What happens if you don’t pay your taxes?

December 21st, 2009

Every taxpaying American citizen is required by law to file a tax return by April 15th of every year. Failing to submit your tax forms on time, or submitting them with incorrect information, is a crime that can earn you jail time if the IRS finds out, but you might wonder just how that happens. What is the process through which the IRS catches you and decides whether or not to press charges?

Businesses have to file tax returns for all their employees, so as long as you aren’t self-employed, tax infractions are relatively easy to spot. Even if you don’t work for anyone else, the IRS tends to audit the very wealthy more often, and since your tax records from years past are kept on file, the IRS can spot the discrepancy if you just stop paying taxes all of a sudden. The IRS also performs some random audits every year for statistical purposes, and every tax return that goes through gets a DIF score – basically, a measure of how suspicious it looks. If your DIF score is high enough, the computer program that evaluated your tax return will audit you automatically.

The good news is that the IRS generally won’t press charges even if they do bust you – they’ll probably just file a tax return on your behalf and then charge you for it. But anyone who files an incorrect tax return – or doesn’t file at all – is potentially at risk for jail time, so it’s worth it to keep careful records.

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