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Tax season anxiety: How to stop stressing and start filing

March 10, 2026
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Tax season anxiety: How to stop stressing and start filing

If your chest gets tight when you sit down to look at tax forms or your mind goes down a rabbit hole of imagining worst-case scenarios (Fines! Jail!), you鈥檙e one of millions of people who dread April 15.

is incredibly common (affecting around of U.S. adults), and tax season tends to amplify it. A found that 46% of U.S adults say that tax season is the most stress-inducing financial moment of the year.

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A graphic showing the fact that 46% of U.S adults say that tax season is the most stress-inducing financial moment of the year.
Alma


shares more about tax season stress, the psychology behind why IRS forms are so stressful, and eight therapist-recommended coping skills for tax anxiety.

What is tax anxiety?

Tax anxiety refers to the intense stress associated with filing taxes, owing money, or facing consequences. It isn鈥檛 a formal diagnosis (there鈥檚 no such thing as tax anxiety disorder), but it鈥檚 a very real mix of emotional, cognitive, and physical symptoms.

According to licensed clinical social worker , 鈥渟ymptoms鈥 of tax anxiety include:

  • Procrastination and avoidance
  • Catastrophic thinking and imagining worst-case scenarios
  • Irritability and mood swings
  • Shame
  • Self-criticism
  • Trouble sleeping due to financial stress
  • Physical symptoms like chest tightness, headaches, stomach discomfort, and muscle tension
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A graphic listing the 7 common symptoms of tax anxiety.
Alma


Why tax season triggers so much anxiety

If you鈥檙e wondering, 鈥淲hy do I avoid doing my taxes?鈥 or 鈥淲hy do taxes make me so stressed out?鈥 here are some common reasons why tax season is so anxiety-inducing.

Facing your financial reality

鈥淭ax season forces people to confront their full financial picture all at once, including income, spending, debt, and savings, which many people actively avoid throughout the rest of the year,鈥 says , a licensed marriage and family therapist and certified financial therapist.

This can be especially hard if money鈥檚 already tight. For many people, tax season brings up fear about owing money, not having enough saved, or realizing their financial situation isn鈥檛 where they hoped it would be.

Unavoidable uncertainty

Tax documents are technical and full of language we just don鈥檛 get. When we don鈥檛 understand something, the brain interprets it as a potential threat,鈥 says Khanna. 鈥淎mbiguity activates uncertainty鈥攁nd uncertainty is one of anxiety鈥檚 favorite fuels.鈥

Not to mention, most of us never receive any formal education teaching us how taxes work, Reis says. Without learning how to do taxes, it鈥檚 no wonder we have overwhelming tax filing anxiety.

Fear of making mistakes

It鈥檚 common to have anxiety about getting something wrong since tax forms involve so many numbers and rules, Reis says. This fear is often worse for freelancers or small business owners who don鈥檛 have straightforward taxes.

鈥淔rom a therapeutic lens, this often shows up as catastrophic thinking, a pattern where the mind jumps straight to worst-case scenarios even when the actual likelihood of serious consequences is low,鈥 says Reis.

Anxiety around authority and punishment

鈥淭axes are tied to government systems, penalties, and potential audits,鈥 says Khanna. 鈥淔or some, this unconsciously activates fears around being judged, punished, or getting in trouble. Even responsible adults can feel like they鈥檙e back in school awaiting a grade.鈥

Real talk: The chances of being audited are low, but many experience audit anxiety. 鈥淭he idea of an audit can feel like being put under a microscope, and it often triggers a fear of being 鈥榗aught鈥 doing something wrong, even when there is no wrongdoing at all,鈥 says Reis.

Avoidance and procrastination

Whether life got in the way or your anxiety caused you to delay, procrastination often backfires.

鈥淎voidance increases stress over time,鈥 Khanna says. 鈥淎s the deadline approaches, urgency rises, and the nervous system shifts into fight-or-flight mode.鈥 This can make it even harder to get started, creating a vicious cycle.

Inherited money trauma

鈥淢any of our reactions to financial stress did not start with us and were either patterns taught in the home as a child,鈥 Khanna says. Growing up around financial instability or shame can shape how your nervous system responds to money in adulthood.

When tax anxiety signals a deeper issue

If you only experience anxiety and avoidance symptoms during tax season, your anxiety is likely situational and doesn鈥檛 necessarily signal a broader mental health condition, like an anxiety disorder or attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD).

However, it may be worth talking to a mental health therapist if:

  • You鈥檙e having intense physical symptoms or panic attacks
  • You have difficult-to-control anxiety year-round 鈥攔elated to finances or not
  • You have trouble starting or completing tasks or focusing in general
  • You frequently experience shame or self-criticism

How to deal with tax anxiety this filing season

Now that you know what fuels anxiety about taxes, here are specific tips to manage tax anxiety, both in terms of managing your mental health and actually getting the paperwork done.

First things first: Soothe tax-related anxiety

1. Reality-check catastrophic thoughts

If you鈥檙e filled with IRS anxiety, spiraling and imagining worst-case scenarios, pause and take a look at these thoughts so you can reframe them.

