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Between multiple waves of layoffs and legislative efforts to pull back more than $20 billion in funding, the gradual declawing of the Internal Revenue Service is well underway.
Representative Tom Cole, R-Oklahoma, introduced a99-page proposed funding bill earlier this month as a stopgap measure that will keep government operations ongoing and avoid a March 15 shutdown. Thebudget, which passed on March 14, chiefly increases defense spending by $6 billion and cuts non-defense spending by $13 billion, but also reclaims $20.2 billion in IRS funding provided by the Inflation Reduction Act.
“Conservatives will love this bill because it sets us up to cut taxes and spending in reconciliation, all while effectively freezing spending this year,” President Trump said on Truth Social on March 5 as the bill was being drafted. “Let’s get this bill done.”
Funding worries are only the tip of the iceberg at the IRS.
Following the 6,000 to 7,000 people let go from the agency in February, reporting from theAssociated Press claims that more widespread staff reductions could happen in the near future — affecting roughlyhalf of the IRS’s overall headcount.
Mark Koziel, president and chief executive of the AICPA, said in a March 7 statement that his organization has been in ongoing talks with IRS officials to clarify any news that comes out of the agency and “assess the immediate and long-term implications.”
“The ability of the IRS to maintain service levels for taxpayers and their preparers is critically important to the AICPA,” Koziel said. “IRS services in combination with modernization efforts, which include technology advancements, have been the bedrock of AICPA’s recommendations for many years.”
The deepening presence of Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency has introduced new challenges at the IRS, which include the aforementioned layoffs but also extend to DOGE’s controversial access to taxpayer data. Accountants and legal executives are divided on whether Musk’s entity will be damaging to taxpayers or not.
Below are some of the latest moves out of the IRS impacting the 2025 tax season and what accounting professionals need to know.
New names on list of eligible countries for foreign income exclusion
Ukraine, Iraq, Haiti and Bangladesh are the four new countries added to the list of regions that have had some requirements for foreign earned income exclusions waived for tax year 2024.
The standard eligibility criteria apply to U.S. citizens or resident aliens living and working abroad whose tax home is in a foreign country, and who meet either a bona fide residence test or a physical presence test. Those who meet the requirements can opt to exclude up to $126,500 from their foreign earned income for the 2024 tax year.
UnderRev. Proc. 2025-17, those who left one of the four aforementioned countries due to war or conflict and are electing to exclude foreign earned income will receive a waiver for the time requirements.
Be it false emails and texts or third-party firms promising to help create IRS Individual Online Accounts, scammers are out in force in 2025.
Malicious efforts to steal taxpayer data aren’t limited just to direct communication between scammers and victims. The proliferation of so-called tax experts on platforms like TikTok have led to a rise in W2s and other filing documents being submitted incorrectly.
“Scammers are relentless, and they use the guise of tax season to try tricking taxpayers into falling into a variety of traps. … These red flags can lead to everything from identity theft to being misled into claiming tax credits for which they’re not entitled,” IRS communications senior adviser Terry Lemons said in a statement.
The IRS has added W-2 and 1095-A information returns to its Individual Online Accounts portal for taxpayers covering 2023 and 2024, marking the first documents to be supported.
Both the Form W-2, “Wage and Tax Statement,” and Form 1095-A, “Health Insurance Marketplace Statement” for the last two tax years can be found online in the Records and Status tab for each individual. In the instance of taxpayers filing joint returns, the forms will be found in each individual’s respective Individual Online Account. State and local tax information will not be supported in the IRS’s online portal.
Funding from the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 has provided the IRS with the necessary capital for adding offerings like Business Tax Accounts and Tax Pro Accounts, in recent years.
Jordan Vonderhaar/Photographer: Jordan Vonderhaar/
Diving into Form 6765 for the R&D Credit
Both the Research Tax Credit and its related form for reporting qualified research expenditures have been around for more than 30 years, but new requirements for the filing have some taxpayers stumped.
Experts like Michelle Abel, a principal at Baker Tilly and leader of the Top 10 Firm’s credits and incentives group nationwide, specialize in the research credit. Able told Accounting Today that while the form has asked for the total dollar amount for “your wages, your supplies, your contract research and your cloud computing expenses” in the past, there’s now a greater information lift on the part of the taxpayer.
“The understanding was always that you’re only putting [qualified research expenses] on your Form 6765 that relate to qualified research activities,” Able said. “But the form never had any place to provide detail about what all those activities were.”
Shutdown or not, in this case not, the IRS is still open for business
A possible government shutdown has been staved off for now, but tax professionals weren’t phased by the stopgap bill’s impact on the operations of the IRS.
IRS acting commissioner Melanie Krause told employees in an email earlier this month that current employees were exempt from any furloughs in the event the budget measure failed to pass “due to existing appropriations.” Part of the bill includes a $20.2 billion clawback of IRS funding made possible by the Inflation Reduction Act.
