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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
Business
Fatima Hussein

Average tax refund revealed as 53 million filers claimed new Trump exemptions ahead of Tax Day

The latest data comes as most Americans, or 7 in 10, still think their taxes are too high - (AP)

The Trump administration says millions of people used new tax breaks this year but refunds have not yet reached the heights President Donald Trump boasted about at the start of tax season.

More than 53 million filers claimed a deduction under provisions from Republicans' massive tax and spending law, a Treasury official told reporters Tuesday ahead of the tax deadline.

Six million people claimed no tax on tips, 21 million claimed the overtime deduction and 30 million older Americans claimed the enhanced deduction.

The official previewing the numbers said the 2026 filing season was a success from the administration's perspective.

Still, the latest data comes as most Americans, or 7 in 10, still think their taxes are too high, according to recent polling, despite the passage of the Republican tax law which promised big savings for taxpayers.

The 2026 season comes as the IRS has gone through a leadership turnover and reduced its workforce by 27% (Getty Images/iStockphoto)

As the tax season kicked off in January, the White House boasted that average returns were projected to rise by at least $1,000. But currently, the average refund amount is $3,462, according to the latest IRS data, which is up 11% or about $350 from last tax year’s $3,116 average refund payment.

Treasury has shifted its messaging to tout that tax refunds this season are up 24% compared with the four-year average of refunds before President Donald Trump took office.

The White House has been trying to promote Trump's tax cuts as a way to get voters more enthusiastic about the way he's handling the economy ahead of November's midterm elections, but the message has been overshadowed for weeks by higher gas prices caused by the war in Iran.

The 2026 season comes as the IRS has gone through a leadership turnover and reduced its workforce by 27% over the past year through cuts brought on by the Department of Government Efficiency.

IRS CEO Frank Bisignano is set to testify in front of the Senate Finance Committee on Wednesday.

In his public testimony to lawmakers, Bisignano planned to tout the IRS' implementation of the Republican tax law.

However, Democratic lawmakers zeroed in on IRS disclosures of confidential taxpayer information to Immigration and Customs Enforcement as part of an agreement between ICE and the Department of Homeland Security to share information for the purpose of identifying and deporting people illegally in the U.S.

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