How The Tax Code Got So Complicated

Rick KahlerAdvisor Perspectives welcomes guest contributions. The views presented here do not necessarily represent those of Advisor Perspectives.

If you’re wading through the process of preparing your tax return, you may well be asking, “Why does this have to be so complicated?”

I hear some version of this from clients every year. The forms feel endless. The rules seem arbitrary. Even financially savvy people find themselves second-guessing what qualifies, what doesn’t, and what changed this year.

It’s hard to grasp the scope of what we’re dealing with. The U.S. Tax Code – plus the policy rules, interpretations, and case law necessary to fully understand it – was estimated at over 70,000 pages more than a decade ago. That’s equivalent to roughly 50 copies of Tolstoy’s famously long novel, “War and Peace.” And it doesn’t include recent additions like the hundreds of pages of new provisions in the One Big Beautiful Bill. Reading it would take years. Understanding it would take longer.

A House Built in 1913

To understand the source of this complexity, imagine a three-bedroom, one-story house built in 1913, the year that ratification of the 16th Amendment authorized a federal income tax. It has no electricity or plumbing and is heated by a wood stove.

Over the years, various owners make large and small changes. Plumbing and electricity. Central heating. Additions: a porch, a utility room, another bedroom, a second story, a garage, another bathroom, closets, a sunroom, and a detached office connected by a breezeway.

Individually, each change makes sense. It solves a real problem or meets a real need at the time.