“There’s certainly a lot of uncertainty and a lot of anxiety about whether the Service is going to have the manpower to provide the kind of customer service that they have in recent years,” Anne Gibson, a senior legal analyst at Wolters Kluwer, told Accounting Today.
Muni bonds and taxes;BE-10 time;a troubling history; and other highlights from our favorite tax bloggers.
Recovery mode
Don’t Mess with Taxes (http://dontmesswithtaxes.typepad.com/): As natural disasters continue to break records in number and severity, government agencies help a little — but in many cases, those who survived major disasters must come up with cash for repairs and recovery. Many turn to their largest pot, retirement savings. What to remind them about what federal lawmakers have done to help those who must tap tax-advantaged nest eggs.
Current Federal Tax Developments (https://www.currentfederaltaxdevelopments.com/): A chief counsel memorandum addresses the deductibility of theft losses (under Sec. 165) for five hypothetical taxpayers who were victims of scams in 2024.
Turbotax (https://blog.turbotax.intuit.com): If they’re asking a lot of questions about this season (and we bet they are), here’s your cheat sheet.
Getting real (estate)
The Tax Times (https://www.thetaxtimes.com): The IRS has new advice regarding transfer pricing adjustments for high-profit-potential intangible property.
CLA (https://www.claconnect.com/en/resources?pageNum=0): Lawmakers are under pressure to identify revenue offsets to finance fiscal and tax packages. One such potential offset: curtailing the business-related property tax deduction, which could have consequences for commercial real estate owners, developers and investors.
Tax Foundation (https://taxfoundation.org/blog): As the property tax debate continues in Kansas, two proposals recently emerged: a tight levy limit that would give voters the opportunity to approve or reject property tax increases and a proposal allowing taxpayers to protest and overturn property tax increases they disagree with, while increasing state transfers to cities and counties. Should policymakers continue doing more?
Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy (https://itep.org/category/blog/): Why lawmakers should improve or implement a circuit breaker program that kicks in to help alleviate the pressure property taxes put on working families’ budgets.
Reshaping obligations
Tax Notes (https://www.taxnotes.com/procedurally-taxing): A recent case, In re John Carr Smith, provides a straightforward application of a previous landmark case, United States v. Craft. In the latter, the decision focused on spouses owning property as tenants finding themselves unable to shake off a federal tax lien on one of the spouses. What makes Carr a “sad case” is that Mr. Carr married into the house and contributed nothing to its purchase, yet the IRS will reap a benefit from his ownership interest.
Withum (https://www.withum.com/resources/): Guidance did exist on minimum investment amounts when determining whether an issuer has taken reasonable steps to verify purchasers’ accredited investor status, but further clarification has arrived from the Securities and Exchange Commission about relying on Rule 506(c) of Regulation D.
Virginia – U.S. Tax Talk (https://us-tax.org/about-this-us-tax-blog/): A recently leaked memorandum has revealed potential tax reform, including changes concerning foreign-earned income and the corporate income tax rate that could reshape the tax obligations of U.S. persons living abroad and those of multinational business owners.
Finding the way
U of I Tax School (https://taxschool.illinois.edu/blog/): How to use the Taxpayer Advocate Service taxpayer roadmap from tax prep through processing, collections, appeals and litigation.
Mauled Again (https://mauledagain.blogspot.com/): New bills in the Washington Senate and the Washington House look to impose a state vehicle miles-traveled tax, a different name for a mileage-based road fee.
MBK (https://www.mbkcpa.com/insights): Some nonprofit clients are hesitant to use background checks on board members — a reluctance understandable, but misplaced. Why and how such clients should know their board members as completely as possible.
The National Association of Tax Professionals (https://blog.natptax.com/): This “You Make the Call” looks at Jim and Sarah, married filing a joint return in 2024. Their modified adjusted gross income was $237,000, and they completed the adoption of a child with special needs in 2024 and have qualified adoption expenses of $10,000. Is their adoption credit limited to $10,000 in 2024?
Taxable Talk (http://www.taxabletalk.com/): The BE-10 Survey deadline looms again for large business clients.
Tax scammers are exploiting the current political divide and resurrecting old websites to lure potential victims, according to a new report.
The report, released Tuesday by BforeAI, a cybersecurity company specializing in threat prevention, found cybercriminals and identity thieves reviving old internet domains, dating as far back as 2009, to fool victims this filing season.
“Due to successful evasion techniques used by these cybercriminals, old websites with good reputations and rankings on search engines garner a sense of legitimacy among the targeted audience,” said the report. “Since security analysts generally warn people interacting with recently registered websites, old websites remain off the radar.”
Those include several websites registered using freely available platforms such as the venerable blogging service Blogspot. The fraudulent sites feature alleged “warnings” from the IRS about impending deadlines, but have giveaways such as misspellings and odd use of capital letters. BforeAI’s threat research team noticed that some of the old domains were re-registered last December right before tax season.
