I.R.S. Audits Are at a Record Low. Trump’s Cuts Could Make Them Even Rarer.

1 week ago 12

You have a preview view of this article while we are checking your access. When we have confirmed access, the full article content will load.

The Biden plan to increase tax revenue through more enforcement is being reversed.

Ben Blatt

April 8, 2025, 10:35 a.m. ET

The Internal Revenue Service’s audit rate has been lower this decade than in most taxpayers’ lifetimes, a New York Times analysis shows, and if the Trump administration follows through with plans to cut the agency’s work force, audits will almost certainly become even rarer.

The most recent I.R.S. data shows the audit rate of individual taxpayers has decreased by about two-thirds since 2010.

Audit rate of personal income tax returns

Source: I.R.S. Annual Data Book. Percentage examination coverage calculated for recent years using the I.R.S. definition that existed until 2019.

Exact comparisons of audit rates are challenging because the I.R.S. has changed its definitions over time. But the Times analysis of historical I.R.S. data found that the effective audit rates between 2020 and 2023, all under 0.5 percent, were lower than any published audit rate since at least 1950.

In 1980, the agency’s published audit rate was over 2 percent, and in 1960 it was over 3 percent.

In the 2010s, audit rates plunged for all income levels. For most Americans, an audit might have been a one-in-100 event at the beginning of the decade. By the end of the decade, it was even less likely.

$1-$25,000 household income

$25k to $100k

$100k to $500k

$500k to $10 mil.

$10 mil. +

Source: I.R.S. Annual Databook. Estimates based on all audits either in-process or closed. Total positive income considered income.

Source: I.R.S. Annual Data Book. 2024 estimate based on other news reports.

INCOMEAVG. ADDITIONAL REVENUE
COLLECTED AFTER AUDIT
$1 to $25,000

$4.6k

$25k to $50k

$5.1k

$50k to $75k

$5.4k

$75k to $100k

$6.6k

$100k to $200k

$7.2k

$200k to $500k

$13k

$500k to $1 mil.

$24k

$1 mil. to $5 mil.

$52k

$5 mil. to $10 mil.

$114k

$10 mil. +

$147k

Source: I.R.S. Annual Databook. Estimates based on the 2019 tax year reflect only closed audits. Numbers may change as more audits are completed. Total positive income considered income. Tax rounded to the nearest hundred. Includes both field and correspondence audits.


Thank you for your patience while we verify access. If you are in Reader mode please exit and log into your Times account, or subscribe for all of The Times.


Thank you for your patience while we verify access.

Already a subscriber? Log in.

Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Read Entire Article
Olahraga Sehat| | | |