2026 Edition — Updated for Tax Year 2025

How to Extend Your US Tax Return (Form 4868)

The complete guide for Americans in Canada. Whether you need an extra 2 months, 6 months, or even 8 months — here's exactly how each extension works, what it costs, and how to file.

20 min read
Difficulty:
Easy
Free to file

1 Why You Might Need an Extension

Filing a US tax return as an American in Canada is genuinely complex. You're navigating two tax systems simultaneously — the IRS wants your Form 1040 while the CRA wants your T1, and the two don't operate on the same calendar. Here are the most common reasons Americans in Canada file for an extension:
  • Canadian tax slips arrive late. T3 slips (from trusts and mutual funds) often aren't issued until late March or even April — after the US filing deadline. You can't complete your US foreign tax credit calculations without them.
  • Cross-border complexity takes time. Treaty elections, foreign tax credits, RRSP reporting, TFSA complications, and dual-country income require more preparation than a standard US-only return.
  • Your cross-border advisor is managing hundreds of returns. April is the busiest season for cross-border tax professionals. Extensions allow proper, careful preparation rather than rushed filing.
  • You're waiting on information. Selling a Canadian property, receiving a pension, or dealing with a trust can all create delays in gathering the information you need.
Filing an Extension Is Normal — Not a Red Flag
Millions of Americans file for extensions every year. Filing an extension does not, by itself, increase audit risk. The IRS selects returns for audit based on the content of the return, not whether an extension was filed. It is a standard part of the US tax system.
Critical: An Extension Extends Your Time to FILE — Not to Pay
This is the most important thing to understand. Form 4868 gives you more time to file your return — it does not extend your time to pay any taxes you owe (this may not apply if you're out of the US on the filing date). If you owe taxes, interest begins accruing from April 15 regardless of any extension. Americans abroad who qualify as "out of the country" get the payment deadline extended to June 15, but interest still runs from April 15. Pay as much as you can as early as possible.

2 The Extension Timeline for Americans Abroad

Americans living in Canada have access to up to four different deadlines. Here's the complete timeline:
Apr 15
Original Deadline
April 15, 2026
Original due date for your 2025 Form 1040. Any taxes you owe are due on this date — regardless of any filing extensions you take. If you are in the United States on April 15, this is also your deadline to file Form 4868.
⚠ For US-based filers, taxes owed are due today. For Americans abroad who qualify as "out of the country," the payment deadline is also extended to June 15 — but interest begins accruing from this date regardless.
Jun 15
Automatic 2-Month Extension
June 15, 2026
Automatic extension for Americans living outside the US and Puerto Rico — no form required. You qualify if your tax home and main place of work are both outside the US and Puerto Rico, or if you're in military service abroad. Qualification depends on your tax home and main place of business — not just your physical location on April 15. Even if you are physically in the US on April 15 (for a visit or business trip), you still qualify as long as your tax home and main place of work remain outside the US. If you need more than 2 months, file Form 4868 by this date (checking box 8) to get to October 15. You'll also want to ensure to attach a statement to your filed 1040 outlining this extension request.
⚠ This extension covers both filing and payment — late payment penalties do not start until after June 15. However, interest on unpaid taxes still accrues from April 15.
Oct 15
6-Month Extension via Form 4868
October 15, 2026
Maximum standard extension — 6 months from the original April 15 deadline (4 additional months if you are "out of the country" and already had the 2-month auto extension). Requires Form 4868 to be filed by April 15 (if in the US) or June 15 (if abroad, checking box 8). Your complete Form 1040 must be filed by this date.
Dec 15
Discretionary Extension (Americans Abroad Only)
December 15, 2026
Additional 2-month discretionary extension available only to Americans living abroad who already have the October 15 extension. Request by writing a letter to the IRS by October 15 — include your name, SSN, tax year, and reason. The IRS only contacts you if your request is denied. Interest and applicable penalties continue accruing from April 15. It's never advisable to extend to December 15th.
What About Form 2350?
Form 2350 is a completely separate form with a different purpose. It is for Americans abroad who have not yet met the bona fide residence test or physical presence test needed to claim the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (FEIE). Form 2350 extends your filing deadline to 30 days after the date you expect to meet the applicable test.

