A Tax Compliance Lawyer Explains IRS Audit Defense Strategies

Área de práctica:Finance

Income tax compliance is the obligation to accurately report earnings, claim only allowable deductions, and pay taxes owed within statutory deadlines, with both civil and criminal enforcement consequences for failure.



The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and state tax authorities conduct audits and investigations based on risk profiles, documentation gaps, and inconsistencies between reported income and third-party records. Taxpayers face potential assessments, penalties, interest, and in serious cases, criminal prosecution if the IRS determines that underpayment resulted from willful evasion or fraud. Understanding the legal standards that distinguish honest mistakes from intentional violations, and knowing how the audit process unfolds, helps taxpayers evaluate their exposure and make informed decisions about disclosure, representation, and record preservation.

Contents


1. What Income Tax Compliance Requires under Federal Law


Federal income tax compliance rests on the statutory duty to file a timely return, report all income, and substantiate deductions and credits claimed. The Internal Revenue Code defines gross income broadly to include wages, self-employment earnings, investment returns, rental income, and other accretions to wealth, with limited statutory exclusions. Taxpayers must maintain contemporaneous written substantiation for charitable contributions, business expenses, and certain other items, and the IRS may disallow deductions lacking adequate documentation. The threshold for civil accuracy-related penalties is typically triggered when underpayment exceeds a statutory percentage of the correct tax (often 10 percent or 20 percent depending on the type of error), and the IRS need not prove negligence; strict liability applies once the understatement is established.

Criminal prosecution for tax evasion, by contrast, requires proof of willfulness, meaning a voluntary and intentional violation of a known legal duty. Negligence, even gross negligence, does not satisfy the willfulness standard; the government must demonstrate that the taxpayer acted with knowledge of the law and deliberate intent to evade or defeat tax obligations. This distinction matters because it creates a meaningful gap between honest reporting errors and prosecutable conduct, though the boundary is often contested in litigation. Courts look to the totality of circumstances, including the sophistication of the concealment method, the duration of the pattern, and whether the taxpayer sought professional advice or deliberately avoided it.



2. Civil Audit Process and Assessment Risk in New York Practice


The IRS initiates civil audits through correspondence or field examination, and the scope may be limited to specific line items or comprehensive. Taxpayers have the right to representation by a CPA, enrolled agent, or attorney, and the IRS must follow administrative procedures for notice and opportunity to respond before issuing a notice of deficiency. In New York practice, delays in providing substantiation or failure to timely respond to document requests can result in the IRS issuing a notice of deficiency based on incomplete information, which then triggers the taxpayer's right to petition the U.S. Tax Court; however, if the petition is not filed within the statutory window (typically 90 days), the IRS may assess and collect without further judicial review, effectively foreclosing the taxpayer's opportunity to contest the deficiency in court before payment.

Compliance ElementRequirementConsequence of Failure
Timely filingReturn due by April 15 (or extended deadline if extension granted)Failure-to-file penalty (5% per month, up to 25%)
Accurate reportingAll income reported; deductions substantiatedAccuracy-related penalty (20%); audit; assessment
PaymentTax owed paid by filing deadlineFailure-to-pay penalty (0.5% per month); interest accrues
SubstantiationContemporaneous written documentation for charitable gifts, business expensesDeduction disallowed; deficiency assessed

The audit process itself is civil, not criminal, and most audits resolve through agreed adjustments or appeals within the IRS system. However, the IRS may refer a case to the Criminal Investigation Division if the examination reveals indicators of fraud or evasion, such as deliberate underreporting of income, false deductions, or concealment of assets. This referral can occur even after a civil audit has begun, creating a risk that a taxpayer's cooperation in the civil process may inadvertently generate evidence used in a criminal investigation.