Scammers are also taking advantage of the current political climate in the U.S., launching websites mentioning President Donald Trump with tax-related keywords to entice users to their alleged services. One site used the keyword “trump” with “tax refund” while also offering a tax calculator. The BforeAI team also noticed cybercriminals exploiting the cryptocurrency arena through meme coin scams, including a “NoTax Coin” featuring Trump, who has launched memecoins of his own that have led to heavy losses for many investors.
The threat researchers spotted a new tax-related service in which recently established businesses are leveraging the “gov” keyword to mislead people in search of legitimate government services. One website previously advertised a service to claim up to $32,000 in just 20 minutes, but now features an affiliate referral link and promotes a completely new business offering.
The BforeAI team also observed the use of the IRS logo to make fraudulent websites mimic the official IRS website, but with the use of different fonts and colors creating a confusing, unclear target. One such site featured the official IRS logo but was in Russian language and is probably targeting Russian nationals.
Some websites showed statements of tax payments, perhaps in an effort to lure victims into checking their statements and thereby sharing their financial data. The team also saw various phishing attempts featuring fake login and signup forms requiring users to authenticate their identities via ID.me, Google or their social media accounts.
“As we fulfill our tax obligations this season, be on the lookout for tax-related traps laid by cybercriminals,” warned the report.
The Treasury Department named a pair of Internal Revenue Service agents as special advisors to Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and plans key roles for them in reforming the IRS after they complained of mistreatment under the Biden administration while investigating Hunter Biden’s taxes.
Gary Shapley and Joseph Ziegler, who were both special agents with the IRS’s Criminal Investigation division, testified in 2023 before the House Oversight Committee claiming then-President Biden’s son Hunter received preferential treatment during a tax evasion investigation, and they had been removed from the investigation after complaining to their supervisors in 2022. Biden agreed to a plea deal in 2023 on both tax and firearms charges with prosecutors, but the plea deal fell apart when it was questioned by a judge and special counsel David Weiss, who had initially agreed to the deal. Biden was later convicted in 2024 of the firearms charges, which related to lying about his drug use on an application for a handgun, and he again pleaded guilty to not paying at least $1.4 million in taxes. He was pardoned by then-President Biden shortly before leaving office in January.
The two whistleblowers had accused prosecutors and IRS CI officials of not pushing for felony charges, allowing the statute of limitations to expire on some of the tax charges, and retaliating by removing them from the investigation. Their cause has been championed by Republicans in Congress, including Senate Judiciary Committee chairman Charles Grassley of Iowa, who sent a letter last month to Bessent commending Shapley and Ziegler’s “bravery, courage, expertise and integrity” and asking Bessent to take action to place Shapley and Ziegler in leadership positions. The promotion is a result of Grassley’s direct request.
“As I noted in my letter to Secretary Bessent last month, if we reinstate whistleblowers who have been retaliated against, it will send a clear signal that pointing out wrongdoing is an honorable thing to do,” Grassley said in a statement Tuesday. “It will help change the culture of our bureaucracy. I’m very grateful to Secretary Bessent for supporting Gary and Joe, and I have no doubt they will be a boon to the Treasury Department in their new roles. Gary Shapley and Joe Ziegler put their entire careers on the line to stand up for the truth, and instead of being thanked, the Biden administration treated them like skunks at a picnic. Far too many whistleblowers share a similar experience of retaliation. I hope today is the first of many redemption stories for whistleblowers who’ve been mistreated. By taking a stand for whistleblowers, President Trump and his cabinet are ushering in a new era of transparency and accountability.”
Bessent hailed their promotion to positions of influence in the Trump administration. “I am pleased to welcome Gary Shapley and Joseph Ziegler to the Treasury Department, where they will help us drive much-needed cultural reform within the IRS,” Bessent said in a statement. “These veteran civil servants join us to help further the agency’s focus on collections, modernization, and customer service, so we can deliver a more effective and efficient IRS experience for hardworking American taxpayers. I appreciate Senator Grassley’s efforts in Congress to support whistleblower protections in order to improve transparency, accountability and root out the culture of retaliation.”
Shapley and Ziegler are expected to transition to senior IRS leadership after their stint at the Treasury Department, according to the New York Post. They have reportedly named six IRS officials who they claim retaliated against them and asked for the officials to be disciplined in an official complaint filed with the federal Merit Systems Protection Board. In February, a federal whistleblower protection agency known as the Office of Special Counsel found the IRS had wrongly retaliated against the two men. That same month, Trump fired the head of that agency, Hampton Dellinger, prompting a short-lived court battle before he agreed to drop his appeal of the ouster.
“We are enormously grateful to Secretary Bessent, Senator Grassley, and all of the members of Congress for their leadership and trust,” Shapley and Ziegler said in a joint statement. “We have been motivated by one singular mantra: do what’s right, and do it the right way. It has not been easy, but having a clear conscience is worth the effort. We appreciate the opportunity Secretary Bessent is giving us to put our experience and firsthand knowledge to good use for the American people to eliminate waste and reform the IRS.”