Abating IRS penalties

Abating IRS penalties

The IRS can assess many types of penalties against taxpayers: late-filing penalties, late-payment penalties, estimated tax penalties, accuracy-related penalties—and the list goes on. This column summarizes common IRS penalties that tax practitioners see almost daily, and practical ways to obtain a penalty abatement.

FAILURE-TO-FILE AND FAILURE-TO-PAY PENALTIES (SEC. 6651)

Many taxpayers file a return late and/or make a payment late. The IRS sends out automated notices proposing failure-to-file and failure-to-pay penalties, often referred to as late-filing and late-payment penalties—and abates many of them.

First-time penalty abatement is an easy "get-out-of-jail-free card" for taxpayers who have a clean compliance history of filing and paying on time with no prior penalties (other than an estimated tax penalty) for the past three years. The reasonable-cause (facts and circumstances) defense can also be successful. Refer to Internal Revenue Manual (IRM) Section 20.1.1.3.2 for a list of the IRS's criteria for evaluating the most frequently raised defenses for these penalties. Death, serious illness, fire/casualty, erroneous advice, forgetfulness, and even ignorance of the law are among the defenses discussed in the IRM. In addition, other administrative waivers could apply to certain taxpayers, such as disaster victims.

Here are penalty abatement tips for failure-to-file and failure-to-pay penalties:

ESTIMATED TAX PENALTY (SEC. 6654)

Individual taxpayers must adequately withhold from their wages and/or make estimated tax payments evenly throughout the year. When they do not, the IRS may impose the estimated tax penalty, commonly referred to as the underpayment penalty.

There is no general reasonable-cause exception for the estimated tax penalty; therefore, it is often more difficult to get the penalty removed, but it is not impossible. The IRS may abate it if the taxpayer (1) proves that the IRS incorrectly charged the penalty or made an error, (2) shows that calculating the penalty under a different method reduces or eliminates it, or (3) proves that he or she meets the waiver criteria discussed in Sec. 6654(e)(3) (i.e., by reason of casualty, disaster, or unusual circumstances, or the taxpayer retired or became disabled during the tax year or the preceding year and the underpayment was due to reasonable cause and not willful neglect).

Here are penalty abatement tips for the estimated tax penalty:

ACCURACY-RELATED PENALTY (SEC. 6662)

The IRS may impose an accuracy-related penalty for many types of misconduct, such as negligence, substantial understatement of tax, etc. This penalty comes up frequently in an audit (almost automatically if the understatement exceeds the greater of 10% of the tax required to be shown on the return or $5,000), but it also comes up on notices, such as the common CP2000, which the IRS sends when underreported income is detected.

The accuracy-related penalty cannot be imposed if the return position being questioned meets certain tax authority standards (e.g., the "more likely than not" standard or the "substantial authority" standard), or if a taxpayer proves he or she has reasonable cause for failing to comply.

Regs. Sec. 1.6664-4 provides guidance to help practitioners determine whether clients meet reasonable-cause criteria to avoid an accuracy-related penalty. It boils down to facts and circumstances and proving that the client exercised ordinary business care and prudence.

Here are penalty abatement tips for the accuracy-related penalty:

Remember: Those who do not ask will not receive. Large, and sometimes even small, penalties are worth fighting to get removed. A simple phone call or letter may be all that is necessary to save a client thousands of dollars. And do not be afraid to turn to the IRS Office of Appeals. It is increasingly common for penalty cases to be resolved through this channel.

The AICPA Tax Section offers many resources to help practitioners obtain a penalty abatement:

Editor's note: A version of this column appears in the January 2017 issue of The Tax Adviser as "Tax Practice & Procedures: Pesky IRS Penalties: How to Get Them Abated for Clients."

Susan C. Allen (sallen@aicpa.org) is senior technical manager, AICPA Tax Practice & Ethics, in Durham, N.C.

To comment on this article or to suggest an idea for another article, contact Paul Bonner, senior editor, at pbonner@aicpa.org or 919-402-4434.