Form 2350 does not replace Form 4868 — they serve entirely different purposes. Most Americans in Canada who have lived there for more than a year use Form 4868, not Form 2350. See IRS Publication 54 for more information.

3 How to File Form 4868 (3 Methods)

There are three ways to request an extension. Choose the method that works best for you — you only need to use one.

Simplest option — no form to file

No Form 4868 Required
If you make an electronic payment and indicate it is for an extension, the IRS automatically processes your extension. You do not need to file Form 4868 separately. Your extension is automatically processed when you pay part or all of your estimated income tax electronically.
1

Choose an Electronic Payment Method

The IRS accepts electronic payments via:
  • IRS Direct Pay — pay directly from your bank account at irs.gov/payments/direct-pay
  • IRS Online Account — at your IRS online account
  • EFTPS (Electronic Federal Tax Payment System) — at eftps.gov
  • Credit or debit card
  • Digital wallet — Click to Pay, PayPal, or Venmo
For a complete list of payment options, see irs.gov/payments.
2

Indicate the Payment Is for an Extension

When prompted, select that the payment is for an extension. This is the key step — without indicating it is for an extension, the payment will be applied to your balance but no extension will be processed.
3

Save Your Confirmation Number

You will receive a confirmation number after paying online or by phone. Write it down and save it. This is your proof that the extension was processed.
Don't Double-File
If you make an electronic extension payment, you do NOT also need to file Form 4868. Doing both is redundant. Pick one method.

File electronically through tax software or a tax professional

1

Choose Your E-Filing Method

You can e-file Form 4868 through:
  • Your tax software — most major tax software packages support Form 4868 e-filing
  • A tax professional who uses IRS e-file
  • IRS Free File — several companies offer free e-filing of Form 4868 through the Free File Program at irs.gov/freefile
2

Have Your 2024 Return Ready

You will be asked to provide information from your 2024 tax return for taxpayer verification purposes. Have it available before you start.
3

Complete Form 4868 Information

Enter your:
  • Name(s) and address
  • Social Security Number(s)
  • Estimate of total 2025 tax liability (Form 1040, line 24)
  • Total 2025 payments already made (excluding this payment)
  • Balance due (line 4 minus line 5)
  • Amount you are paying (if any)
  • Check box 8 if you are out of the country
4

Submit and Save the Acknowledgment

After submitting, you will receive an electronic acknowledgment. Save this with your tax records. Do not mail a paper copy of Form 4868 if you file electronically (unless you are also sending a check or money order).

For those who prefer paper filing or fiscal year taxpayers (must use paper)

1

Download Form 4868

Download Form 4868 (Application for Automatic Extension of Time to File U.S. Individual Income Tax Return) from irs.gov/Form4868.
2

Complete the Form

Fill in all fields: your name(s), address, SSN(s), estimated tax liability, total payments, balance due, and amount you are paying. Check box 8 if you are out of the country and a US citizen or resident.
Reasonable Estimate Required
Your estimate should be reasonable based on the information available to you. Minor inaccuracies will not invalidate the extension — only gross negligence or bad faith in estimating would be an issue.
3

Mail to the Correct Address

For filers from a foreign country (including Canada):
  • If making a payment: P.O. Box 1303, Charlotte, NC 28201-1303 USA
  • If not making a payment: Department of the Treasury, Internal Revenue Service Center, Austin, TX 73301-0215 USA

Note: Private delivery services (UPS, FedEx, DHL) cannot deliver to P.O. box addresses. Use the U.S. Postal Service for P.O. box addresses.

4

Mail by the Deadline — Keep Proof

Mail Form 4868 by June 15, 2026 if you are out of the country (or by April 15 if in the US). Keep a copy of the completed form and your mailing receipt as proof of timely filing.

4 The Automatic 2-Month Extension for Americans Abroad

This section is especially important for the Beacon Hill audience — Americans living in Canada. If you qualify as "out of the country," you get an automatic 2-month extension to June 15 without filing anything.

