IRS targets wealthy ānon-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 ānon-filersā with a new round of letters, starting with high-income taxpayers who havenāt 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 āimmediate actionā to avoid more letters, higher penalties and āstronger enforcement measures.ā Non-filers can learn more about past-due returns here.
More from Personal Finance:
This IRS issue is āthe biggest, most consistent problemā for filers, expert says
Number of 401(k) millionaires and average balances rose in 2023, Fidelity says
āGhostingā gets more common in the job market: Itās not a āpassing fad,ā report notes
āIf someone hasnāt 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. Thereās 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
āHistorically low audit ratesā for higher earners
The new wave of letters comes amid IRS plans to reverse āhistorically 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 itās unclear exactly how much the IRS will collect via the revamped non-filer program, the agency estimates there could be āhundreds of millions of dollarsā in unpaid taxes from these cases.
āThis is a very material amount of money that is being left on the table,ā Werfel said Thursday.
Donāt miss these stories from CNBC PRO:
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
#IRS #targets #wealthy #nonfilers #wave #compliance #letters