Free VITA & TCE Tax Help at U.S. Public Libraries (2026 Filing Season)
By Mustafa Bilgic · Last updated · ~12 min read
What this guide covers
What is VITA, and why is it at the library?
The Volunteer Income Tax Assistance (VITA) programme has been administered by the IRS since 1969. VITA volunteers — IRS-certified preparers who pass annual ethics, basic, and intermediate exams — prepare federal and (in most cases) state tax returns for free for filers earning roughly $67,000 or less (2026 threshold; the threshold rises slightly each year with inflation).
The companion Tax Counseling for the Elderly (TCE) programme serves filers aged 60 and older, regardless of income, with a focus on retirement, Social Security, and Medicare-related tax issues. AARP Foundation Tax-Aide is the largest TCE grant operator, with more than 5,000 sites nationwide.
Public libraries host VITA and TCE sites for several reasons: they have meeting rooms and computers, they are accessible by transit, they have established trust with low-income communities, and they are open during the same hours when retirees and low-income working families are available. The Phoenix Public Library, for example, has hosted the largest VITA library site in Arizona for over a decade.
VITA, TCE, and Free File: who is eligible for what?
VITA eligibility (2026):
- Income under approximately $67,000 (the IRS adjusts this annually).
- Persons with disabilities.
- Limited English-speaking filers (VITA sites have multilingual volunteers).
TCE eligibility:
- Age 60 or older. There is no income cap, but TCE focuses on retirement and Social Security tax issues. Wealthier seniors with complex investment income are typically directed to paid preparers.
IRS Free File:
- Income under $84,000 (2025 threshold; 2026 threshold rises with inflation). The IRS partners with commercial software providers (TaxAct, FreeTaxUSA, etc.) to offer free guided preparation. Free File is online; library computers can be used. Some libraries offer Free File assistance through their workforce development staff.
IRS Direct File:
- The new IRS-built Direct File system, piloted in 2024 for federal returns and expanding state-by-state in 2025-2026, is free for moderately complex returns. Some library tax help volunteers can guide filers through Direct File.
Major library VITA & TCE sites by region
Northeast
- NYPL hosts VITA sites at the Stavros Niarchos Foundation Library, Bronx Library Center, and 96th Street Library. Partners with the NYC Department of Consumer and Worker Protection's Annual Tax Time! programme.
- Brooklyn Public Library hosts AARP Foundation Tax-Aide TCE sites at Central Library and several branches.
- Boston Public Library partners with Action for Boston Community Development (ABCD) for VITA at Copley Central.
- Free Library of Philadelphia hosts Campaign for Working Families VITA sites at multiple branches.
South
- Houston Public Library partners with United Way of Greater Houston for VITA sites at multiple branches.
- Dallas Public Library partners with Foundation Communities (formerly Foundation for the Homeless) for VITA at Central Library.
- El Paso Public Library hosts bilingual Spanish-English VITA at Main Library, January-April.
- Charlotte Mecklenburg Library partners with the Charlotte Center for Legal Advocacy.
- Memphis Public Libraries partner with the United Way of the Mid-South for VITA.
Midwest
- Chicago Public Library partners with the Center for Economic Progress (CEP) for VITA at Harold Washington and several branches.
- Detroit Public Library partners with the Wayne Metropolitan Community Action Agency.
- Indianapolis Public Library partners with United Way of Central Indiana.
- Columbus Metropolitan Library partners with United Way of Central Ohio.
West
- LAPL hosts VITA sites at Central Library and 10 branches; partners with United Way Greater Los Angeles.
- San Francisco Public Library partners with United Way Bay Area's Earn It! Keep It! Save It! programme.
- Phoenix Public Library hosts VITA at Burton Barr Central Library — the largest VITA library site in Arizona.
- Seattle Public Library partners with United Way of King County for VITA.
- Denver Public Library partners with The Piton Foundation's Tax Help Colorado for VITA.
What to bring to a VITA appointment
- Photo ID for you and your spouse (if filing jointly). Required by IRS.
- Social Security cards or ITIN cards for everyone on the return (you, spouse, dependents). Original cards or letters; photocopies are sometimes accepted.
- Birth dates for everyone on the return.
- All income documents: W-2s from each employer, 1099-MISC/NEC for contract work, 1099-INT and 1099-DIV for interest and dividends, 1099-R for retirement distributions, 1099-SSA for Social Security, 1099-G for unemployment, 1099-K for payment apps over $600.
- Last year's tax return. VITA volunteers reference last year's return for state tax addback adjustments and depreciation continuations.
- Documentation of credits and deductions: childcare provider EIN and statement (Child and Dependent Care Credit), college tuition 1098-T (American Opportunity Credit), property tax statements (if itemising), charitable donation receipts, mortgage interest 1098.
- Bank routing and account numbers (or a voided check) for direct deposit of refund.
VITA volunteers cannot prepare returns for filers with: rental property income (Schedule E), business owners with employees (most Schedule C businesses with helpers), partnerships, farm income, or income from foreign sources beyond simple foreign tax credit.
Frequently asked questions
Are VITA tax preparers really qualified?
Yes. VITA volunteers must pass IRS Volunteer Standards of Conduct and pass IRS Basic and Intermediate certification exams each year. The IRS provides quality review at every site. VITA volunteers are not CPAs, but for the typical W-2 plus dependents return, they are equally qualified.
Can VITA help with state returns?
Yes. VITA volunteers prepare both federal and state returns at most sites. A few state returns (e.g., complex multi-state returns) may be referred to paid preparers.
What if I have to file a return with self-employment income?
VITA can prepare Schedule C returns for self-employed filers within scope (gross receipts under $35,000, no employees, no inventory, no depreciation in some cases). For more complex self-employment returns, VITA refers to paid preparation.
Can VITA help with prior-year returns?
Yes — many VITA sites prepare prior-year returns from the past 3 tax years (the IRS lookback period for refunds). The library will need access to your prior-year W-2s and 1099s; if you do not have them, you can get IRS Wage and Income Transcripts at irs.gov/get-transcript.
Is my information secure at a library VITA site?
VITA volunteers sign the IRS Volunteer Standards of Conduct and complete annual ethics training. Your tax data is entered into IRS-approved tax preparation software (TaxSlayer Pro is the most common). Library staff supervise the physical security of the site.
Can I file electronically through VITA?
Yes. VITA sites are IRS-authorized e-file Providers. Most VITA returns are e-filed at the time of preparation; refunds typically arrive in 21 days via direct deposit (longer if paper check).
Do I need to bring my health insurance documentation?
Generally no for federal returns (the federal individual mandate penalty was zeroed in 2019). However, several states (California, Massachusetts, New Jersey, Rhode Island, Vermont, DC) have state-level health insurance mandates with penalties; bring Form 1095-A (Marketplace), 1095-B (insurance), or 1095-C (employer) if you have one.