The agent will charge interest on the 2024 tax dates paid after April 15th.
“American citizens or resident foreigners residing abroad are permitted to extend two months from the usual April 15 deadline, as they reside in the military serving outside the United States. From June 15th onwards, on Sundays in 2025, the deadline will be delayed until Monday, June 16th.” The June deadline also applies to those with double citizenship.
If you live and do business outside of the US and Puerto Rico, taxpayers will be allowed to auto-expand. Additionally, taxpayers in military or naval service on duty outside the US and Puerto Rico will automatically be granted extensions.
In the case of a return of an application, the taxpayer must attach a statement clarifying which of these two circumstances applies to them.
If taxpayers are unable to file by June 16th, they can request an auto-extend feature that allows them to postpone the filing date until October 15th.
“But an extension of the time you file is not an extension you should pay,” the IRS said. “Interest applies to 2024 tax payments received after April 15, 2025.”
Terrorist attacks against taxpayers affected on October 7, 2023, Israel or the Jewish state, Gaza or those living in the West Bank will have time to file and pay taxes from October 7, 2023 until September 30th.
“There are no necessary measures to receive exclusions. Each military organization is automatically recognized by excluding revenues that can be reported on the W-2.
The agency reminded foreign taxpayers that all income received and deductible expenses received by all income paid in foreign currency must be reported in US dollars upon return. All tax payments must also be in dollars.
Penalty
The deadline is reduced to April 15th, and taxpayers who have not yet filed taxes returned or paid should consider applying for and repaying the dues immediately, as the IRS will impose a claim and fine in such cases.
“If both payment failure and penalty disability were applied in the same month, if you did not submit a penalty due to the amount of failed penalty payments applied that month,” the IRS said.
“For example, instead of not failing that month’s penalty by 5%, you apply a 4.5% failure to submit a penalty and a 0.5% failure to pay the penalty.”
Long said taxpayers frequently complain about lower customer service and delayed refunds.