A new analysis warns that common filing mistakes are draining household budgets just as families brace for tax season. The report, released ahead of peak filing weeks, says routine errors can shrink refunds or trigger penalties for millions of Americans.
Its core finding is blunt: small missteps on returns add up to large bills. The warning comes as filers juggle complex forms, new software prompts, and a patchwork of state rules. The issue matters for workers with contract income, parents chasing credits, and retirees sorting pension and investment paperwork.
“From missed deductions to misreported income, a new report outlines five common tax mistakes that could cost American taxpayers thousands of dollars.”
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ToggleWhat are the Warning Signals?
The advisory zeroes in on errors that crop up every year. Two stand out. First, taxpayers leave money on the table by skipping deductions and credits they qualify for. Second, income reporting often falls short when people forget to file a 1099 form, misplace a statement, or estimate figures that do not match their records.
Those errors are simple to make and hard to fix after filing. A missed credit can quietly trim a refund. A mismatch between what a filer reports and what the IRS receives from employers or platforms can slow processing and lead to notices.
Why These Mistakes Keep Happening
Tax filing now covers more sources of income than it did a decade ago. Side gigs, digital sales, and short-term rentals add forms and rules. Many filers also move between jobs or combine W-2 wages with investment income, creating more lines to review.
Paperwork arrives on different timelines, and software cannot auto-import every document. People often file early without every form in hand, then forget to amend. Others assume last year’s settings still apply, only to learn that a life change has shifted their bracket or eligibility.
Experts say time pressure and overreliance on defaults contribute, especially when taxpayers skip the interview steps in software or rush through the final review.
Who Is Most at Risk
Contract workers and gig earners face the highest risk of underreporting. Small payments spread across platforms may not trigger a form in every case, but they are still taxable. Retirees also run into problems when required distributions, Social Security, and investment income interact in ways that affect taxes owed.
Families with changing child care costs, college bills, or shared custody can miss credits or claim them incorrectly. New homeowners sometimes forget mortgage interest or points, while renters skip state-level benefits they could claim.
What the Five Errors Look Like in Practice
While the full list is not public, tax professionals describe a familiar pattern that aligns with the warning:
- Missed deductions and credits: Overlooking education benefits, saver’s credits, or state-level relief.
- Misreported income: Leaving out 1099-NEC or 1099-INT forms, or estimating amounts that do not match records.
- Wrong filing status or dependents: Choosing the wrong status or double-claiming a child across households.
- Withholding and estimated tax gaps: Underpaying through the year and facing penalties at filing.
- Banking and math errors: Typos that delay refunds or trigger notices, even when totals are close.
How Filers Can Reduce Risk
The safest move is to build a checklist and finish it before hitting submit. That starts with waiting for every tax form, including late-arriving corrected statements. It also means comparing this year’s return against last year’s to spot any missing items.
Filers should confirm their filing status and any dependent claims if there were any life changes, such as marriage, divorce, or shared custody. Gig workers can track income with a simple ledger and match it to deposits, not just platform statements.
Another fix is to use the final “error check” screens in software and review any mismatch flags. If unsure, a second set of eyes from a preparer or volunteer clinic can help catch issues before they cause delays.
What This Means for the Season Ahead
The warning points to a filing season where caution beats speed. Accuracy protects refunds, reduces audits, and cuts down on stressful mail from the government. For households on tight budgets, a clean return can mean weeks saved on processing and a refund that arrives as planned.
Policy shifts and new reporting thresholds could further change which forms appear next year. Filers who keep year-round records, update withholding after big life events, and store tax letters in one place will be better prepared.
Bottom line: the cheapest mistake is the one you never make. Take the extra hour, find the missing form, and claim every dollar you have earned under the rules.







