Complete guide to filing for an extension — Form 4868 for individuals, Form 7004 for businesses. Includes a payment calculator and a confirmation checklist so you don't get hit with the failure-to-pay penalty.
Other forms exist for specific situations: Form 8868 for tax-exempt organizations (Form 990 series), Form 2350 for citizens/residents abroad who need extra time to qualify for the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (FEIE).
Estimate what you'll owe so you can pay it with the extension. Rough math is better than no math — the IRS just needs a good-faith estimate.
Pay this amount with your extension via IRS Direct Pay, EFTPS, debit/credit card, or check with Form 4868. Paying at least 90% of total tax owed with the extension avoids the failure-to-pay penalty (interest still accrues on any unpaid balance).
For S-Corps and partnerships, the original deadline is March 15; the extended deadline is September 15. For C-Corps, March 15 doesn't apply — the original is April 15, extended to October 15.
Most states accept the federal extension and don't require a separate state filing. But some require their own form, and some require it even if you don't owe state tax. Common state-specific forms include CA Form 3519, NY Form IT-370, MA Form M-4868.
If your state doesn't piggy-back on the federal extension, the state extension is usually required by the same April 15 deadline. Check your state Department of Revenue website before filing.