The IRS will not send local police to your house to arrest you for unpaid taxes, and they never threaten to do so. While IRS special agents or revenue officers may make unannounced, in-person visits, these are rare and typically occur only after multiple mailed notices for severe, outstanding tax issues or criminal investigations.
Revenue agents – examinations (audits)
They may meet you at an IRS office or visit your home, business or accountant's office. A visit may require a tour of your business or your authorized power of attorney. Before a visit: The agent contacts you by mail. After, they may call to discuss your audit.
The IRS may initiate criminal proceedings if they suspect a taxpayer has willfully committed tax fraud or tax evasion. This may involve falsifying information on federal tax returns, hiding income, or claiming false deductions.
You know the IRS might be investigating you through official mail (first contact), phone calls (often with automated messages to IRS.gov), or in-person visits, but signs of a criminal probe include contact with IRS Criminal Investigation (CI) agents, subpoenas to you or your bank, questions to your accountant/bank, unusual account activity (freezing/refusing transactions), or agents suddenly going silent after an audit. Key indicators are official IRS letters, contact from CI special agents, third-party inquiries, and formal summonses for records, signaling serious scrutiny beyond a simple audit.
The IRS can seize some of your property, including your house if you owe back taxes and are not complying with any payment plan you may have entered.
Can the IRS or FTB Foreclose on Your House? Both the IRS and FTB have the legal authority to foreclose on a property to satisfy a tax lien, but foreclosure is not their preferred course of action.
IRS employees may visit the taxpayer's home or business without notification to the taxpayer if attempts to communicate with the taxpayer in other ways, such as letters or phone calls, are not successful.
IRS Warning Signs of Federal Tax Evasion
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 government has no legal obligation to notify you that you're under investigation. There is no constitutional right to know that prosecutors are building a case against you.
If the taxpayer fails to respond or pay the owed amount, the tax authority may proceed with issuing a tax warrant. Public Record: Once issued, a tax warrant may be filed as a public record, alerting creditors and other interested parties of the government's claim against the taxpayer's property.
Yes, you absolutely can go to jail for tax evasion, as it's a serious federal felony involving willful attempts to underpay taxes, carrying potential prison time (up to 5 years per offense), substantial fines (up to $250,000 for individuals), and criminal record consequences, though the IRS typically pursues criminal charges only in cases of proven fraudulent intent, not honest mistakes.
The two most common ways to protect assets are:
Notices – The IRS will start sending you notices a month or two after you miss a tax deadline. Penalties and interest – If you don't respond to notices for missed tax payments, you'll continue to accrue penalties and interest.
Special Agents have no such pressure.
With a 90% conviction rate to protect, they dont bring cases they might lose. They take as long as necessary to make sure theyll win. That “luxury of time” is paid for with your anxiety. The typical IRS criminal investigation takes 12 to 24 months to complete.
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.
The "20k rule" refers to the traditional IRS threshold for reporting income from payment apps and online marketplaces on Form 1099-K: over $20,000 in gross payments AND more than 200 transactions in a calendar year. While a law (the American Rescue Plan) temporarily lowered the threshold to $600, recent legislation, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) (OBBBA), has reinstated the $20,000/200-transaction rule for tax years starting in 2025, providing relief for casual sellers and gig workers.
You know the IRS might be investigating you through official mail (first contact), phone calls (often with automated messages to IRS.gov), or in-person visits, but signs of a criminal probe include contact with IRS Criminal Investigation (CI) agents, subpoenas to you or your bank, questions to your accountant/bank, unusual account activity (freezing/refusing transactions), or agents suddenly going silent after an audit. Key indicators are official IRS letters, contact from CI special agents, third-party inquiries, and formal summonses for records, signaling serious scrutiny beyond a simple audit.
Here's a list of seven symptoms that call for attention.
Who must file. Generally, any person in a trade or business who receives more than $10,000 in cash in a single transaction or in related transactions must file a Form 8300.
Not reporting all of your income is an easy-to-avoid red flag that can lead to an audit. Taking excessive business tax deductions and mixing business and personal expenses can lead to an audit. The IRS mostly audits tax returns of those earning more than $200,000 and corporations with more than $10 million in assets.
Ignore the Myths
The IRS hardly ever seizes people's property. They will never take your house that you live in. If you owe more than $10,000, they may issue a Notice of Federal Tax Lien, which puts your debt on the public record, and means that money from selling your property goes towards your tax debt first.