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The IRS still has a sizable backlog of returns, taxpayer advocate says


Erin M. Collins, National Taxpayer Advocate

Source: IRS

LAS VEGAS — After a difficult three years for taxpayers, the IRS has made significant improvements. But there’s still work to do, according to the National Taxpayer Advocate Erin Collins.

“This filing season has probably been as close to normal as possible,” she said, speaking at the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants’ annual conference in Las Vegas this week.

However, despite customer service boosts, the agency is still working through a sizable backlog — including amended returns, filings in suspense and other correspondence, she said.

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Collins said the IRS is currently juggling 3.7 million amended returns, 6.8 million “in suspense” with missing information and 5.3 million pieces of correspondence. “Those are pretty big numbers that the IRS is still dealing with,” she said.

This season, the agency has prioritized phone service and answered more than 85% of calls from key phone lines in less than five minutes.

“But it did come at a cost,” Collins said, because phone assistors process paper returns during downtime from answering calls. “The problem is, we are now back to a backlog of paper correspondence and amended returns, similar to where we were a year ago,” she said.

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We cannot go into the next filing season with another backlog.

Erin Collins

National Taxpayer Advocate

While Collins believes the IRS has the technical capability to implement direct filing, she worries about the timing. “IRS still is not out of the hole that they have dug,” she told CNBC.

“We cannot go into the next filing season with another backlog,” she said. “We need to eliminate that word from the IRS’ vocabulary.

“No more backlogs,” she added.

Collins also pointed to state tax challenges, especially for more than 40 states that rely on federal returns for residents’ state filings. If you decouple those returns, it could cause issues for state tax administration, she said.

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