Among the highest priorities of the IRS workforce recruitment strategy is building a workforce that is highly skilled. In order to achieve this, we use the Schedule A Excepted Service Appointing Authority. This authority allows for appointments for positions that are specifically excepted from the competitive service by law, the President, or the U.S. Office of Personnel Management.
People with disabilities, veterans, and students are eligible to participate in the Schedule A Excepted Service Appointment Authority. This appointing authority enables our teams to expedite the hiring process. In turn, we are better able to maintain a workforce that is highly skilled. Our strength allows for unique approaches to problem-solving, perspectives and experiences. If you have a desire to works as a civil servant in an exciting career with competitive salaries, excellent benefits, and opportunities for career advancement. We would like to hear from you!
Please review this page to find information to any questions you may have related to the Excepted Service Appointing Authority.
Schedule A (5 C.F.R. 213.3102(u)) is an Excepted Service Appointing Authority for Federal agencies to tap into a diverse talent pool of people with disabilities without going through the (often-lengthy) traditional hiring process. Eligible applicants must be a person with severe physical, psychiatric, or mental impairment that substantially limits one or more major life activities, or intellectual disability, psychiatric disorders, muscular or neurological disorders. Other less obvious disabilities are also subject to eligibility such as lupus, AIDS, diabetes, or heart disease. Other groups that may apply using the Schedule A appointment authority are veterans. After 2 years of satisfactory service, the agency may convert the employee, without competition, to the competitive service.
Excepted service appointing authorities are critical tools for increasing employment opportunities for people with disabilities in the Federal Government. Federal Government civilian positions are traditionally acquired through a merit based competitive civil service hiring process. This means that an applicant will have to compete against other applicants to ultimately be chosen for the desired position.
The Excepted Service Appointment Authority is a streamline hiring process that allows applicants satisfying all Federal requirements to be exempted from the traditional competitive hiring process and placed into an appointed hiring status.
There are four classifications identified as “schedules” established under the Excepted Service Appointing Authority. The schedule(s) are simply titled by letter A, B, C, D. This page will focus specifically upon Schedule A (5 C.F.R. 213.3102(u)) hiring authority for people with disabilities.
Applicants choosing to apply for Federal appointments though the Schedule A process must provide proof of eligibility under 5 C.F.R. 213.3102(u)
No, how you apply is completely up to you. Schedule A applicants may apply for a vacancy in the following ways:
The #IRS reminds you that using strong passwords is one way to safeguard your personal data. Choose an unpredictable combination of letters, numbers and special characters each time you create a password. https://t.co/YXqIRZ7WA5 #TaxSecurity pic.twitter.com/Gua2JTiuZO
— IRStaxsecurity (@IRStaxsecurity) February 23, 2026
Treasury, #IRS issue guidance on special depreciation allowance for qualified production property, announce upcoming proposed regulations under the One, Big, Beautiful Bill. https://t.co/7KjTHILB7I pic.twitter.com/i4GWzrtA0L
— IRSnews (@IRSnews) February 23, 2026
If you’re looking for ways to speed up your refund, consider the electronic route – use #IRS Free File and direct deposit. Learn more here: https://t.co/3byJqk9fiF pic.twitter.com/FeEcxpCMqc
— IRSnews (@IRSnews) February 23, 2026