Who Qualifies as "Out of the Country"?

According to the IRS, you are out of the country if either of the following apply:
  • You live outside the United States and Puerto Rico AND your main place of work is outside the United States and Puerto Rico, OR
  • You are in military or naval service on duty outside the United States and Puerto Rico
You Still Qualify if Visiting the US on April 15
Qualification depends on your tax home and main place of business being outside the United States and Puerto Rico — not just your residency status. Even if you are physically present in the US on April 15 (for a vacation or business trip, for example), you still qualify as long as your tax home and main place of work remain outside the US.

What the Automatic Extension Covers

  • ✅ Extends your filing deadline from April 15 to June 15
  • ✅ No form or request required — it is automatic
  • ✅ When you file, attach a statement explaining that you qualify as out of the country
  • ✅ Extends your payment deadline to June 15 as well — late payment penalties do not begin until after June 15
  • ❌ Does NOT stop interest from accruing on unpaid tax from April 15
Interest Runs from April 15 — Even with Extensions
Even if you qualify for the automatic 2-month extension and do everything correctly, you will still owe interest on any unpaid tax from April 15, 2026. The IRS instruction is explicit: "Interest will still be charged, however, on payments made after the due date, without regard to the extension." If you had a good reason for not paying on time, you will still owe interest.

Getting to October 15 (The Additional 4 Months)

If you need more time beyond June 15, file Form 4868 by June 15 and check box 8 ("Check here if you're out of the country"). This gives you an additional 4 months — bringing your total to 6 months from the original April 15 due date (October 15, 2026).
Penalties: Filing vs. Payment
The late filing penalty (5%/month, up to 25%) does NOT apply if you file by your extended deadline.

The late payment penalty (0.5%/month, up to 25%) begins after your extended due date (June 15 for those qualifying as out of the country) — but may be waived entirely if you paid at least 90% of your tax by the original due date and pay the remaining balance when you file (reasonable cause). The interest rate is the federal short-term rate plus 3%, compounded daily.

5 Interest, Penalties & What It Costs

Understanding the cost of not paying — and the cost of not filing — is essential to making smart decisions about your extension.
Extension Cost Summary
Item Rate Starts From Maximum
Interest on unpaid tax Federal short-term rate + 3%, compounded daily April 15, 2026 No cap — runs until paid
Late payment penalty 0.5% per month (or part of month) April 15, 2026 (June 15 for out-of-country filers) 25% of unpaid tax
Late payment penalty (installment agreement) 0.25% per month — only if IRS-approved installment agreement is in place April 15, 2026 25% of unpaid tax
Late filing penalty 5% per month (or part of month) of unpaid tax After extended deadline 25% of unpaid tax
Late filing penalty — minimum $525 (for 2025 tax year returns; adjusted annually for inflation) or balance due, whichever is smaller If return is more than 60 days late
Filing extension (Form 4868) Free — $0

Reasonable Cause — Avoiding the Late Payment Penalty

Paying at least 90% of your total 2025 tax liability by April 15 (through withholding, estimated payments, or payments with Form 4868) and paying the remaining balance when you file strengthens your position for penalty relief. However, the IRS evaluates reasonable cause based on facts and circumstances — it is not guaranteed simply by meeting the 90% threshold. Attach a statement to your return (not to Form 4868) explaining your situation.
The Math Is Simple
Filing Form 4868 is free. Not filing when you're not ready costs you 5% per month in late filing penalties — which can add up to 25% of your tax bill. There is essentially no downside to filing Form 4868 if you cannot file your return on time. Always file the extension.