For example, maybe you鈥檙e imagining a worst-case scenario about going to jail because you messed up on your forms. Khanna suggests asking yourself, 鈥淲hat is actually 濒颈办别濒测?鈥

鈥淢ost tax mistakes are fixable,鈥 she says. 鈥淭he IRS sends letters before levying consequences. Replacing imagined disaster with factual process reduces fear.鈥

2. Take a minute to name emotions

When you鈥檙e having tax season anxiety, remember there are probably other emotions behind the anxiety.

Pause and conduct a brief emotional check-in with yourself,鈥 Reis says. 鈥淎re you experiencing shame about what you earned? Fear about what you might owe? Resentment toward the process itself?鈥

When you label what you feel, it helps your 鈥渢hinking brain鈥 take the lead instead of the 鈥渆motional brain,鈥 Reis explains. Even something as simple as labeling can help lower the intensity of what you鈥檙e feeling.

3. Regulate your nervous system

鈥淔inancial stress manifests somatically as much as it does cognitively, and your body often knows you are anxious before your mind does,鈥 Reis says. For example, you might feel shallow breathing, chest tightness, or muscle tension.

Don鈥檛 push through; listen to your body. Take a break from what you鈥檙e doing and regulate your nervous system. Physical movement is a great way to calm your mind. Try stretching, going for a run, or taking a walk around the block.

You can also try breathing exercises to get out of fight-or-flight mode. Reis recommends box breathing, where you visualize breathing along each side of a square. You do this by:

  • Inhaling for four seconds
  • Holding for four seconds
  • Exhaling for four seconds
  • Holding for four seconds
  • Repeating until you feel more regulated

4. Filing jointly? Talk to your partner

Work on approaching tax season as a team. 鈥淚f you are filing jointly or sharing finances, take a moment to have an honest, non-judgmental conversation before you sit down to file,鈥 Reis says. 鈥淢oney is one of the most emotionally charged topics in relationships, and tax season has a way of bringing unspoken dynamics to the surface.鈥

Resentment around money and financial work can fester if things remain unsaid. Try the 鈥渓istening chair鈥 exercise from Gottman couples therapy: When it鈥檚 your turn in the chair, you get to express what you're thinking and feeling, and your partner鈥檚 only task is to reflect or repeat back what you鈥檙e saying in their own words. Then switch places.

Getting practical: Tackle tax-related tasks

5. Break the work into micro-steps

Wondering how to start taxes when you feel overwhelmed? Instead of adding 鈥渄o taxes鈥 to your to-do list (which is super anxiety-inducing), Khanna suggests breaking it down into microsteps. 鈥淪mall, concrete tasks calm the brain because they feel achievable,鈥 she says. 鈥淧rogress reduces anxiety.鈥

Create a structured checklist with steps. Reis says these steps might include:

  • Gather receipts
  • Collect W-2s
  • Log in to your filing platform
  • Complete one section at a time

6. Block time on your schedule

Khanna recommends choosing a specific time and date to work on your tax checklist. Containing the task can help prevent it from taking up space on other days when you wonder whether you might do taxes today.

As with any undesirable task, getting started is often the hardest part. Once you begin, you might realize it鈥檚 not as terrible as you thought it would be. As a bonus, you can pair the process with a comforting element, like a favorite beverage or calming music, Reis says.

7. Get professional or digital support

Working with a tax professional like a certified public accountant (CPA) can make tax season infinitely more bearable. 鈥淢any people carry a belief that they 鈥榮hould' be able to handle their taxes on their own, but that expectation often adds unnecessary pressure to an already stressful experience,鈥 Reis says. If cost is a concern, you can find low-cost or free tax return preparation services to see if you qualify.

If you can鈥檛 afford professional help, there are many user-friendly tools available online to help you make sense of your tax forms. Reis suggests:

  • TurboTax
  • H&R Block
  • FreeTaxUSA
  • Cash App Taxes

If navigating filing is what stresses you out the most, these platforms walk you through each step, Reis says.

8. Plan early for the next year

To experience less tax filing anxiety next year, start planning early. If you鈥檙e a small business owner or freelancer, Reis suggests using an app like Keeper to track deductions throughout the year so that tax season feels much less chaotic and rushed. 鈥淓ven something as simple as keeping a dedicated folder for all your tax-related documents as they come in, whether on your computer or in a drawer, can cut down on that feeling of anxiety when it is time to file,鈥 she adds.

You don鈥檛 have to do this alone

鈥淚f tax season makes you tense, avoidant, or ashamed, there is nothing 鈥榳rong鈥 with you,鈥 Khanna says. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e not bad at being an adult. You鈥檙e navigating a complex system that didn't start with you, and that deserves patience for yourself, not judgment.鈥

It can be easy to convince ourselves that help isn鈥檛 needed or deserved. Yet experience shows that once a trusted person is in our corner, everything can begin to change for the better.

If general advice isn鈥檛 working for you, reach out to someone who can give you personal support, whether that鈥檚 a tax prep specialist or a mental health therapist who can help you manage anxiety in any and all areas of your life.

was produced by and reviewed and distributed by 爆料TV.


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