3. Willfulness and Criminal Tax Evasion: the Legal Threshold


Criminal tax prosecution requires the government to prove that the taxpayer knowingly and willfully violated the tax laws. The willfulness standard is high: the IRS must show that the taxpayer understood the legal duty to report income and file a return, and that the taxpayer deliberately chose not to do so or deliberately understated income with intent to evade tax. Courts have held that mere negligence, even substantial negligence, does not constitute willfulness. Instead, the government must establish affirmative steps toward concealment, such as maintaining dual books, using offshore accounts without disclosure, making false statements to accountants, or destroying records.

In practice, these disputes rarely map neatly onto a single rule. The government often relies on circumstantial evidence of intent, such as the sophistication of the scheme, the duration of non-compliance, the taxpayer's education and business experience, and whether the taxpayer sought professional tax advice or deliberately avoided it. A taxpayer who files returns prepared by a CPA and relies on the CPA's advice, even if the returns are later found to be inaccurate, may be better positioned to argue lack of willfulness than a taxpayer who keeps no records and ignores IRS notices. The distinction turns on whether a reasonable person in the taxpayer's position would have known of the legal duty and whether the taxpayer's conduct shows deliberate disregard for that duty.



4. Income Tax Compliance and Federal Tax Practice


Compliance with federal income tax obligations is the foundation of tax practice. Issues such as the timing of income recognition, the characterization of expenses as deductible business costs versus non-deductible personal expenditures, and the proper treatment of pass-through entity income require careful analysis of the Internal Revenue Code and Treasury Regulations. A taxpayer's exposure to audit or assessment often hinges on the substantiation available for claimed deductions and the consistency of reporting across multiple years and entities.

For taxpayers with complex income streams, international activities, or business operations, compliance also involves coordination with state and local tax authorities. Federal income tax compliance may intersect with issues of international tax compliance, particularly when income is earned abroad, foreign financial accounts are held, or transactions involve non-U.S. entities. These overlapping obligations require attention to reporting deadlines, substantiation requirements, and disclosure rules that vary by income source and taxpayer status.



5. Documentation and Disclosure: Strategic Considerations before Audit or Investigation


Taxpayers should maintain organized records of income sources, business expenses, charitable contributions, and investment transactions contemporaneously with the transaction, not years later when an audit begins. Organized contemporaneous records (receipts, invoices, bank statements, charitable acknowledgments) significantly strengthen a taxpayer's position in an audit and reduce the risk of disallowance or penalty. If a taxpayer discovers an error or omission on a prior return, filing an amended return promptly, before the IRS initiates an examination, demonstrates good faith and may reduce or eliminate penalties.

Taxpayers should also consider whether voluntary disclosure of unreported income or underpayment, before IRS contact, may be advisable. The IRS operates a voluntary disclosure practice that allows taxpayers to come forward, file amended returns, pay back taxes plus interest and penalties, and in many cases avoid criminal prosecution. The availability and terms of voluntary disclosure depend on the specific facts and the taxpayer's prior compliance history. Consultation with tax counsel before taking this step is advisable because the decision to disclose, the scope of disclosure, and the timing all affect the outcome.

As counsel, I often advise taxpayers to preserve all records related to income and deductions for at least seven years, even after the statute of limitations for assessment has expired, because the IRS may reopen older years if fraud is discovered. Additionally, if a taxpayer receives notice of an IRS examination or criminal investigation, immediate consultation with tax counsel is warranted to understand rights, obligations, and strategic options before responding to document requests or submitting to an interview.


06 May, 2026


La información proporcionada en este artículo es únicamente con fines informativos generales y no constituye asesoramiento legal. Los resultados anteriores no garantizan un resultado similar. La lectura o el uso del contenido de este artículo no crea una relación abogado-cliente con nuestro despacho. Para asesoramiento sobre su situación específica, consulte a un abogado calificado autorizado en su jurisdicción.
Ciertos contenidos informativos en este sitio web pueden utilizar herramientas de redacción asistidas por tecnología y están sujetos a revisión por parte de un abogado.

Reservar una consulta
Online
Phone