I don’t have live access to the latest results beyond my last update, but I can summarize recent reporting on Trump’s IRS lawsuit and settlement talks based on reputable outlets up to mid-May 2026.
Direct answer
- Yes, there have been credible reports that settlement talks between President Trump and the IRS were underway in the $10 billion tax-return-related lawsuit, with courts being asked to pause or extend deadlines to allow negotiations. Several outlets cited filings indicating the parties were exploring a resolution and that a pause of weeks to months could occur to facilitate talks.
Key developments and context
- Settlement discussions were publicly discussed in court filings in mid-April 2026, with Trump’s team requesting time to negotiate and the possibility that talks could narrow or resolve the issues without protracted litigation [multiple outlets reported on these filings and requests for pauses] [web sources cited in the reporting cluster].
- The negotiations have been described as potentially involving terms such as dropping current or future IRS audits of Trump and his family, or other arrangements that would address reputational and financial harms alleged in the suit. The specifics varied by report, but the theme remained: a settlement could avert ongoing litigation and audits [CNN/NYT-reported coverage cited in several summaries].
- The interests and timing around the talks were complicated by the DOJ and White House overlap, including concerns about conflicts of interest since the agency defending the IRS is part of the executive branch. Some reports noted the unusual nature of the DOJ/White House dynamics in a case brought by the president against a federal agency [common threads across coverage].
What this means going forward
- If settlement talks progress, a court deadline extension or pause could be renewed or formalized, and terms could be proposed publicly or kept confidential pending agreement. The trajectory depends on how far negotiators can bridge differences over audits, payments, or other remedies.
Caveat
- Because this is fast-moving, I recommend checking the latest from established outlets (e.g., major national outlets' politics desks) for any new court filings, official statements, or confirmed settlements.
Would you like me to monitor for updates and summarize the very latest statements or filings as they become available? I can also pull a brief side-by-side timeline of the key filings and terms as they are announced.
Sources
The Justice Department is holding internal discussions about settling President Donald Trump’s lawsuit against the Internal Revenue Service in coming days, according to three people familiar with the deliberations, a move that could involve the government directly providing taxpayer funds or another public benefit to the president. Whether to settle the suit and on what terms remains up in the air.
ground.newsThe president requested a 90-day court pause.
www.theepochtimes.comSettlement talks could potentially require Trump-appointed officials to approve a significant payout to the president and his family.
www.mediaite.comBy Paula Reid, Alayna Treene, Casey Gannon, CNN (CNN) — The Justice Department is discussing whether to settle President Donald Trump’s $10 billion lawsuit against the Internal Revenue Service in the coming days, according to two sources familiar. Among the options being discussed internally is whether a settlement would include a provision on the IRS
abc17news.comLawyers for President Donald Trump are engaged in talks with the IRS to resolve a $10 billion lawsuit the president filed against his own tax collection agency over the leak of his tax information to news outlets between 2018 and 2020.
ground.newsThe Trump administration says it’s in talks with the IRS to resolve a $10 billion lawsuit over leaked tax information. Tax and ethics experts say the lawsuit raises legal and ethical questions. In a Friday federal court filing, President Donald Trump requests an extension to potentially resolve or narrow the dispute. Trump filed the lawsuit in a Florida federal court earlier this year, alleging reputational and financial harm from the leak. Former IRS contractor Charles Edward Littlejohn was...
www.ajc.com