Estimated Tax Due Dates for 2026 (and 2025)

The four quarterly deadlines, the oddly-shaped periods they cover, and what it actually costs when you miss one.

Tax year 2026 deadlines

PaymentIncome earnedDue dateDay
Q1Jan 1 – Mar 31, 2026April 15, 2026Wednesday
Q2Apr 1 – May 31, 2026June 15, 2026Monday
Q3Jun 1 – Aug 31, 2026September 15, 2026Tuesday
Q4Sep 1 – Dec 31, 2026January 15, 2027Friday

All four 2026 dates fall on business days — no weekend shifts this cycle. When a deadline does land on a weekend or legal holiday, it moves to the next business day. Federally declared disaster areas can get postponed deadlines; check IRS disaster relief announcements for your state.

Tax year 2025 deadlines (for returns being filed in 2026)

PaymentIncome earnedDue dateNote
Q1Jan 1 – Mar 31, 2025April 15, 2025
Q2Apr 1 – May 31, 2025June 16, 2025June 15 was a Sunday
Q3Jun 1 – Aug 31, 2025September 15, 2025
Q4Sep 1 – Dec 31, 2025January 15, 2026

The trap in the calendar

Notice the periods: the second "quarter" covers only two months (April–May), and the fourth stretches across four. People who set a simple "every 3 months" reminder routinely miss June 15 — and June is the single most-missed deadline of the cycle. The math doesn't care about fairness: each missed installment starts its own penalty meter.

What actually happens when you miss one

Already missed one? Get the exact damage and the "pay this much today to stop the meter" number: IRS underpayment penalty calculator →

Who needs to pay quarterly at all

Broadly: anyone who expects to owe $1,000 or more after withholding — typically freelancers, contractors, landlords, and investors without enough W-2 withholding to cover their full bill. If withholding plus credits will cover the safe-harbor amount, quarterly payments aren't required.

Estimate, not tax advice. Special calendars apply to farmers and fishermen, fiscal-year filers, and disaster-area taxpayers. Confirm your own deadlines against IRS.gov.