Introductory Remarks by the National Taxpayer Advocate
The past year has been one of extraordinary transition for the IRS. The agency began the year with its largest workforce in recent memory, and then after absorbing a 27% reduction, it ended the year with one of its smallest. Reductions of this magnitude almost surely will affect operations, particularly in areas that already depend heavily on manual work and experienced employees, such as processing correspondence, amended returns, and other account adjustments, including identity theft cases. As the IRS enters the 2026 filing season while implementing extensive changes enacted by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, the agency’s challenge will be to ensure that taxpayers continue to receive timely service and fair treatment, even as it operates with fewer resources.
Taxpayers want, and deserve, a 21st century tax administration – one that provides clear communication, transparent processing timeframes, secure digital options that resolve problems, and a smooth handoff to live assistance when automation is not sufficient. The good news is that improvement is achievable. The operational gains seen in 2024 and 2025, along with Congress’s enactment of targeted bipartisan taxpayer protections, show that practical reforms can translate into better outcomes for millions of taxpayers. The task now is to make those gains durable so that service does not improve only when conditions are unusually favorable, but remains reliable through workforce constraints, major law changes, and inevitable future disruptions. That requires sustained modernization and, equally important, modern performance measurement. Success should be defined by what taxpayers deserve: timely refunds, accurate information, first-contact resolution where possible, and timely processing of cases that cannot be resolved on a phone call.
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