Nolo Logo Lawyer Directory Newsletter Nolo Now: Nolo's Online Document Service Blogs Cart
Estate planning for less -- save 37% now!
IRS Audits and Appeals
Make a legally valid will online.
Surviving an IRS Tax Audit
Surviving an IRS Tax Audit
Book / $26.99
eBook / $22.99

Stand Up to the IRS
Stand Up to the IRS
Book / $24.99
eBook / $20.99


 

Page 1 of 2  next »

Negligence Versus Tax Fraud: How Can the IRS Tell the Difference?

The difference between cheating on your taxes and negligently filing them, and how the IRS distinguishes between the two.

It shouldn't come as a shock to hear that it's a crime to cheat on your taxes. In a recent year, however, only 2,472 Americans were convicted of tax crimes -- .0022% of all taxpayers. This number is astonishingly small, taking into account that the IRS estimates that 17% of all taxpayers are not complying with the tax laws in some way or another. And the number of convictions for tax crimes has decreased over the past decade.

According to the IRS, individual taxpayers do 75% of the cheating -- mostly middle-income earners. Corporations do most of the rest. Cash-intensive businesses and service industry workers, from handypeople to doctors, are the worst offenders. For example, the IRS claims that waiters and waitresses underreport their cash tips by an average of 84%.

How People Cheat on Their Taxes

Most people cheat by deliberately underreporting income. A government study found the bulk of the underreporting of income was done by self-employed restaurateurs, clothing store owners, and -- you'll no doubt be shocked -- car dealers. Telemarketers and salespeople came in next, followed by doctors, lawyers (heavens!), accountants (heavens, again!), and hairdressers.

Self-employed taxpayers who over-deduct business-related expenses -- such as car expenses -- came in a far distant second on the cheaters hit parade. Surprisingly, the IRS has concluded that only 6.8% of deductions are overstated or just plain phony.

If you are caught cheating by an auditor, she can either slap you with civil fines and penalties or, worse, refer your case to the IRS's criminal investigation division.

Fraud or Negligence?

Auditors are trained to look for tax fraud -- a willful act done with the intent to defraud the IRS -- that dark area beyond honest mistakes. Using a false Social Security number, keeping two sets of financial books, or claiming a blind spouse as a dependent when you are single are all examples of tax fraud. Although auditors are trained to look for fraud, they do not routinely suspect it. They know the tax law is complex and expect to find a few errors in every tax return. They will give you the benefit of the doubt most of the time and not go after you for tax fraud if you make an honest mistake.


Reprint permissions  

1 2  next »

Judge Joe Brown ad
Survive a PC disaster with Carbonite online backup. Try it free!