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© 2026 Govwatch

Press ReleaseUrgent2026-04-15

Tax Day Reclaimed: Why April 15 Feels Different This Year

Robert J. Wittman
Robert J. Wittman
RVA-1 · Representative
Share:
TaxesEnvironmentSocial SecurityLabor

Context

This press release from Representative Robert J. Wittman (R-VA) was published on 2026-04-15 and titled "Tax Day Reclaimed: Why April 15 Feels Different This Year". It focuses on taxes and touches on the environment, Social Security.

Full Text

Tax Day Reclaimed: Why April 15 Feels Different This Year

Every year, Tax Day arrives with a familiar sense of anxiety, as millions of Americans wait to see what they owe or what they’ll get back. This year feels different. Thanks to the Working Families Tax Cuts, April 15 is no longer just a deadline. It is a moment of relief for millions of hardworking Americans who are seeing real, tangible benefits in their paychecks and tax refunds. The results speak for themselves. According to a recent report from the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), tax refunds are up nearly 11 percent this year, with the average refund exceeding $3,500. At the same time, millions of Americans are already seeing higher take-home pay as they adjust their withholding under the law’s lower, permanent tax rates. Nearly half of all filers have already benefited from at least one of the law’s key provisions, including No Tax on Tips, No Tax on Overtime, and No Tax on Social Security. These policies are delivering meaningful relief to workers across the country, especially those who put in long hours to support their families. Department of Treasury officials have indicated that more than 23 million Americans have taken advantage of the No Tax on Overtime provision. For too long, working extra hours meant sending more of their hard-earned income to Washington. Now, those workers are keeping more of what they earn, providing greater financial stability and rewarding hard work. The same is true for service workers. More than 6 million Americans have already benefited from No Tax on Tips, helping restaurant staff, drivers, hairstylists, and others keep more of their earnings. This is real relief for people who depend on every dollar they make. Small businesses, the backbone of our economy, are seeing the impact as well. According to the Small Business Administration, nearly 12 million small business owners are receiving an average tax reduction of about $7,000. The permanent extension of the 20 percent Qualified Business Income deduction is providing an average of $4,600 in relief to millions of entrepreneurs, enabling them to reinvest, grow, and create jobs in their communities. In addition, restoring immediate deductibility for research and development expenses, applied retroactively, is unlocking billions in prior-year deductions, while full expensing allows businesses to invest in new equipment and expansion with greater confidence. These are the kinds of pro-growth policies that strengthen our economy from the ground up. Families are benefiting too. Parents of more than four million children have already claimed Trump Accounts, giving the next generation a head start and introducing young Americans to the power of long-term saving and compound growth. And for seniors, relief is long overdue. More than 26 million filers have claimed the No Tax on Social Security provision, helping retirees keep more of the benefits they earned over a lifetime of work. Taken together, these reforms represent one of the most significant efforts in recent years to return hard-earned money to the American people. And they come despite unified opposition from Democrats in Congress. This Tax Day, Americans aren’t just filing. They’re feeling the difference. April 15, 2026, may well be remembered as the day we began to turn Tax Day back into something it should be—not a burden, but a reminder that when Washington steps back, hardworking Americans get to keep more of what they earn and invest it in their families, their futures, and their communities. Read the article in the Richmond Times-Dispatch here.
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