-2 filer, it’s not that hard, and I have many prior years worth of forms to look at for help.
Intuit and H&R Block aren’t getting another penny from me.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

Say the leftist guy that is not an proud patriotic hardworking American that only pay half the tax it owes.
(Source: all MAGA supporters)

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

Not until laws are passed saying you must use H&R block OR intuit and manual filing is now illegal. Cause open bribery is now the thing.

Anonymous Coward says:

I mean, if there’s one thing I really enjoy about April, it’s guessing the amount that’s been paid to the IRS on my behalf and hoping I’ve added all the numbers correctly.

Dave760 says:

Of course there’s a reason for this. Intuit donated a million dollars to Trump’s inauguration fund. Direct File might make them lose business and we can’t do that to a company that sucks up to Trump.

Just another way our government wants to funnel money from private citizens and into corporate coffers.

Next year we should try to get as many people as possible to file paper forms, and to analyze their deductions so that they owe a few dollars rather than getting a refund. And let’s get folks to wait until sometime close to the deadline to send in those forms with paper checks for payment. If the government doesn’t want to make things easy for us, then let’s not make it easy for them.

David says:

Re:

There won’t be enough personnel to handle the returns anyway, so making things more complicated for them than necessary will just cause your returns to take a year instead of a half.

Bloof (profile) says:

Because companies have lobbied for it and conservatives don’t want government programs to work as that’s really bad for their attempts to sell everything off to oligarchs. They smash things with sledgehammers then go ‘Look at this broken thing, the government can’t do anything right!’

drew (profile) says:

Another US thing...

In the UK and most European countries most people are on PAYE tax. It’s calculated by the employer and collected at source. It’s simple, works, and is cheaper than trying to audit millions of basic returns.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

It’s calculated by the employer and collected at source. It’s simple, works, and is cheaper than trying to audit millions of basic returns.

The U.S. does the same thing, but it doesn’t eliminate the need for returns or audits. The systems you mention don’t appear to cover non-employment income, for example, including things as simple as interest-bearing bank accounts. Plus, one could fradulently reduce withholding by claiming a bogus deduction.

And since the U.S. governments tend to over-collect taxes, people need to request refunds. That could theoretically be fixed, but might be politically difficult. A lot of Americans seem to believe “tax return” refers to the money being returned by the government, and would have financial difficulties if not for this annual “free government money”.

Call me Al says:

Re:

US employees have taxes withheld too but the US system has more quirks and deductions that PAYE would struggle to deal with.

The UK though also has a free, online tax return system for those where PAYE alone doesn’t cover everything and anyone with straightforward affairs can just file it themselves.

glenn says:

Twenty years ago the GOP set out to destroy the US Postal Service (formerly “The Post Office”). Now it seems that “Fuck Up the IRS” is the next step in the GOP’s plan to “Make Government Useless to the Typical American.” (So, aren’t you folks who didn’t sorry yet that you didn’t vote?)

31Bob (profile) says:

This is the stage where the abuser takes out his angst on his victim.

We didn’t all line up to fondle the testicles of King Mango, in 2020, and he took that personally. Now, he’s going to destroy as much as possible, to “teach us a lesson” with the help of Nazi Barbie, Plastic AG, Drunken SecDef, etc.

If these people are not lined up against a fucking wall and treated like all traitors should be treated, America is dead.

Anonymous Coward says:

It's all part of the same plan

Trump et.al. are systematically breaking the United States: defense, economy, health care, education, environment, transportation, everything that makes the country work as a coordinated ecosystem. And they’ve weakened it enough, they’ll use that as an excuse to accept “help” from Russia — do remember that Trump works for Putin, or more precisely, Putin owns Trump.

Other Jim (profile) says:

Re: RE: Same plan

I’d say it isn’t systematic, but the results are similar. They are more random, childish, and loud. A smarter person could have done all this damage in a way that would have been quieter, harder to notice, and harder to fight against.

freakanatcha (profile) says:

That darn Elmo!

While we’re wringing our hands about conflicts of interest, perhaps the repubs could have a look-see into Elmo deciding which govt contracts are cut, then his sugar daddy awarding him gazillion$ in govt contracts.

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