As the April 15 tax deadline approaches, it’s common to take a second look at your return and spot a few things you wish you’d done differently.
But before you panic, it’s important to know that while some errors are easily fixed, others are much harder to change once your return is in the hands of the IRS.
The key is knowing which mistakes are worth correcting. In some cases, rushing to change a minor detail can stretch your processing time out for months, only to lead to the same outcome. Here’s more to know.
Sign up for Kiplinger’s Free Newsletters
Profit and prosper with the best of expert advice on investing, taxes, retirement, personal finance and more – straight to your e-mail.
Profit and prosper with the best of expert advice – straight to your e-mail.
What you can change on your taxes after you’ve filed them
Some updates can be made after your return is submitted. However, in many cases, the IRS requires filing an amended return using Form 1040-X.
Common triggers for needing to amend include:
- Reporting Missed Income: This is common if a 1099 or W-2 arrived late or was updated after you hit submit.
- Life Events: Significant changes, like a marriage, birth, or adoption, or the death of a loved one, can fundamentally shift your filing status and eligibility.
- The Qualifying Relative: Realizing after filing that you provided more than half the support for an aging parent could unlock the $500 Credit for Other Dependents.
- Maximizing Credits: A minor oversight on a child’s residency or age could mean missing out on the $2,200 Child Tax Credit. Or if you filed before your school sent the final 1098-T form, you might have missed the American Opportunity Tax Credit (AOTC), which can shave up to $2,500 off your tax bill.
Example: When to amend your return
The Situation: You filed in February, but in March, you realize you forgot to claim the new deduction for your car loan interest or your qualified overtime pay.
The Result: Because these new 2025 deductions could directly lower your taxable income, filing a 1040-X is likely worth the wait. It could increase your refund by hundreds of dollars.
Note: This is a simplified example. Whether you should amend your return will depend on your specific tax situation.
Overall, if a change affects what you owe the IRS or how much money you get back, it’s typically worth correcting. However, if you’re uncertain, consulting a tax professional can help you decide if the math justifies the extra paperwork.
What’s harder to change after you submit your return
Some decisions are effectively locked in once your return is filed, especially after the Tax Day deadline passes.
Certain tax elections and filing choices are only available up to the original filing deadline. However, once that window closes, your ability to change direction is limited, even if new information comes to light.
Some examples:
- The Joint to Separate Rule: If you and your spouse filed a joint return, you generally cannot change your mind and switch to “Married Filing Separately” once the April 15 deadline has passed.
- Irrevocable Elections: Certain technical choices, like electing to forgo a “net operating loss carryback” or specific business accounting methods, are often permanent once submitted on an original return.
- The 65-Day Rule for Trusts: If you are a trustee, the window to “push” 2025 income out to beneficiaries to lower the trust’s tax bill (known as the 65-day election) closes in early March. If you missed that window, you can’t “amend” your way back into it later.
When to fix a tax mistake — and when to leave it alone
Notably, not every mistake requires you to file an amended return. Often, the IRS catches and corrects simple math errors for you.
As Kiplinger has reported, under the recently enacted IRS MATH Act, the agency is now required to be much more transparent about these “automatic” fixes.
If the IRS adjusts your return, they must send you a detailed notice explaining exactly which line they changed and why, giving you a clear 60-day window to disagree with their assessment.
Example: When to leave it alone
The Situation: You realize you accidentally typed “$5,200” instead of “$2,500” for a single line of income, but your tax software already caught the discrepancy in your final total.
The Result: If it’s a “transposition error” that doesn’t change your final tax owed, the IRS will likely reconcile it during processing. Filing an amendment for a $0 change only puts your return at the back of a 20-week line for no reason.
For more information, see Kiplinger’s report: Made a Tax Return Mistake? A New IRS Law Could Help You Fight Back.
Overall? If the mistake doesn’t change your tax liability or your refund, filing an amendment may not be worth the potential processing delay.
But keep in mind, the above is a simplified example. Your specific tax situation will determine whether an amended return makes sense.
What happens when you file an amended return
Amended returns take longer to process than standard filings.
While some electronic amendments move faster, the IRS officially presents a timeline of 16 to 20 weeks for full processing.
In some cases, tax pros recommend waiting until your originally filed return has been processed and you’ve received your initial refund (if any) before filing an amended return.
What can trigger the IRS to flag your return for review?
If your reported income doesn’t match what’s on file with the IRS (from employers or banks), the system may flag your return. This “mismatch” is a key cause of delays and often occurs with freelance work or investment accounts.
When a return is flagged for inconsistency or identity verification, it moves to a manual review queue.
Taking a few extra minutes to ensure your 1099s match your filing can prevent your refund from being stuck in a months-long backlog.
Changing your tax return after filing: Bottom line
Filing your taxes is a major step, but it’s not always the final one for everyone.
By understanding what the IRS fixes automatically and what requires a 1040-X, you can avoid unnecessary IRS processing delays and make more confident decisions about your money.
Read More
Don’t Make These 5 Common Mistakes on Your Tax Return
8 Big Tax Changes to Know Before You File
IRS Tax Refund Schedule 2026: When Will Your Refund Arrive?
7 Bad Tax Habits to Kick Right Now
