S-1438-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Finance.
Sponsored by Raphael Warnock (D-GA)
What it does
This bill would require the IRS to treat postponements of federal tax deadlines caused by federally declared disasters (or certain similar events) as formal extensions when calculating the "lookback period" — the window of time used to determine how much of a tax refund a taxpayer can claim. Under current law, disaster-related postponements do not count as extensions for this purpose, which can reduce the refund amount available to affected taxpayers. The bill would also require the IRS to include any such postponement when calculating the 60-day window for mailing certain tax payment notices and demands.
Who benefits
Taxpayers in federally declared disaster areas who filed returns during a postponement period and are seeking refunds — particularly those who made tax payments before filing and whose payments currently fall outside the lookback window. This includes individuals, small business owners, and farmers in disaster-prone regions such as hurricane corridors, wildfire zones, and flood plains. Tax preparers and attorneys who assist disaster-affected clients would face fewer complications. Taxpayers who received IRS notices during a postponement period may also benefit from the adjusted notice timeline.
Who is hurt
The federal Treasury would forgo some revenue, as more taxpayers would qualify for larger refunds under the expanded lookback period. IRS administrative systems and staff would need to be updated to implement the new calculation rules, potentially increasing short-term operational costs. Taxpayers not in disaster areas receive no benefit and indirectly bear any fiscal cost through the general budget.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the current law creates an inequitable outcome: taxpayers who did everything right — paying taxes on time and filing during a legally authorized postponement — are penalized by having their refund eligibility reduced through no fault of their own. They contend that disaster victims already face financial hardship and that the IRS's own postponement authority should not inadvertently shrink the refund window Congress intended. Treating postponements the same as extensions restores the original purpose of the lookback period and corrects a technical gap in the tax code.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill expands refund eligibility in a way that increases Treasury costs without a clear offset, adding to the federal deficit. They contend that the existing lookback rules provide a defined, predictable window that limits the government's exposure to stale refund claims, and that broadening this window — even for disaster victims — sets a precedent for further carve-outs that erode the integrity of refund deadlines. Critics may also argue that existing disaster relief programs already address financial hardship, making this additional tax code change duplicative.