6 How to Extend to December 15 (Americans Abroad)

If you are an American living abroad and you still cannot file by October 15, there is one more option available to you — an additional discretionary extension to December 15, 2026.
Requirements Before You Can Request This Extension
  • You must already have the October 15 extension in place (Form 4868 must have been filed)
  • You must be an American living abroad — this is not available to US-based filers
  • Your written request must reach the IRS by October 15

How to Request the December 15 Extension

1

Write a Letter to the IRS

There is no special form — write a letter including:
  • Your name (and spouse's name if filing jointly)
  • Your Social Security Number(s)
  • The tax year (2025)
  • Your reason for needing the additional time
  • A statement that you are a US citizen or resident living abroad
2

Submit by October 15, 2026

Your letter must reach the IRS by October 15, 2026. Mail it to the appropriate IRS address for international filers. The IRS will only contact you if your request is denied — in practice, the IRS only contacts you if your request is denied.
3

File Your Return by December 15

If granted, file your complete Form 1040 by December 15, 2026. Remember that interest and any applicable penalties continue to accrue from April 15 throughout this entire period.
Form 2350 vs. Form 4868 — Different Forms, Different Purposes
Form 2350 (Application for Extension of Time to File U.S. Income Tax Return) is for Americans abroad who are trying to qualify for the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (FEIE) under the bona fide residence test or physical presence test, but who have not yet met the required time period. Form 2350 extends your filing deadline to 30 days after the date you expect to meet the test. See IRS Publication 54 for details.

Form 4868 is your standard filing extension. They are completely separate forms serving different purposes. Most long-term Americans in Canada use Form 4868, not Form 2350.

7 Step-by-Step Extension Checklist

Use this interactive checklist to track your progress. Click each item to mark it complete.
  • Determine which extension applies. Are you living outside the US and Puerto Rico with your main workplace also abroad? If yes, you qualify for the automatic 2-month extension to June 15. Decide whether you also need the full 6-month extension to October 15.
  • Estimate your 2025 tax liability. Use your available information to estimate the amount on Form 1040, line 24. Your estimate should be reasonable based on the information available to you — minor inaccuracies will not invalidate the extension.
  • Calculate your total 2025 payments already made. Add up withholding from W-2s and 1099s, quarterly estimated tax payments, and any other prior payments. Do not include the payment you plan to make with the extension.
  • Determine your balance due. Subtract your total payments from your estimated tax liability. This is your estimated balance due.
  • Pay as much as possible by April 15. Even a partial payment reduces the interest accruing on your unpaid balance. Paying 90%+ of your liability by April 15 and the remaining balance when you file may support a reasonable cause argument for penalty relief.
  • File Form 4868 (if needed) by April 15 or June 15. If you are in the US, file by April 15. If you are out of the country, file by June 15 and check box 8. Or make an electronic extension payment — no form needed.
  • Save your confirmation number. Whether you e-file Form 4868 or make an electronic extension payment, you will receive a confirmation number. Save it — this is your proof of timely extension request.
  • File your complete return before October 15 (or December 15 if you have the additional extension). Your complete Form 1040, all schedules, and all required attachments must be filed by your deadline.
  • Pay any remaining balance when you file. Include any remaining amount owed with your return. This satisfies the "reasonable cause" requirement if you paid 90%+ by April 15.
  • Keep records for at least 3 years. Retain copies of your filed return, Form 4868 (or payment confirmation), and all supporting documents for a minimum of 3 years from the filing date. Longer if you have foreign accounts or complex situations.

8 Common Mistakes to Avoid

These are the errors we see most often — and every one of them can cost you money or create problems with the IRS.
  • Thinking the extension means you don't owe taxes yet. This is the most costly misconception. Form 4868 extends your time to file — not your time to pay. Interest begins accruing on any unpaid balance from April 15 regardless of any extension. Note: for Americans abroad who qualify as "out of the country," late payment penalties do not begin until after June 15 — but interest runs from April 15.
  • Not paying anything with your extension. Even if you can't pay the full amount, pay as much as you can. Every dollar you pay by April 15 reduces the interest you'll owe. Paying 90%+ of your total liability may support a reasonable cause argument for penalty relief.
  • Not knowing the automatic 2-month extension exists. Many Americans in Canada file Form 4868 in April when they didn't need to — they already had until June 15 automatically. If you live outside the US with your main workplace also abroad, you have until June 15 to file Form 4868 or pay electronically to get the October 15 extension.
  • Missing the October 15 final deadline. If you file Form 4868 but then miss the October 15 deadline, late filing penalties (5% per month, up to 25%) begin from October 15 — not retroactively from April 15 — provided your extension was validly filed. Mark it on your calendar in bold.
  • Not attaching the "out of the country" statement. When you file your return as someone who qualified for the automatic 2-month extension, you should attach a brief statement explaining that you qualify as "out of the country" (living and working outside the US and Puerto Rico). This documents your qualification.
  • Confusing Form 4868 with Form 2350. Form 2350 is for qualifying for the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion — a completely different purpose. If you're simply extending your filing deadline, you want Form 4868, not Form 2350.
  • Filing Form 4868 AND making an electronic extension payment. You only need one. If you make an electronic payment indicating it is for an extension, your extension is automatically processed. Filing Form 4868 in addition to that is redundant.

