Tax season does not care that you worked nights, stacked overtime, or spent half the year running on bad sleep and station coffee. It shows up anyway, same as smoke through a doorway, and if you are not ready for it, the damage spreads fast.
For firefighters, a late return is rarely just a paperwork problem. It can lead to penalties, inaccurate estimates, missed deductions, and costly mistakes tied to overtime, deferred comp, pension income, and side work.
For most taxpayers, the federal deadline to file and pay for the 2025 tax year is Wednesday, April 15, 2026.¹ If you miss it while you owe, the Internal Revenue Service can stack penalties: failure to file is generally 5% of unpaid tax per month up to 25%,² and failure to pay is generally 0.5% per month up to 25%.³
This guide is built around firefighter realities: overtime swings, pension systems, governmental 457 plans, side income, and two major policy changes affecting 2025 returns. The goal is simple: take control before April.
The Deadline Pressure Test
An extension gives you more time to file, not more time to pay.⁴ If you need the extension, use it, but treat April 15 like a hard pay deadline anyway.⁴
Three moves that prevent a last week meltdown:
• File even if you cannot pay in full. Not filing can trigger the bigger failure to file penalty on top of what you already owe.² ³
• If a key form is missing or wrong, file an extension and pay a reasonable estimate by April 15.⁴ This protects you from rushing bad numbers into a permanent filing.
• Decide now who owns what: you own the deadline and the estimate, your employer owns payroll reporting timelines, and your retirement system owns when it issues forms.
Once the clock is under control, prioritize the new lever that can matter for firefighters with heavy overtime: the 2025 overtime deduction.
Overtime and the 2025 Return: Claiming the New Deduction Available
The One, Big, Beautiful Bill Act created a new deduction for “qualified overtime compensation” effective for 2025 through 2028.⁵ This is not the whole overtime check. The IRS ties it to the overtime premium above your regular rate required by the Fair Labor Standards Act, and it must be reported on Form W 2, Form 1099, or another required statement.⁵
What matters before you file:
• The maximum deduction is $12,500, or $25,000 for joint filers.⁵
• It begins to phase out when modified adjusted gross income is over $150,000, or $300,000 for joint filers.⁵
• If you are married, you generally must file jointly to claim it.⁵
• The IRS has said there is transition relief for tax year 2025 as reporting starts, so confirm with payroll how it will identify qualified overtime compensation before you file.⁵
Confirm your qualified overtime number rather than guessing it from pay stubs. Ask payroll how it will identify qualified overtime compensation for 2025.⁵ If you cannot get clear reporting in time, extending can be cleaner than filing and amending later.⁴ ⁵
After overtime, focus on the handful of account moves that still count for 2025.
Retirement and health accounts: the last chance moves that still count
Most workplace plan deferrals for 2025 had to happen during 2025. But three buckets can still matter before you file.
IRA contributions: The IRS instructions for Form 8606 state that the due date for making IRA contributions for 2025 for most people is April 15, 2026.⁸ The 2025 IRA contribution limit is $7,000, or $8,000 if you are age 50 or older.⁷ If you contribute between January 1 and April 15, make sure the custodian codes it as a 2025 contribution, not a 2026 contribution.
HSA contributions: if you were eligible for an HSA in 2025, the instructions for Form 8889 are clear: include 2025 contributions you make in 2026 by the unextended filing deadline for your 2025 return, April 15, 2026.⁹ For 2025, the HSA contribution limits are $4,300 for self-only coverage and $8,550 for family coverage, plus an additional $1,000 if you are age 55 or older.¹⁰
2026 payroll choices. This does not change your 2025 return, but it changes how you feel next April. For 2026, the elective deferral limit for most 401(k), 403 (b), governmental 457 plans, and the federal Thrift Savings Plan is $24,500.⁷ If you are age 50 or older, catch-up contributions can raise your total, and there is an even higher catch-up tier for ages 60 through 63.⁷ Set your deferral early enough that it is spread across the year instead of coming out of a few fall paychecks.
One more 2025 update that affects nearly everyone: the standard deduction for 2025 is $15,750 for single filers and married filing separately, $31,500 for married filing jointly, and $23,625 for head of household.⁶ The cap on the state and local tax itemized deduction was also increased to $40,000 for eligible taxpayers, which can change whether itemizing makes sense.⁶
Contributions are the offense. Defense is knowing what happens when money leaves the accounts firefighters use most.
