Can You Really Go to Jail for Not Paying or Filing Your Taxes? (2024)

Can You Really Go to Jail for Not Paying or Filing Taxes?

Can You Really Go to Jail for Not Paying or Filing Your Taxes? (1)

A lot of people want to know if you can really go to jail for not paying your taxes? The short answer is maybe — it depends on why you’re not paying your taxes.

If you cannot afford to pay your taxes, the IRS will not send you to jail. However, you can face jail time if you commit tax evasion or fraud.

The tax attorneys at The W Tax Group can help you navigate the tax code. If you’re having trouble with the IRS, contact us today.

Penalties for Tax Crimes

The most common tax crimes are fraud and evasion. Evasion is when you willfully avoid filing or paying taxes, and fraud is when you deliberately lie or deceive the IRS. There are several different types of tax fraud including:

  • Failure to collect or pay tax.
  • Failure to file a return or supply requested information.
  • Fraudulent withholding exemption certificate or failure to supply information.
  • Fraudulent and false statements.

These crimes can lead to a prison sentence of up to five years and fines up to $250,000 for individuals and $500,000 for corporations.

To be convicted of these crimes, your behavior must be willful. Fraud and evasion are intentional. They are not the same as making a mistake on your return.

Civil Versus Criminal Judgments

In most cases, the IRS uses civil judgments to hold taxpayers accountable. Here’s a quick example, imagine that you file a tax return and owe $10,000. You ignore the bill and all of the IRS’s collection notices. At this point, the IRS may obtain a civil judgment against you for the $10,000. This gives the IRS the right to issue a federal tax lien, seize your assets, garnish your wages, or take other collection actions. The IRS cannot put you in jail.

Here’s another example. Imagine that you don’t file a return or file an incomplete return. The IRS determines that you didn’t report all your income so the agency assesses a $10,000 tax liability against you. When you ignore the agency’s collection efforts, it obtains a civil judgment and starts collection actions against you. No criminal charges are filed, and you do not face jail time.

If willful fraud or evasion is involved, the IRS can also assess civil fraud penalties against you. The civil fraud penalty is 75% of the tax owed or the tax that was unreported. Additionally, if you commit civil fraud, the IRS may file criminal fraud charges against you as well, and then, you can face jail time.

People Who Have Gone to Jail for Tax Fraud

When willful fraud or evasion is involved, the IRS will not hesitate to pursue criminal charges. Many famous people have gone to jail for tax evasion, including:

  • Wesley Snipes was sentenced to three years in federal prison for tax evasion and failure to file returns.
  • Mike “The Situation” Sorrentino from the Jersey Shore was sentenced to eight months in prison for failure to pay taxes on $9 million of earnings.
  • Ja Rule (Jeffrey Atkins) received a 28-month prison sentence for failing to file returns and failure to report over $3 million in income.
  • Daryl Strawberry spent three months in prison and three months on house arrest for failure to report half a million in income between 1986 and 1990.
  • Founder of the Girls Gone Wild series, Joe Francis was sentenced to 301 days already served and a year of probation for filing false tax returns.
  • Lauryn Hill faced a three-month prison sentence after not paying $1.8 million in taxes.
  • Real Housewives of New Jersey stars Teresa and Joe Guidice were respectively sentenced to 15 and 41 months in prison for tax fraud and failure to file.
  • Chuck Berry served 120 days in prison, four years of probation, and 1,000 hours of community service for tax evasion.
  • Survivor winner Richard Hatch was sentenced to 51 months in prison for tax evasion and filing false returns.

Will You Get Caught If You File a False Return?

Filing a return with false information is a misdemeanor, and if charged, you can face up to three years in prison or up to $25,000 in fines. If you report additional dependents, overstate your business deductions, or lie about charitable contributions, you may face felony charges for tax evasion.

But will you get caught if you put the wrong information on your return? Not necessarily. It depends on the situation, but saving a few dollars on your tax bill is not worth the risk of facing jail time, incurring fines, or hurting your reputation.

To detect false information on returns, the IRS uses a matching system. If a financial institution, an employer, a client, or another third party reports information to the IRS and your return doesn’t have the matching info, the IRS will flag your return for a manual review.

The IRS also randomly selects people and businesses for audits. If you file your tax return honestly and keep good records, an audit can be relatively painless. However, if you’ve lied on your return, an audit can be the first step toward a criminal case against you.

Example of a Tax Crime

To help you get a sense of how the IRS detects tax fraud and other tax crimes, here’s a story about someone committing tax evasion.

Joe has a Monday through Friday job at an office, and every year, he reports the earnings from his job on his tax return. On the weekends, Joe does junk removal. At first, he just provides services for a few friends, but over the years, he develops a strong reputation as a junk removal professional.

For the past few years, Joe has earned an extra $500 every weekend on his side hustle. His annual income from junk removal is about $25,000. He’s been saving the cash in a savings account at XYZ Savings Bank, but he hasn’t reported any of that income on his tax return.

The IRS sends Joe an audit notice. During the audit, the auditor asks about other income sources, but Joe claims that his only income is from his Monday-to-Friday job. When the auditor asks to see his bank statements, Joe provides the auditor with statements from his checking account, but he doesn’t share any of the statements from his savings account.

Joe believes that his return was randomly selected for an audit, but it wasn’t. The IRS has a reason to believe that Joe might be evading taxes. Last year, ABC Property Management Company paid Joe $3,000 to remove junk from some of their properties, and they issued a 1099-NEC to Joe. Although Joe didn’t receive the 1099-NEC because he moved, the IRS has a record of this payment, and the agency is curious about why Joe didn’t report it.

