The American tax and regulatory system is currently functioning like a high-speed train running on tracks that are simultaneously being built, dismantled, and rerouted. For accounting professionals, the whiplash is palpable. On one front, practitioners are fighting a high-stakes battle with an understaffed IRS over pandemic-era refund deadlines. On another, they are watching the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) abruptly roll back one of the most significant disclosure mandates of the decade.
As we move deeper into 2026, the intersection of legal battles, agency operational failures, and shifting regulatory goalposts is forcing CPA firms to constantly recalibrate their advisory strategies. The latest developments—ranging from the IRS's controversial appeal in the Kwong case to the SEC's climate rule rescission—paint a picture of a regulatory landscape in profound transition.
The Kwong Appeal: Billions in Taxpayer Refunds Hanging in the Balance
Perhaps the most immediate issue keeping tax professionals awake at night is the ongoing saga of pandemic-era refund claims. The IRS has officially appealed the Kwong decision, a move that the National Taxpayer Advocate warns could jeopardize countless legitimate refund claims.
At the heart of Kwong is the interpretation of disaster relief provisions under IRC Section 7508A. When the COVID-19 pandemic triggered nationwide disaster declarations, deadlines for filing tax returns were extended. The plaintiffs in Kwong successfully argued in lower court that this automatic extension also applied to the "lookback" period for claiming refunds. The IRS, however, vehemently disagrees, arguing that the extension only applied to the physical act of filing, not the statutory window for the money itself.
"If the IRS prevails in its appeal, we will see a retroactive tightening of the rules that many practitioners and taxpayers relied upon in good faith during an unprecedented global crisis. The administrative and financial fallout for taxpayers could be staggering."
For practitioners, the IRS's decision to appeal means that any client who filed a refund claim relying on the extended COVID-19 lookback period is now in a state of limbo. Firms must proactively identify affected clients, communicate the risk of clawbacks or denials, and consider filing protective claims where applicable.
Inside the IRS: A Workforce Pushed to the Brink
The IRS's aggressive legal posture in Kwong stands in stark contrast to its internal operational reality. The agency is fighting tooth and nail in the courts while simultaneously drowning in administrative backlogs and technological debt.
A recent report from the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration (TIGTA) paints a grim picture of the agency's human capital crisis. According to the report, IRS overtime rose 12% in 2025 while the overall workforce dropped. Taxpayer Services bore the brunt of this strain, logging the most extra hours as the agency attempted to mask its headcount deficit with brute-force labor.
This human capital deficit is directly contributing to severe operational vulnerabilities. In a separate and highly critical TIGTA report, auditors discovered that the IRS has been manually tracking billions of dollars in missing or unidentified taxpayer payments. In response to the watchdog's findings, the IRS has finally agreed to develop an electronic system to track these funds.
The Pendulum Swings Back: SEC and PCAOB Pivot
While tax professionals navigate IRS dysfunction, auditors and public company CFOs are experiencing their own form of regulatory whiplash. After years of pushing toward expansive, European-style environmental, social, and governance (ESG) reporting, the SEC is hitting the brakes.
The SEC's Climate Rule Rescission
In a stunning reversal, the SEC has proposed the rescission of its historic climate disclosure rules adopted just two years ago in 2024. The proposal signals a definitive return to a materiality-focused approach to regulatory oversight.
The 2024 rules originally mandated extensive disclosures regarding Scope 1 and Scope 2 greenhouse gas emissions, climate-related risks, and the financial impacts of severe weather events. The compliance costs for public companies—and the corresponding advisory revenues for accounting firms—were projected to be astronomical. However, facing relentless legal challenges, pushback from corporate America, and a shifting political climate, the SEC is stepping back.
For accounting firms that invested heavily in building out massive ESG assurance practices, this rescission requires a strategic pivot. While voluntary sustainability reporting will undoubtedly continue driven by investor demand and international frameworks like the CSRD, the immediate regulatory gun to the head of US public companies has been lowered.
PCAOB Seeks Modernization
Concurrently, the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (PCAOB) is recognizing the need to update its own legacy processes. The regulator is currently working to form an Inspections Modernization Council.
This new advisory group is tasked with bringing the PCAOB's inspection approach into the modern era, focusing on how to better evaluate audit quality in an environment increasingly dominated by artificial intelligence, offshore talent, and complex data analytics. By inviting external applicants to join the council, the PCAOB is acknowledging that its traditional "tick-and-tie" inspection methodology is insufficient for the audits of tomorrow.
Mapping the 2026 Regulatory Landscape
To understand the sheer volume of changes impacting the profession, we can look at how these developments alter the strategic priorities for different practice areas:
| Regulatory Body | Recent Action | Primary Impact on CPA Firms |
|---|---|---|
| Internal Revenue Service (IRS) | Appealing the Kwong decision on COVID-era refund lookback periods. | Requires urgent client communication regarding potential refund denials; increases need for protective claims. |
| Internal Revenue Service (IRS) | Relying on heavy overtime amid workforce drops; building new payment tracking tech. | Expect continued delays in dispute resolution and higher risks of misapplied client payments. |
| Securities & Exchange Commission (SEC) | Proposing rescission of 2024 climate disclosure rules. | Shifts ESG advisory from a mandatory compliance service back to a strategic, investor-driven advisory service. |
| PCAOB | Forming the Inspections Modernization Council. | Signals upcoming changes in how firm quality control and AI-driven audit tools will be evaluated. |
Strategic Imperatives for Accounting Professionals
How should firms navigate this collision of IRS operational strain and SEC regulatory rollbacks? The current environment demands a highly proactive, defensive posture.
- Audit Your Refund Pipeline: Identify every client whose refund claim relies on the disaster extension provisions debated in Kwong. Prepare them for the possibility of a prolonged legal fight or a denied claim.
- Over-Document IRS Interactions: Given TIGTA's findings on the IRS's manual tracking of missing payments and its exhausted workforce, firms must assume that IRS systems will fail. Send payments via traceable methods, pull transcripts frequently, and document every phone call.
- Reposition ESG Advisory: With the SEC backing down on climate rules, firms must pivot their ESG messaging. Focus on the operational efficiencies of sustainability, compliance with state-level mandates (like California's climate laws), and the demands of institutional investors, rather than SEC compliance.
- Prepare for PCAOB 2.0: Audit practices must ensure that their use of AI and emerging technologies is deeply integrated into their System of Quality Management (SQM). The PCAOB's new modernization council will likely target the "black box" of AI in upcoming inspection cycles.
Conclusion
The events of May 2026 highlight a profound truth about the current state of the US accounting profession: we are operating in an environment where regulatory certainty is a luxury of the past. Whether it is the IRS fighting to limit pandemic-era relief while struggling to balance its own books, or the SEC rolling back its most ambitious rule in a decade, the ground is constantly shifting.
For practitioners, the path forward requires agility. The firms that will thrive in this era are those that act not just as compliance processors, but as strategic interpreters—helping clients see through the fog of agency appeals, operational breakdowns, and regulatory reversals to make sound financial decisions.
