IRS audit rate is declining, again

The IRS’s audit rate went down again in 2018, according to data released Monday by the government agency.

There were fewer audits during fiscal year 2018, from Oct. 1, 2017 to Sept. 30, 2018, the IRS Data Book for 2018 showed. The IRS audited more than 892,000 individual income tax returns during the fiscal year, down slightly from the previous year. The IRS audited 0.6% of all individual tax returns filed in calendar year 2017, and 0.9% of corporate income tax returns, not counting S-corp returns. The majority of fiscal year 2018 audits, 74.8%, were conducted by correspondence. The other 25.2% were conducted in the field. Of the nearly 1 million examinations of tax returns, more than 22,000 taxpayers didn’t agree with the IRS examiner’s determination, totaling an unagreed recommended additional tax of almost $10.2 billion.

On the other hand, of the nearly 1 million examinations of tax returns, almost 30,000 resulted in additional refunds to the taxpayer, totaling more than $6 billion. The IRS also examined 15,562 tax-exempt organization, employee retirement plan, government entity, tax-exempt bond and related taxable returns in fiscal 2018.

“Underlying the numbers in this year’s edition of the Data Book is the hard work of IRS employees,” said IRS Commissioner Chuck Rettig in a statement.
Charles Rettig, commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), listens during a House Appropriations Subcommittee hearing in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Tuesday, April 9, 2019. House Ways and Means Chairman Richard Neal last week asked Rettig to hand over President Donald Trump's tax filings. Photographer: Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg

The IRS Data Book also includes information on a wide array of other subjects, such as tax returns, refunds, examinations and appeals. It comes with charts depicting changes in IRS enforcement activities, taxpayer assistance, tax-exempt activities, legal support work and IRS budget and workforce levels compared to fiscal year 2017 and previous years.

Also included this year is a section on taxpayer attitudes from a long-running opinion survey. The survey indicated that most taxpayers continued to agree it’s not at all acceptable to cheat on their income taxes. This attitude has remained within a four-point range since 2009. Most taxpayers are still satisfied with their personal interactions with the IRS. Nearly half of the taxpayers who responded to the survey last year agreed that service and enforcement are properly balanced.

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“Underlying the numbers in this year’s edition of the Data Book is the hard work of IRS employees,” said IRS Commissioner Chuck Rettig in a statement. “Our employees are the backbone of this agency, delivering our mission efficiently and effectively. They work hard to help taxpayers, and the numbers outlined in the Data Book reflect their commitment.”

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Over the course of the fiscal year, the IRS collected nearly $3.5 trillion, processed more than 250 million tax returns and other forms, and issued over 120 million individual income tax refunds totaling almost $395 billion.

The IRS received and processed more of every major type of form during FY 2018 than during the prior year, with the exception of estate tax returns; those filings declined slightly less than 1% compared to the prior year. However, filings by pass-through entities were up in FY 2018. While partnerships filed nearly 5% more forms with the IRS in FY 2018 than in the prior year, S-corp filings were up almost 6% in the same time frame.

The IRS offered taxpayer assistance through over a half-billion visits to IRS.gov and helped more than 64.8 million taxpayers through various service channels, including correspondence, toll-free telephone helplines or at Taxpayer Assistance Centers. There were also more than 309 million inquiries to the “Where’s My Refund?” application, up 11% compared to the prior year.

Net revenue from delinquent collection activities rose to just over $40 billion, an increase of 1.6% compared to the prior year. IRS levies were up 8.3% compared to the previous year, but the IRS filed about 8% fewer liens than in fiscal 2017.

This article originally appeared in Accounting Today
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Tax audits Tax research Income taxes Tax returns Charles Rettig IRS
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