Close

Blog

Back to Article List

January 2026 Business Due Dates

Share this article...
January 2026 Business Due Dates

January 15 - Employer’s Monthly Deposit Due -

If you are an employer and the monthly deposit rules apply, January 15 is the due date for you to make your deposit of Social Security, Medicare, and withheld income tax for December 2025. This is also the due date for the nonpayroll withholding deposit for December 2025 if the monthly deposit rule applies. Employment tax deposits must be made electronically (no paper coupons), except employers with a deposit liability under $2,500 for a return period may remit payments quarterly or annually with the return.

January 15 - Farmers and Fishermen -

Pay your estimated tax for 2025 using Form 1040-ES. You have until April 15 to file your 2025 income tax return (Form 1040 or Form 1040-SR). If you don't pay your estimated tax by January 16 15, you must file your 2025 return and pay any tax due by March 2, 2026, to avoid an estimated tax penalty.


Weekends & Holidays:

If a due date falls on a Saturday, Sunday or legal holiday, the due date is automatically extended until the next business day that is not itself a legal holiday.

Disaster Area Extensions:

Please note that when a geographical area is designated as a disaster area, due dates will be extended. For more information whether an area has been designated a disaster area and the filing extension dates visit the following websites:

FEMA: https://www.fema.gov/disaster/declarations
IRS: https://www.irs.gov/newsroom/tax-relief-in-disaster-situations






PDF
Printable PDF

Have a Question About This Topic?

I confirm this is a service inquiry and not an advertising message or solicitation. By clicking “Submit”, I acknowledge and agree to the creation of an account and to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.

NEVER MISS A STORY.

Sign up for our newsletters and get our articles delivered right to your inbox.

 

Track Your Refund

 
Track Federal Refund Check Federal Amended Return Refund

Check your State Refund