IRS targets wealthy ā€˜non-filersā€™ with new wave of compliance letters

by Pelican Press
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IRS targets wealthy ā€˜non-filersā€™ with new wave of compliance letters

IRS Commissioner Daniel Werfel speaks during an IRS event in McLean, Virginia, on Aug. 2, 2023.

Alex Wong | Getty Images

The IRS has unveiled plans to target ā€œnon-filersā€ with a new round of letters, starting with high-income taxpayers who havenā€™t filed federal returns since 2017.

Starting this week, the agency will send letters to wealthy non-filers, with the first batch going to those earning $400,000 to more than $1 million.

Formerly known as CP-59 notices, the letters will go to between 20,000 and 40,000 non-filers per week, according to plans announced Thursday. The IRS said recipients should take ā€œimmediate actionā€ to avoid more letters, higher penalties and ā€œstronger enforcement measures.ā€ Non-filers can learn more about past-due returns here.

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ā€œIf someone hasnā€™t filed a tax return, this is the time to make it right,ā€ IRS Commissioner Danny Werfel told reporters during a press call. Citing staffing issues, he said the non-filer program has only run sporadically since 2016.

The failure-to-file penalty is 5% of the amount owed per month, capped at 25% of the tax bill, according to the IRS. Thereā€™s also an interest-based penalty based on the current interest rate.

The agency urges non-filers to work with a tax professional to file past-due returns and calculate taxes owed, penalties and interest. Ā  Ā 

ā€˜Historically low audit ratesā€™ for higher earners

The new wave of letters comes amid IRS plans to reverse ā€œhistorically low audit ratesā€ of large corporations, complex partnerships and higher earners.

TheĀ audit rateĀ for taxpayers earning $1 million or more was 0.7% in 2019, compared to 7.2% in 2011, according toĀ the IRS.

While itā€™s unclear exactly how much the IRS will collect via the revamped non-filer program, the agency estimates there could be ā€œhundreds of millions of dollarsā€ in unpaid taxes from these cases.

ā€œThis is a very material amount of money that is being left on the table,ā€ Werfel said Thursday.

IRS Commissioner Werfel: Millionaires and billionaires evade more than $150 billion a year in taxes

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Tax refunds,Income Tax,Tax bill,Personal finance,Government taxation and revenue,Tax planning,Personal saving,Wealth,Internal Revenue Service,National taxes,Taxes,business news
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