Pension and deferred comp: avoid penalty surprises when money moves
Firefighters are more likely than many workers to retire earlier, switch departments, or run a bridge period before a full pension starts. That makes the distribution rules real.
Governmental 457 plans: the IRS explains that eligible state or local government 457 plans are not “qualified retirement plans” for purposes of the 10% additional tax, so distributions from those plans generally are not subject to the 10% early distribution tax.¹³ But the IRS also warns that if your 457 received money rolled in from a qualified plan like a 401k, that portion can carry the 10% rules with it.¹³ Before you roll other money into a 457, ask the plan whether rollover dollars are tracked separately and how distributions are treated.
Public safety exception: IRS guidance lists an exception for distributions made to a qualified public safety employee from a governmental plan after separation from service during or after the year the employee turns age 50 or has 25 years of service, whichever is earlier.¹³ This can prevent a penalty, but the distribution can still be taxable income.
Retired public safety officer premium exclusion: IRS Publication 575 explains that eligible retired public safety officers can exclude from gross income distributions from certain governmental plans used for health or long-term care insurance premiums, up to the lesser of $3,000 or the premiums paid.¹⁴ If you are retired, confirm your retirement system’s process and make sure the reporting supports the exclusion.
Governmental 457(b) plans are not classified as "qualified plans" for purposes of the 10% early distribution tax. Distributions are generally not subject to that penalty regardless of your age at separation.
If your 457 received money rolled in from a qualified plan like a 401(k), that portion can carry the 10% early distribution rules with it. The plan may track rollover dollars separately.
Eligible retired public safety officers may exclude distributions used for health or long-term care insurance premiums from gross income, up to the lesser of $3,000 or premiums paid.
With retirement handled, there is one more change that has hit some firefighters hard since 2025: Social Security.
Social Security after the Fairness Act: bigger checks, new tax questions
Do not assume firefighters do not get Social Security. Some do, some do not. The Social Security Administration notes that most state and local public employees, about 72%, work in Social Security-covered employment and were not affected by WEP or GPO.¹¹
For those who were affected, the Social Security Fairness Act ended the Windfall Elimination Provision and the Government Pension Offset.¹¹ The SSA says it began adjusting payments starting February 25, 2025, and eligible beneficiaries received a one-time payment covering increases back to January 2024.¹¹
Two moves that matter before April: • If your benefit increased, keep your Form SSA 1099 with your tax packet. Social Security taxation depends on your other income, and an increase can change the taxable portion.
• If you received a lump sum back payment in 2025 that included benefits for earlier years, IRS guidance says you include the taxable part in the year received, but you may elect a method to calculate the taxable portion for the earlier year separately if it lowers the taxable amount.¹²
If you got a big retroactive Social Security deposit, run that election calculation instead of accepting the default software result.
Now bring it home with a checklist that matches shift life and reduces rework.
A pre-April checklist built for shift work
Confirm the records
• Form W-2 is correct, and confirm whatever payroll information your employer provides if you are claiming the overtime deduction.⁵
• Any Form 1099 R is included if you had a rollover or distribution.
• IRA and HSA contributions funded between January and April are coded to the correct year.⁸ ⁹
Do not chase bad “write-offs.”
For most Form W 2 employees, the IRS explains you can no longer claim most miscellaneous itemized deductions that used to cover unreimbursed employee expenses, with limited exceptions for specific categories.¹⁵ Gear and station purchases usually do not create a federal deduction for a W 2 firefighter.
Keep side income clean
The IRS explains that payment apps and online marketplaces must send Form 1099 K when payments for goods or services exceed $20,000 and more than 200 transactions, though they may send one at lower amounts.¹⁶ Whether you receive a form or not, clean records make your reporting defensible.
Where Protection Red fits
Overtime, IRA and HSA contributions, 457 distributions, pension income, and Social Security changes all collide on one return, and small mistakes can become expensive ones in a hurry.
Get ahead of the deadline, confirm the numbers that matter, and make decisions before the pressure hits. File on time if you can. Extend if you need to. But either way, treat April 15 like the line you do not want to cross blindly.
That is where Protection Red fits in. We focus on helping firefighters make sense of pensions, retirement accounts, insurance decisions, and the tax consequences that come with them. Because when tax season hits, the best outcome is boring: no scramble, no ugly surprises, and no preventable money left on the table. Click the button below to get started.


