IRS will furlough nearly half of its workforce as the government shutdown enters a second week

WASHINGTON – The IRS will furlough nearly half of its workforce on Wednesday as part of the ongoing government shutdown, according to an updated contingency plan posted to its website. Most IRS operations are closed, the agency said in a separate letter to its workers.

The news comes afterΒ President Donald TrumpΒ and CongressΒ failed to strike an agreementΒ to fund federal operations, and theΒ government shutdownΒ has entered its second week, with no discernible endgame in sight.

The agency’s initialΒ Lapsed Appropriations Contingency Plan, which provided for the first five business days of operations, stated that the department would remain open using Democrats’ Inflation Reduction ActΒ funds.

Now, only 39,870 employees, or 53.6%, will remain working as the shutdown continues. It is unclear which workers will remain on the job.

Doreen Greenwald, president of the National Treasury Employees Union, said in a statement that taxpayers should expect increased wait times, backlogs and delays implementing tax law changes as the shutdown continues.

β€œTaxpayers around the country will now have a much harder time getting the assistance they need, just as they get ready to file their extension returns due next week,” she said. β€œEvery day these employees are locked out of work is another day of frustration for taxpayers and a growing backlog of work that sits and waits for the shutdown to end.”

She urged the Trump administration and Congress to “reach an agreement that reopens government and restores the services that Americans need and deserve.”

The notice to workers states that furloughed workers and those who remain on the job will receive back pay once the shutdown ends. This is notable since the Republican administration on TuesdayΒ warned of no guaranteed back payΒ for federal workers affected by a government shutdown.

Last week, Trump said roughlyΒ 750,000 federal workersΒ nationwide were expected to be furloughed across agencies, with someΒ potentially firedΒ by his administration.

Representatives from the IRS, the Treasury and the White House did not comment on the furlough plans.

Earlier this year the IRS embarked on mass layoffs, spearheaded by the Department of Government Efficiency, affecting tens of thousands of workers. At the end of 2024, the agency employed roughly 100,000 workers β€” and currently that hovers around 75,000.