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The US filing season opened Jan. 26, 2026, amid Treasury Department claims that President Trump’s Working Families Tax Cuts will deliver the largest tax‑refund season in history, with officials saying refunds will rise by about $1,000 on average and more than 100 million households expected to receive refunds.
Administration and Treasury officials, including Secretary Scott Bessent, have highlighted expanded credits and changes — boosted child tax credits, a larger standard deduction, new treatment of tips and overtime pay, and other deductions — as drivers of the jump.
State authorities such as New York urged residents to recheck eligibility for federal and state credits like the Earned Income Tax Credit and the Empire State Child Credit.
The IRS has warned many filers routinely miss refundable credits, potentially leaving billions unclaimed, and is urging electronic filing and direct deposit to speed payments.
Independent analysts and budget experts counter that many provisions are temporary and could add trillions to long‑run deficits, while some administration messages (for example, about Social Security tax) have been challenged as inaccurate.
🔗 Based On
The Daily OverviewMillions of Americans urged to recheck tax credits before leaving cash on the table
The Daily OverviewTreasury chief Bessent touts record tax refunds for US families
The Daily OverviewTrump’s money moves could leave taxpayers holding the bag























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