Current:Home > MyIRS ramping up crackdown on wealthy taxpayers, targeting 1,600 millionaires -ProfitLogic
IRS ramping up crackdown on wealthy taxpayers, targeting 1,600 millionaires
View
Date:2025-04-25 01:48:19
The IRS said Friday it is ramping up a crackdown on wealthy taxpayers who owe back taxes, noting that the effort springs from billions in new funding through the Inflation Reduction Act partially designed to help it track down millionaire tax cheats.
The agency will begin by pursuing 1,600 millionaires who owe at least $250,000 each in overdue taxes, the IRS said in a statement. The agency announced it will have "dozens of revenue officers" focusing on high-end collections cases in fiscal-year 2024, which starts in October and ends in September 2024.
The 2022 Inflation Reduction Act directed $80 billion to the IRS, with more than half of that earmarked for more enforcement agents. The idea is to generate more tax revenue for the nation's coffers by zeroing in on wealthy taxpayers who hide or underreport their income. Because of their legal complexity and costs, such tactics are far less common among people who are less well off because their income is reported to the IRS on W2s and other tax forms.
"If you pay your taxes on time it should be particularly frustrating when you see that wealthy filers are not," IRS Commissioner Danny Werfel told reporters in a call previewing the announcement.
The IRS will also heighten its scrutiny of 75 large business partnerships that have assets of at least $10 billion on average. In addition the dedicated agents, the agency said it plans to use artificial intelligence to track tax cheats.
Audit rates and underfunding
At the same time, the IRS reiterated that it doesn't intend to increase audit rates for people earning less than $400,000 a year. Some Republican lawmakers and right-leaning policy experts have raised concerns that the new IRS funding would be used to go after middle-income workers.
Audit rates have dropped precipitously in recent decades due to the IRS' shrinking workforce. The agency employed 82,000 workers in fiscal-year 2021, down from 94,000 workers in 2010, even as the U.S. population and number of taxpayers has grown over the same period.
The number of people with incomes of $1 million has jumped 50% over the last decade, but the number of audits on million-dollar tax returns has fallen by two-thirds.
"The years of underfunding that predated the Inflation Reduction Act led to the lowest audit rate of wealthy filers in our history," Werfel said Friday in a statement.
A team of academic economists and IRS researchers in 2021 found that the top 1% of U.S. income earners fail to report more than 20% of their earnings to the IRS.
—With reporting by the Associated Press.
- In:
- IRS
veryGood! (491)
Related
- Why members of two of EPA's influential science advisory committees were let go
- Ulta 24-Hour Flash Sale: Take 50% Off Lancôme, Urban Decay, Dr. Brandt, Lime Crime, and Maëlys Cosmetics
- Sudan conflict rages on after a month of chaos and broken ceasefires
- Evidence proves bear captured over killing of Italian jogger is innocent, activists say
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- TikTok's Taylor Frankie Paul Shares Update on Her Mental Health Journey After Arrest
- Tech Layoffs Throw Immigrants' Lives Into Limbo
- Gisele Bündchen Recalls Challenging Time of Learning Tom Brady Had Fathered Child With Bridget Moynahan
- Federal court filings allege official committed perjury in lawsuit tied to Louisiana grain terminal
- Raiders' Foster Moreau Stepping Away From Football After Being Diagnosed With Hodgkin’s Lymphoma
Ranking
- The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
- RuPaul's Drag Race Top 5 Give Shady Superlatives in Spill the T Mini-Challenge Sneak Peek
- What DNA kits leave out: race, ancestry and 'scientific sankofa'
- Cryptocurrency turmoil affects crypto miners
- Sam Taylor
- If ChatGPT designed a rocket — would it get to space?
- Willie Mae Thornton was a foremother of rock. These kids carry her legacy forward
- Twitch star Kai Cenat can't stop won't stop during a 30-day stream
Recommendation
NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
A sci-fi magazine has cut off submissions after a flood of AI-generated stories
A TikTok star who was functionally illiterate finds a community on BookTok
El Niño is coming back — and could last the rest of the year
McKinsey to pay $650 million after advising opioid maker on how to 'turbocharge' sales
Lea Michele's 2-Year-Old Son Ever Leo Hospitalized for Scary Health Issue
A future NBA app feature lets fans virtually replace a player in a live game
5 more people hanged in Iran after U.N. warns of frighteningly high number of executions