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Sales Tax Arrears: What Penalties Apply When Businesses Stop Paying?



Sales tax arrears arise when a business collects sales tax from customers but fails to remit the amounts to the state taxing authority, creating a liability that state law treats fundamentally differently from ordinary commercial debt. Because collected sales tax is trust fund money held on behalf of the state, Sales Tax Arrears expose the business and its responsible officers to Tax Lien assessments, Levy actions, and personal liability through the Trust Fund Recovery Penalty.

Contents


1. Why Sales Tax Arrears Trigger Liability Beyond Ordinary Business Debt


Sales Tax law treats collected but unremitted sales tax as trust fund money belonging to the state, and this trust fund character is the legal foundation for the severe enforcement consequences that distinguish Sales Tax Arrears from ordinary business debts.



Why Is Sales Tax Treated As a Trust Fund and What Are the Legal Consequences of Diversion?


Under the sales tax statutes of every U.S. .tate, a retailer who collects sales tax becomes a trustee of those funds at the moment of collection, creating an obligation independent of the ability to pay that cannot be discharged in a standard Chapter 7 business bankruptcy. Business tax counsel retained at the earliest sign of a shortfall can negotiate payment arrangements before a Tax Lien is filed and before the auditor characterizes the diversion as willful, transforming the civil matter into a tax fraud referral.



How Do Penalty Assessments and Statutory Interest Compound Sales Tax Arrears?


A business that misses a sales tax deadline incurs a failure-to-file penalty of five to ten percent per month and a failure-to-pay penalty, and the combination with monthly compounding interest can increase the liability by fifty percent or more within the first year. The tax laws governing penalty abatement allow a first-time filer to request abatement upon reasonable cause, and underreporting allegations during audit can add a fraud penalty of up to fifty percent, making prompt corrective filing the most cost-effective response.



2. State Tax Liens, Levies, and Administrative Enforcement against Delinquents


State taxing authorities have broad statutory authority to impose Tax Liens and Levies on all property of sales tax delinquents without advance judicial approval, and these enforcement tools can disrupt business operations more rapidly than any private creditor collection action.



What Enforcement Tools Do States Use to Collect Sales Tax Arrears?


When a business fails to pay Sales Tax Arrears after a notice and demand, most states perfect a Tax Lien attaching to all property, and the state may then Levy the bank account. A bank levy or bank account garnishment against a business operating account can cause payroll to fail without any judicial proceeding, and the IRS tax levy mechanism mirrors the state process.



Enforcement Intensity by Delinquency Stage and Primary Legal Response


The table below compares the enforcement intensity and recommended legal responses at each stage of sales tax delinquency.

 

Delinquency StagePrimary ActionLegal and Business ImpactRecommended Response
Early (under 3 months)Demand notices; penalty assessmentCredit rating begins to declineRequest penalty abatement; payment plan
Mid-stage (6 months)Bank levy; receivables garnishmentBusiness operations disruptedChallenge levy; seek collection hold
Substantial (12+ months)Tax lien; business license riskFinancing and contracts impairedOffer in Compromise or installment
Chronic high-balanceTravel restrictions; public disclosurePersonal reputation restrictedTax appeal; due process hearing
Willful diversionFraudulent conveyance; criminal referralPersonal asset seizure; prosecutionRetain criminal defense counsel


3. Personal Liability for Corporate Sales Tax Arrears: Trust Fund Recovery and Corporate Veil Piercing


When a business cannot satisfy its Sales Tax Arrears from corporate assets, state taxing authorities assess Secondary Tax Liability against responsible officers and shareholders who had control over the funds, piercing the corporate form to reach personal assets.



When Are Corporate Officers and Shareholders Personally Liable for Corporate Sales Tax Debt?


The Trust Fund Recovery Penalty under IRC § 6672 imposes personal liability on any person responsible for paying over trust fund taxes who willfully fails to do so, extending to majority shareholders who directed the misapplication of funds, with willfulness satisfied by proof that the person knew of the unpaid tax but authorized other payments. Asset protection planning after the liability arises can be challenged as a fraudulent conveyance if the transfer renders the responsible person insolvent.



Defending against Personal Liability for Corporate Sales Tax Arrears: Compliance Checklist


The following checklist identifies the evidentiary and procedural items a corporate officer or shareholder must address to contest a proposed Secondary Tax Liability assessment.

  • Absence of actual control: Document that the proposed responsible person lacked authority to direct tax payments, because the Trust Fund Recovery Penalty requires both responsibility and willfulness.
  • Challenge to willfulness: Demonstrate reliance on professional advice, because the tax fraud standard requires intentional disregard of a known obligation and good faith reliance negates willfulness.
  • Verification of corporate asset calculation: Verify that corporate assets were correctly calculated before imposing Secondary Tax Liability, because an error may have improperly transferred liability to the individual.
  • Procedural compliance: Confirm that the notice was issued within the applicable statute of limitations, because a defective notice may be challenged through criminal defense or administrative appeal.


4. Resolving Sales Tax Arrears through Appeals, Settlement, and Integrated Defense Strategy


A taxpayer facing Sales Tax Arrears has a structured sequence of administrative and judicial remedies available at each stage of the collection process, and a comprehensive resolution strategy combines the appropriate legal challenge with a viable payment or settlement mechanism.



What Administrative and Judicial Remedies Are Available to Contest a Sales Tax Assessment?


Most states allow the taxpayer to challenge a sales tax assessment within 30 to 90 days of issuance, and a timely appeal typically stays collection action pending the outcome. IRS audit defense principles apply equally to state sales tax audits, and when willful diversion is alleged, federal criminal defense or criminal defense counsel should be retained immediately upon any indication of a criminal referral.



How Does Legal Counsel Resolve Sales Tax Arrears through Compromise and Payment Programs?


An installment agreement allows payment over up to five years, and an Offer in Compromise settles the liability for a reduced amount when the taxpayer demonstrates it represents the reasonable collection potential. Sentencing advocacy is relevant when civil Arrears is linked to a white collar crime proceeding, and bankruptcy for tax relief may discharge some liability, though trust fund portions are excepted, making the IRS tax debt Offer in Compromise the primary fallback.


18 Mar, 2026


The information provided in this article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Reading or relying on the contents of this article does not create an attorney-client relationship with our firm. For advice regarding your specific situation, please consult a qualified attorney licensed in your jurisdiction.
Certain informational content on this website may utilize technology-assisted drafting tools and is subject to attorney review.

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