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The Eight Types of Audits
There are eight types of audits that can affect
your return:
-
Mathematical Correction Audits These audits are usually generated by a computer program to find
mismatches between names and social security numbers, earned income credit qualifications, filing status issues, estimated
tax and withholding tax errors, assessments of estimated tax and late filing penalties and interest or almost any other
issue. Sometimes these audits require an appointment for these matters to be examined and sometimes the IRS
assumes that they are correct and includes a recalculation of the tax return with a tax balance due, including interest
and penalty assessments for you to pay. Even if they issue a bill, we have 30 days to schedule an appointment to prove
your numbers are correct.
- Income Document Matching Audits These audits are usually generated by a computer program
that is matching all 1099 forms, W-2 forms, K-1 forms, etc. that were issued to your name and social security number to
what is reported on your tax return. If the IRS believes that you did not report all of your income based on their
computations, they will audit this tax return. They might send you a letter requiring a phone call to schedule an appointment,
or they will preschedule an appointment date and time, or they might send you a bill itemizing why you need to pay more,
including interest and penalties. Even if they issue a bill, we have 30 days to schedule an appointment to prove that
you properly reported your income.
- DIF Scoring Every tax return filed is given a discriminant function (DIF) score.
The score is based on secret calculations developed by the IRS to identify returns with the highest likelihood of tax change
on audit. The DIF score increases for various items on a return (such as Schedule C or auto expenses) and decreases
for other items (such as using a paid preparer). IRS classifiers review high DIF-score tax returns, select those
that will be audited and decide which items on the tax return will be audited.
- Correspondence Audits These audits require that documentation for an item or items on the
tax return be mailed to the IRS auditor, sometimes to an IRS office on the other side of the country. The
documentation includes both the receipts and the proof of payment for whatever items are being examined. For
example, if your charitable contributions are being audited, you will need to provide copies of the receipts from the
charitable organizations and copies of the canceled checks to verify the numbers that you reported on your tax return. Any
contribution that you cannot prove will be disallowed and the IRS will issue a bill for the balance due,
including interest and penalties.
- Office Audit and Field Audit These are the face-to-face audits that have received the
most publicity in the last several years. Congressional pressures on the IRS and an increase in funding have
resulted in dramatic increases in the audit rate. This type of audit starts with a telephone call or letter
from the IRS. The intent of the telephone call, which is used exclusively in many areas, is to get the taxpayer
to volunteer information long before the face-to-face meeting. This information would never be revealed by our
qualified representative. During the audit appointment, the IRS will examine items on the tax return that could
result in a larger tax bill. Based on the results of the audit, other tax years will also be examined.
- Random Audits In order to improve the IRS’s audit selection process,
the IRS randomly selects individual tax returns for audit. This audit plan, called the National Research Program
is the successor to the Taxpayer Compliance Measurement Program (TCMP). This audit is certainly
the most intrusive by its very nature. Every entry on the tax return can be examined, line by line.
For instance, if a child was claimed as a dependent, you will need to provide the birth certificate to prove that the child
is yours and proof that the child was actually living with you in the tax year being audited. The IRS is currently
performing these audits nationwide.
- Financial Status Audits These audits focus on the taxpayer’s standard
of living and other
factors not specifically related to the tax return. Auditors use public records and statistical data to trace
spending and changes in wealth to prove that you, the taxpayer, have unreported income. Records examined include
tax returns for all open years, credit reports, property tax records, business license applications, motor vehicle records,
1099 information, currency transaction reports and SEC filings.
Due to perceived abuses of these techniques, Congress limited their use in the IRS Restructuring and Reform Act of
1998. Under Section 7602(e), the IRS cannot use financial status or economic reality techniques unless the IRS
already has a reasonable indication that there is a likelihood of unreported income. The statute (law) does
not define "reasonable indication."
- IRS Special Project Audits The IRS annually identifies twelve of the most blatant tax scams.
This list is called “The Dirty Dozen” and identifies many areas that
will cause an audit. This list is worth reviewing.
http://www.irs.gov/newsroom/article/0,,id=206370,00.html
Don’t open your mailbox and find an audit notice before joining TaxResources. You must purchase your membership prior
to being selected for audit. The day your audit notice is issued is one day too late!
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