IRS to offer pandemic-related relief on some penalties to nearly 5 million taxpayers

Some 4.7 million taxpayers nationwide who owe back taxes but haven't seen a notice in more than a year will be granted relief from some penalties, thanks to a new initiative by the Internal Revenue Service.

The break, which adds up to $1 billion in relief, applies to individuals, businesses, and tax-exempt organizations that were not sent automated collection reminder notices during the pandemic. The IRS noted that most of those receiving the penalty relief make less than $400,000 a year.

Nearly 70% of the individual taxpayers receiving penalty relief have income under $100,000 per year, the IRS said.

Only those who owed less than $100,000 in back taxes for specific tax years 2020 and 2021 would see such relief.

Taxpayers could save on average about a bit more than $200 per return, thanks to the waiving of a key penalty. This penalty relief is automatic. Eligible taxpayers don’t need to do anything.

Need a new tax strategy? These money-saving tips taken by Dec 31 may help pad your pockets

What are 2023 tax brackets: IRS announces new tax brackets. What does that mean for you?

The IRS is not waiving interest on unpaid taxes, just the failure-to-pay penalty. No relief is being given for failure to file a return.

The failure to pay penalty is complicated but amounts to 0.5% of the unpaid taxes for each month or part of a month the tax remains unpaid. The penalty won’t exceed 25% of your unpaid taxes.

Taxpayers who already paid this penalty would be getting a refund, following the new waiver. The IRS will send the first round of such refunds now through January. The IRS will issue a refund or credit the payment toward another outstanding tax liability.

"If a taxpayer does not receive a refund, a special reminder notice may be sent with their updated balance beginning in early 2024," the IRS said.

Taxpayers with questions on penalty relief can contact the IRS after March 31, 2024.

Go to IRS.gov/penaltyrelief for information on potentially waiving such penalties even if you don't qualify for the new break.

Taxpayers who are not eligible for this new automatic relief have other options, the IRS said, such as applying for relief under the reasonable cause criteria or the First-Time Abate program.

The IRS will restart sending automated collection notices and letters in 2024, marking the end of a pandemic-related pause. Mailings will go out on a staggered basis and gradually resume over several months.

In January, for example, the IRS will begin sending automated collection paperwork to individuals with tax debts prior to tax year 2022.