The Internal Revenue Service plans to shut down nine in-person Taxpayer Assistance Centers in six states as part of the Trump administration's cost-cutting moves.
The IRS needed to inform Congress of the planned closures, as required by federal law. The sites to be closed are in Altoona and Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania; Cedar Rapids, Iowa; Elmira and West Nyack, New York; Owensboro and Paducah, Kentucky; Walnut Creek, California and Wheeling, West Virginia. The effective date will be Nov. 30.
They are among approximately 360 TACs across the U.S. where taxpayers can schedule an appointment and get free, in-person help from trained professionals. The move comes after reports last month that the IRS
The National Treasury Employees Union is opposing the plan to shut down the TACs.
"Taxpayer Assistance Centers are absolutely essential to the nation's tax system and closing them is the opposite of what the IRS should be doing right now," said Doreen Greenwald, national president of the National Treasury Employees Union, in a statement last week. "We urge the IRS and the Treasury Department to reconsider these closures and make sure that individuals and business owners can access the assistance they need to meet their tax obligations."
The union noted that the TACs are particularly helpful to taxpayers who lack access to the internet, as well the elderly, or anyone who prefers to conduct their business in-person. In fiscal year 2023, the IRS had 1.6 million face-to-face meetings with taxpayers at the TACs.
The IRS had
"Reducing the number of customer service centers reverses the progress that the IRS has made when it comes to being accessible and helpful to the American people," Greenwald stated.
"Without these TACs, the people of these communities will have to drive longer distances, possibly 100 miles or more, in order to meet with the IRS and get their questions answered," she added. "Whatever savings the agency believes will come from canceled leases is overshadowed by the harm to taxpayers who are simply trying to do the right thing and comply with the ever-changing tax laws."
Back in February, the U.S. General Services Administration reportedly drew up plans to close more than 110 IRS offices with taxpayer assistance centers, according to the
The IRS is facing the prospect of further budget cuts this coming fiscal year. The House Appropriations Committee voted last week to advance a $9.5 billion budget for the agency in fiscal year 2026, a 23% cut from FY 2025, according to the
By recommending that the IRS receive $853 million less for taxpayer services than the president requested for fiscal year 2026, the appropriations bill being considered by House Republicans would further undermine the agency's customer service mission, the NTEU noted.
However, the IRS has