9 Frequently Asked Questions

Not for the first 2-month extension. Americans living in Canada automatically qualify for a 2-month extension to June 15 — no form or request is required. You qualify because you live outside the US and Puerto Rico and your main workplace is also outside the US and Puerto Rico. However, if you need time beyond June 15 to file your return, you must file Form 4868 by June 15 (checking box 8) to get the full 6-month extension to October 15, 2026.
No. Filing Form 4868 does not increase your likelihood of being audited. Millions of Americans file extensions every year. Filing an extension does not, by itself, increase audit risk. The IRS selects returns for audit based on the content of the return, not whether an extension was filed. A well-prepared, accurate return filed on October 15 is better than a rushed, error-prone return filed on April 15.
Yes. If you are out of the country on the due date of your return, you have until June 15, 2026 to file Form 4868 (or make an electronic extension payment). You must check box 8 on Form 4868 to indicate you are out of the country. This will give you an additional 4 months — to October 15 — on top of your automatic 2-month extension.
File Form 4868 anyway — always. Even if you can't pay a single dollar, filing Form 4868 prevents the late filing penalty (5% per month, up to 25% of your balance). The late payment penalty for not paying on time is only 0.5% per month. So the math is clear: the cost of not filing is 10 times the cost of not paying. File the extension, then pay as much as you possibly can to limit the interest that will accrue. If you can't pay at all, you may also qualify for IRS payment plans or currently not collectible status — but that's a separate conversation.
No. The FBAR (FinCEN Form 114) is technically due April 15, but has a built-in automatic extension to October 15 — no form, letter, or request of any kind is needed. Your FBAR extension is completely separate from your income tax extension. Form 4868 extends your Form 1040 only. For complete FBAR filing instructions, see our FBAR Filing Guide.
Yes. If you plan to file a joint return, you can file one Form 4868 for both spouses. Enter the primary SSN on line 2 and your spouse's SSN on line 3. If you later decide to file separately, you can split any payment made with Form 4868 between you in any agreed amounts. If you each filed a separate Form 4868 but later file jointly, enter the total paid with both forms on the appropriate line of your joint return.
Yes. All US citizens — including dual US-Canadian citizens — who live outside the United States and Puerto Rico and whose main place of work is also outside the US and Puerto Rico qualify for the automatic 2-month extension to June 15. Holding Canadian citizenship in addition to US citizenship has no effect on this. You still owe interest on any unpaid tax from April 15, 2026.
Your US and Canadian returns are completely separate. Form 4868 only extends your US federal income tax return. For your Canadian T1 return, check with the CRA or your Canadian tax advisor — extension rules vary by province and filing situation. Most individual Canadian T1 returns are due April 30 (June 15 for self-employed individuals and their spouses). Contact the CRA or a qualified Canadian tax professional regarding provincial extensions.

Your Extension Is Step One. Your Complete Cross-Border Plan Is What Matters.

Cross-border tax extensions are just the beginning. If you're an American living in Canada, your financial picture involves two tax systems, treaty elections, foreign tax credits, RRSP coordination, and retirement planning across two countries. Getting the extension right is step one — getting your complete cross-border financial plan right is what we do. Book a Free Consultation Learn what we do →
This guide is provided for educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute tax, legal, or financial advice. Tax rules can change; verify all details with the IRS or a qualified cross-border tax professional before making any filing decisions. Beacon Hill Wealth Management is not a tax preparation firm and does not file returns on behalf of clients.