
Tax Season 2026: What Went Wrong and What Banks Should Fix Before 2027
Now that another tax season is behind us, many banks are having the same conversations internally:
- Why did reporting take longer than expected?
- Why were advisors asking for manual clarifications?
- Why did operational pressure spike again in Q2?
And most importantly:
👉 Which of these problems were actually avoidable?
The reality is that tax reporting rarely breaks because of one major issue.
It breaks because small inefficiencies accumulate over time.
A missing classification here. A manual workaround there. An edge case that nobody fully automated because “it only happens occasionally.”
Until suddenly:
- support tickets increase
- reconciliation takes days
- and teams spend more time explaining reports than generating them
The patterns we continue to see 🔍
Across the industry, the same weak points appear every year:
- Reports that are technically complete, but difficult for advisors to work with
- Hardcoded logic slowing down regulatory updates
- Mixed asset class portfolios creating inconsistent treatment
- Manual intervention for corporate actions and special cases
- Lack of traceability when clients question specific calculations
None of these issues are new.
But they become much more visible as portfolios become more international and structurally more complex.
💡 What separates scalable setups from reactive ones
The banks that handled this tax season best were usually not the ones with the largest teams.
They were the ones with:
- flexible tax logic
- consistent classification frameworks
- systems designed for change, not just for output
- and reporting structures advisors could actually use directly
Because operational scalability in tax reporting is not a staffing question anymore.
It’s an infrastructure question.
🏗 Looking ahead to 2027
The important part about tax season is not surviving it.
It’s learning from it while the friction points are still visible.
Because once Q2 ends, many organisations move on — until the exact same problems return next year.
The banks that improve fastest are usually the ones that treat tax season as feedback.
Not just as a deadline.