What exactly is an IRS audit?

An IRS audit is a review/examination of an organization’s or individual’s accounts and financial information to ensure information is reported correctly according to the tax laws and to verify the reported amount of tax is correct. Why am I being selected for an audit?

What happens if IRS audits Me?

Your audit can end in one of three ways: No change: Your return was fine after all and your audit simply ends. Agreed: The IRS proposes changes to your return, like saying you actually owed additional tax, and you agree to the changes. If you owe money, you can make payments or set up a payment plan.

What happens if you get audited IRS?

The IRS will propose taxes and possibly penalties, and you’ll get a “90-day letter” (also known as a statutory notice of deficiency). You’ll have 90 days to file a petition with the U.S. Tax Court. If you still don’t do anything, the IRS will end the audit and start collecting the taxes you owe.

What do you need to know about an IRS audit?

An IRS audit is a review/examination of an organization’s or individual’s accounts and financial information to ensure information is reported correctly according to the tax laws and to verify the reported amount of tax is correct. Generally, the IRS can include returns filed within the last three years in an audit.

What happens if you have a correspondence audit with the IRS?

A correspondence audit is when the IRS has questions about your tax return. This is when you need a good tax attorney. The documentation the IRS requests you submit by mail and in some cases, the IRS matter closes with no further action needed.

How long does it take for a tax return to be audited?

The IRS selects returns that are the most likely have errors, based on complex criteria. After you file a return, the IRS usually has three years from that point to start and finish an audit. The IRS starts most tax audits within a year after you file the return, and it finishes most audits in less than a year.

How are tax returns selected for an audit?

Selection for an audit does not always suggest there’s a problem. The IRS uses several different methods: Random selection and computer screening – sometimes returns are selected based solely on a statistical formula. We compare your tax return against “norms” for similar returns.

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