To avoid federal tax penalties, file accurately and on time, pay by the April deadline (or request an extension), and pay at least 90% of your current year's tax or 100% of the prior year's, using withholding or quarterly estimated payments. If you can't pay, file anyway to avoid failure-to-file penalties, pay what you can, and apply for an IRS payment plan to prevent or reduce failure-to-pay penalties.
You can avoid a penalty by filing accurate returns, paying your tax by the due date, and furnishing any information returns timely.
Short-term payment plans (up to 180 days)
If you can't pay in full immediately, you may qualify for additional time --up to 180 days-- to pay in full. There's no fee for this short-term payment plan. However, interest and any applicable penalties continue to accrue until your liability is paid in full.
The IRS underpayment penalty is triggered when you don't pay enough tax throughout the year, typically by failing to meet safe harbor rules: either paying less than 90% of your current year's tax liability or less than 100% (or 110% for high earners) of your prior year's tax, and owing $1,000 or more in tax after credits and withholding, or by paying estimated taxes late. Common causes include insufficient tax withholding from paychecks, underestimating income from self-employment, or not making timely quarterly estimated tax payments.
The IRS $600 rule refers to a change in reporting requirements for third-party payment apps (like Venmo, PayPal) for taxable income from goods and services, where platforms must send a Form 1099-K if you receive over $600 in a year, intended to capture gig economy/side hustle income, though delays and phased implementation have adjusted the timeline, with current rules for 2024 using a higher threshold ($5,000) before fully phasing to $600 for future years, but remember all taxable income, regardless of form, must always be reported.
The IRS "10k rule" primarily refers to the requirement for businesses and financial institutions to report cash transactions over $10,000 by filing Form 8300 (for businesses) or a Currency Transaction Report (CTR) (for banks), under the Bank Secrecy Act. This rule helps combat money laundering, tax evasion, and terrorist financing, requiring reporting for single transactions or related transactions totaling over $10,000 in cash within a year, with penalties for non-compliance.
To avoid the 22% tax bracket (or any higher bracket), focus on reducing your taxable income through strategies like maxing out 401(k)s and HSAs, deferring bonuses, tax-loss harvesting, smart charitable giving, and strategic asset location, understanding that higher rates only apply to income within that bracket, not your entire income.
5 Common Mistakes That Lead to Employee Underpayments
Some common reasons penalties are imposed include: Missing filing deadlines for individual, corporate, or payroll tax returns. Failure to pay the taxes owed by the due date, even if the tax return is filed. Inaccurate reporting of income or expenses on tax returns.
Failure to file or pay penalties
Fires, natural disasters or civil disturbances. Inability to get records. Death, serious illness or unavoidable absence of the taxpayer or immediate family. System issues that delayed a timely electronic filing or payment.
One-time forgiveness, officially known as First-Time Penalty Abatement (FTA), is an IRS program that allows qualified taxpayers to have certain penalties removed from their tax accounts.
The IRS 7-year rule primarily applies to keeping records for claiming a deduction for bad debts or losses from worthless securities, allowing a longer period to file for a credit or refund, but it's not a universal audit limit; it's often a recommended safe buffer for general record-keeping, with the standard IRS audit period usually being 3 years, extending to 6 years for substantial income omission (over 25%) or foreign income issues, and indefinitely for fraud.
The failure-to-pay penalty is one-half of one percent for each month, or part of a month, up to a maximum of 25%, of the amount of tax that remains unpaid from the due date of the return until the tax is paid in full.
Common tax return mistakes that can cost taxpayers
You can get an IRS underpayment penalty waiver for "reasonable cause," like a natural disaster, casualty, or other unusual events preventing payment, or if you retired/became disabled after age 62, using Form 2210 with a written explanation. The IRS also offers first-time penalty abatement (FTA) for those with a clean compliance history, removing penalties for one year if you meet specific conditions, notes TurboTax.
The IRS underpayment penalty is triggered when you don't pay enough tax throughout the year, typically by failing to meet safe harbor rules: either paying less than 90% of your current year's tax liability or less than 100% (or 110% for high earners) of your prior year's tax, and owing $1,000 or more in tax after credits and withholding, or by paying estimated taxes late. Common causes include insufficient tax withholding from paychecks, underestimating income from self-employment, or not making timely quarterly estimated tax payments.
Ghost employee fraud is a common form of internal occupational fraud where an employee, typically with payroll access, adds a non-existent employee (the “ghost”) to the company's payroll. The fraudster then collects the wages and/or benefits that were intended for the phantom employee.
At a glance. If your total income is between £100,000 and £125,140, the tapering of the personal allowance means you could end up paying an effective 60% income tax rate. Almost 725,000 workers will fall into the 60% tax trap in 2025-26, according to HMRC, up from about 300,000 in 2017-2018.
Maximize Your Refund or Minimize Your Tax Liability with These Practical Tips