The Internal Revenue Service told state officials on Monday, November 3, 2025, that its free online tax tool, IRS Direct File, will not return for the Filing Season 2026, ending a short‑lived experiment that had grown to 25 participating states and nearly 300,000 accepted returns last season. In emails sent to the comptrollers of those states, the agency wrote, “IRS Direct File will not be available in Filing Season 2026. No launch date has been set for the future,” confirming that millions of taxpayers in the United States 🇺🇸 will not have access to the government‑run e‑filing option next year.
Immediate public notice and guidance

The IRS updated its public page with a blunt message—“Direct File is closed. More information will be available at a later date”—and pointed users to the agency’s general filing portal, which remains the main resource for current options.
Taxpayers seeking official guidance can start at the IRS’s “File your tax return” page, which outlines free and paid avenues now that Direct File is off the table for next season:
– Refer to the IRS’s official page: File your tax return
The decision leaves a gap for simple filers who had come to depend on the tool’s no‑cost path.
March 2023
Pilot launch of IRS Direct File
IRS Direct File was piloted.
Impact: Start of the government-run, no-cost e-filing experiment.
2024
Expansion to 12 states (2024 season)
Direct File expanded to 12 states for the 2024 filing season.
Impact: Increased geographic availability and usage.
2024
Usage: 140,803 accepted returns
Accepted returns: 140,803
The program accepted 140,803 returns in 2024.
Impact: Early adoption metric showing program traction.
2025 (filing season)
Expansion to 25 states (2025 season)
Direct File reached 25 participating states for the 2025 filing season.
Impact: Broader state participation ahead of the final season.
2025
Usage and satisfaction: 296,531 accepted returns; NPS rose
Accepted returns: 296,531
Direct File accepted 296,531 returns in 2025 and Net Promoter Score rose from the +70s to the +80s.
Impact: Strong usage growth and high user satisfaction reported.
November 3, 2025
IRS announces Direct File will not return for Filing Season 2026
IRS informed state officials that Direct File will not be available for Filing Season 2026 and that no future launch date has been set.
Impact: Shutdown leaves former users to seek alternative filing options and ends the pilot/experiment for the near term.
Growth, usage, and user satisfaction
The program’s shutdown follows two years of measured growth and strong user reviews.
- Launch and expansion
- Piloted in March 2023
- Expanded to 12 states for 2024
- Reached 25 states for the 2025 filing season
- Usage
- 2024: 140,803 accepted returns
- 2025: 296,531 accepted returns
- Customer satisfaction
- Net Promoter Score rose from the +70s to the +80s in its second year — higher than Apple’s often‑cited +72 benchmark.
Political and industry opposition
Despite growth and high satisfaction, resistance from Republican lawmakers and commercial tax software companies persisted.
- Critics’ arguments:
- The government was duplicating services already available through private platforms (including Free File).
- The program was an improper use of taxpayer funds.
- Treasury Secretary (acting IRS Commissioner) Scott Bessent said earlier this year:
“The private sector can do a better job,” and that Direct File “wasn’t used very much,” a point that contrasts with the reported usage growth and satisfaction scores.
Supporters’ perspective
Supporters argued the tool served a practical need:
- For simple filers (W‑2 income, limited tax situations), Direct File offered:
- A clean, ad‑free experience
- No upsell pressure, promo codes, paid add‑ons, or data‑sharing tradeoffs
- A faster, less stressful filing path
- Broader context:
- The average filer still spends more than nine hours and over $160 each year to file a return.
- Advocates pointed to the NPS and season‑over‑season usage jump as evidence the service was gaining an audience.
Decision and messaging to states
The political calculus shifted as the program’s second year closed. The IRS’s email to state comptrollers made the decision plain: no Direct File in 2026 and “no launch date has been set for the future.” That phrasing echoed earlier statements from Trump administration figures and foreshadowing by former IRS Commissioner Billy Long, who said over the summer that the service was “gone.”
The IRS thanked states for “collaboration,” acknowledging operational wins even as it closed the door on Filing Season 2026 participation.
Practical impact for taxpayers
For 2026, former Direct File users must choose among:
- Returning to commercial software
- Using the Free File program (if they meet income and eligibility limits)
- Filing on paper
Consequences and considerations:
– Residents of large participating states (California, New York, Texas, Florida, etc.) lose a government‑run e‑filing channel many credited with lower stress and fewer surprises.
– Paper filing can mean longer processing times and delayed refunds.
– Commercial software continues to dominate but brings price, data privacy, and add‑on fee concerns.
Quote from a 2025 Direct File user in California:
“I don’t want a sales pitch when I file my taxes. … Simple, clear, and free, like it should be.”
Reactions from advocates, lawmakers, and industry
- Consumer advocates and some Democratic lawmakers warn the shutdown reduces choice and could push low‑income filers into confusing interfaces with hidden costs.
- Analysis by VisaVerge.com suggests the termination hands more market power back to commercial providers that historically lobbied against a government alternative.
- Critics of Free File note:
- Complicated eligibility rules
- Historically low uptake relative to the number eligible
Industry response:
– Private tax‑prep firms say they already provide free options and claim competition improves user experience.
– The IRS’s decision aligns with the view that the private sector should lead, summed by Bessent: “the private sector can do a better job.”
Timing and operational effects
The timing—months before software companies finalize their 2026 offerings—reduces uncertainty for vendors and state revenue teams that had to coordinate data flows with the federal tool. Still, some state officials expressed private disappointment about losing a conduit that reduced mismatches and follow‑up calls for basic returns.
Where this leaves filing options
- The public‑private Free File program remains available for eligible filers, though its usage has been low compared to eligibility.
- Commercial software remains the default for many, offering convenience and speed at potential cost.
- Paper filing remains an option but is generally slower.
Final takeaway and next steps
The IRS’s message is unambiguous: Direct File is closed with no return date set. States that participated in the pilot have been told the same.
“A free, public option was there, people liked it, and now it’s gone.”
For official guidance on current filing options, including pathways that remain free for eligible households, visit the IRS: File your tax return.
With IRS Direct File off the calendar for Filing Season 2026, the coming months will test whether private tools can meet demand at a price and clarity level that satisfies the millions who file each year — and whether the public will accept that the government’s own tool has been set aside with no return date in sight.
This Article in a Nutshell
The IRS informed state officials on November 3, 2025 that IRS Direct File—its free, government-run e-filing tool—will not operate for Filing Season 2026. After piloting in 2023, the program expanded to 25 states and processed 296,531 accepted returns in 2025 with strong satisfaction scores. Political and industry opposition, including concerns about duplicating private services, influenced the shutdown. Taxpayers must turn to commercial software, Free File if eligible, or paper filing. The IRS provided no future launch date and directed users to its main filing portal.