Filed an extension? How to use the time between now and October 15th
Filing an extension can be a practical decision. If your return is complex, extending can give you time to file accurately instead of rushing a return that may later need to be corrected.
But an extension is only useful if you use the extra time well.
The IRS grants individuals a six-month extension to file, generally moving the federal filing deadline to October 15th. What it does not do is extend the time to pay. Your taxes were still generally due by April 15th, and interest and failure-to-pay penalties will continue to accrue on any unpaid balance after that date.
Federal extension rules also do not automatically extend state filing deadlines. State requirements vary, so it is important to confirm the rules that apply to you.
That’s why the period between now and October 15th shouldn’t be treated as extra time to set your return aside. It is a useful planning window. Used well, it gives you time to organize records, refine payment estimates, address open questions, evaluate payment options, and make better current-year tax decisions while there is still time for those decisions to matter.
Start by confirming the extension details
You can request an extension using Form 4868. The IRS also treats certain electronic payments designated as extension payments as a valid extension request without a separate Form 4868 (if the payment is made through an approved IRS channel by the original due date).
With the payment obligation clearly in view, the most useful post-extension question shifts. The question is not how long you can wait. It is what you should address now so that October is smoother, more accurate, and less costly.
Use the extension period to improve the return, not just finish it
For many filers, the value of the extension period is quality control.
This is the time to clean up K-1 reporting, reconcile brokerage statements, verify basis schedules, confirm deductible expenses, and collect missing support for credits and deductions. The IRS requires you to maintain records that support income, deductions, and credits appearing on your return. Those records generally need to be kept until the applicable statute of limitations expires, which is typically three years from filing but can be longer in certain circumstances.
It’s also worth remembering that the IRS matches third-party information, including Forms 1099, corrected 1099s, and K-1s, against filed returns. Reconciling those documents carefully during the extension window is one of the most practical ways to reduce the risk of a notice after filing.
This is especially important if your return involves more than a W-2 and a standard deduction. A closely held business, rental activity, investment sales, multi-state filing obligations, charitable gifts, or pass-through income can all add layers of complexity. In those cases, the extension period can be the difference between a return that is simply filed and a return that is filed correctly.
The extension period can also be the right moment to evaluate whether any remaining elections or adjustments can still be made for the year in question. Retirement contributions are one common example, depending on the type of account and your situation.
That is where CPA guidance becomes especially valuable. The point is not to stretch out the filing process. It’s to use the extra months to reduce errors, strengthen support, and identify opportunities before the window closes.
Revisit the payment estimate before the balance grows further
If you extended and still owe, this is the moment to revisit the estimate used in April.
The amount paid with the extension is often just that: an estimate. Once better information is available, you should compare the extension payment with the more complete tax picture rather than waiting until October to find out that the shortfall is larger than expected. Interest and failure-to-pay penalties will generally continue to accrue on unpaid tax after the original due date.
That makes the extension period a cash-flow exercise as much as a tax exercise. In many cases, the better move is to make an additional payment now rather than wait until filing. Even when the final number is not yet known, reducing the unpaid balance earlier can help limit the cost of waiting.
If you cannot pay in full, address it directly
If you cannot pay your full balance, you shouldn’t wait passively for the problem to grow.
The IRS offers structured resolution options, including short-term and long-term payment arrangements. Individuals who owe $50,000 or less in combined tax, penalties, and interest may be eligible to apply online for a long-term payment plan. The IRS also provides resources covering offers in compromise, collection delays, and penalty relief.
This is another plan where professional guidance can be helpful. A CPA can help you evaluate whether it makes sense to pay down the balance immediately, set up an installment arrangement, adjust current-year estimates, or preserve business liquidity while still avoiding a deeper compliance issue.
The right answer is often more than procedural. It depends on your full financial picture.
Don’t let the extension distract you from the current tax year
One of the most common mistakes after an extension is treating the prior-year return as the only tax issue in play. It is not.
Federal income tax is a pay-as-you-go system, and withholding and estimated tax obligations continue throughout the current year. This is particularly important if your income was volatile in the first place.
A profitable business year, pass-through income, capital gains, a bonus, or multiple income sources may have prompted the extension. If those same conditions are continuing in 2026, then resolving the 2025 issue without recalibrating 2026 withholding or estimated payments can simply recreate the same problem.
Use this time to review whether withholding or payments are still on track to meet either 90% of the current year’s tax liability or 100% of the prior year’s liability (or 110% for certain higher-income taxpayers).
Treat October 15 as a hard planning deadline, not a soft reminder
The least productive use of an extension is to let it create a false sense that the tax issue has been postponed. In practice, an extension should create a schedule.
By mid-summer, you should know what documents are still missing. By early fall, you should know whether the extension payment was adequate, whether records are sufficient, and whether any open questions require technical review. October 15th is a real filing deadline, not an informal target. Treating it that way can make the difference between a managed process and a repeat of the April rush.
The extension window is also a genuine advisory opportunity. If you extended because your situation is complex, you may benefit from a mid-year conversation that covers the prior-year return, the adequacy of current-year payments, and any planning considerations that are still actionable before year-end.
Used intentionally, an extension can become the starting point for better ongoing tax planning, not just a sign that the return took longer than usual.
A practical checklist if you filed an extension
The months ahead should focus on five priorities:
- Revisit your April payment. Assess whether the payment made with your extension was adequate, and consider making an additional payment now if the picture has become clearer.
- Gather the documents that affect your return. This may include late-arriving K-1s, corrected 1099s, brokerage confirmations, cost basis records, charitable acknowledgments, and business expense support. Reconciling those documents before filing can reduce the risk of post-filing notices.
- Decide whether the return needs technical review, not just completion. This is especially important if you have business interests, rental activity, investment transactions, multi-state filing issues, or unusually large deductions. In those areas, the facts often need to be interpreted, not just entered.
- Review the current year at the same time. Withholding, estimated taxes, safe-harbor adequacy, and cash-flow planning for 2026 should not wait until the 2026 filing season.
- Address payment issues early. If full payment is not realistic, evaluate IRS resolution options before the problem grows. Payment arrangements tend to work best when approached deliberately and with a clear understanding of your full financial picture.
Using the extension window well
If you filed an extension, the goal is not simply to get your return out by October 15th. The goal is to use the extension window to file accurately, reduce avoidable costs, and prevent the same issues from carrying into the current year.
If your return is complex, your income is volatile, or you still have unresolved payment questions, this is a good time to pause, review the full picture, and make sure the next few months are used intentionally. A well-managed extension period can turn a stressful filing delay into a more thoughtful and effective planning opportunity.
For more personalized guidance, please contact our office.