During the next audit meeting, the auditor asks Joe about his account at XYZ Savings Bank. Joe quickly lies and says that he forgot about that account because he never uses it. The auditor pulls out records that he has summoned from the bank and pokes a big hole in Joe’s story.

Based on the records in that savings account, the IRS realizes that Joe has been earning but not reporting extra income for years. The agency brings criminal charges for tax evasion against Joe. He must pay the taxes owed, plus penalties for criminal tax evasion, and he may face a prison sentence.

Penalties aren’t just for taxpayers. There are also consequences for tax preparers who commit tax fraud.

If you’re in a situation like this, you need a tax attorney. Do not represent yourself.

Who Gets Randomly Audited?

Being randomly selected for an audit is relatively rare, but it depends on your income level. If you report no income or a loss, you face a significant chance of being audited.

Otherwise, your risk of an audit increases based on your income. Here are the percentages of tax returns audited for tax year 2015 broken down by income level.

  • No income — 4.47%
  • $1 to $25,000 — 0.66%
  • $25,000 to $50,000 — 0.40%
  • $50,000 to $75,000 — 0.53%
  • $75,000 to $100,000 — 0.49%
  • $100,000 to $200,000 — 0.47%
  • $200,000 to $500,000 — 0.55%
  • $500,000 to $1 million — 1.13%
  • $1 million to $5 million — 2.39%
  • $5 million to $10 million — 4.39%
  • $10 million and above — 8.16%

Typically, when the IRS does an audit, the taxpayer does not face any criminal penalties. Even if the taxpayer made a mistake on their return, the IRS just adjusts the return and assesses the tax due.

For example, in 2015, the IRS only indicated 1,330 taxpayers for legal-source tax evasion. When you consider that 150 million people file tax returns, this is a very small number.

Note that legal-source income is money earned from legal activities. The IRS also expects you to report income from illegal activities.

Can You Go to Jail for Reporting Illegal Income on Your Tax Return?

The IRS’s tax code requires people to report income earned from illegal sources as well as stolen money and items. For instance, if you earn income from selling drugs or other illegal goods or if you embezzle from your employer, you are legally required to report the income.

You are also supposed to report the fair market value of anything you steal — if you steal a car worth $10,000, you should report the $10,000 as income and pay tax on it.

But what if you report illegal income? Can the IRS tell law enforcement that you earned money from crime? This issue is complicated, and there have been many Supreme Court cases about it. Generally, the rule is that you must report illegal income, but you don’t have to incriminate yourself by revealing its source.

Can You Go to Jail for Not Reporting Illegal Income?

Can You Really Go to Jail for Not Paying or Filing Your Taxes? (2)

You can face jail time for tax evasion if you don’t report income from illegal sources. The most infamous case of this was Al Capone.

The FBI had been trying to capture this famous mobster for years. He was briefly arrested for carrying concealed weapons and contempt of court. His most significant arrest, however, was due to tax evasion. Federal Treasury agents gathered evidence that he failed to report his illegal income and thus failed to pay his income tax bill for years. Ultimately, he was convicted for this crime and spent 11 years in prison.

How Long Can the IRS Bring a Criminal Case Against You?

Typically, the IRS only has three years from the latter of your return due date or the date you filed to audit you. However, if you omit more than 25% of your income, the IRS has six years to bring criminal charges against you.

If you file a fake return or don’t file at all, there is no statute of limitations. The IRS has an unlimited amount of time to bring criminal or civil tax penalties against you.

Is Tax Avoidance a Crime?

No, tax avoidance is a legal strategy to reduce your tax bill. You can legally avoid tax by legitimate means, and ideally, you should use tax planning strategies to reduce your tax bill as much as legally possible.

What Happens If You Don’t File a Tax Return?

If you don’t file a tax return, you can face a penalty of 5% of the tax owed, every month up to 25%. You may not be able to get loans or file for bankruptcy. The IRS may send you a substitution for return (SFR) which is essentially a return where the IRS assumes your income but doesn’t give you any deductions, exemptions, or credits.

The IRS can pursue collection action (liens, levies, seizures, etc) in pursuit of the unpaid tax, but you may also face misdemeanor charges and a penalty of up to one year in jail and up to a $25,000 fine for each unfiled return. For best results, reach out to the IRS first whenever possible. The agency is more lenient when you file your unfiled returns on your own.

Get Help with Tax Crimes and Fraud

Has the IRS accused you of fraud when you just made a simple mistake on your return? Are you worried about unfiled returns or unreported income? Dealing with tax fraud or evasion? Then, you need legal help.

The tax attorneys at The W Tax Group have extensive experience helping clients deal with the IRS. To learn more, contact us today.

Can You Really Go to Jail for Not Paying or Filing Your Taxes? (2024)

FAQs

Can You Really Go to Jail for Not Paying or Filing Your Taxes? ›

The short answer is maybe — it depends on why you're not paying your taxes. If you cannot afford to pay your taxes, the IRS will not send you to jail. However, you can face jail time if you commit tax evasion or fraud.

Do people really go to jail for not filing taxes? ›

Failure to file penalty

That's not to say you still can't go to jail for it. The penalty is $25,000 for each year you failed to file. You can face criminal tax evasion charges for failing to file a tax return if it was due no more than six years ago. If convicted, you could be sent to jail for up to one year.

At what point does the IRS put you in jail? ›

The actions can land you in jail include: Tax Evasion: Any action taken to evade the assessment of a tax, such as filing a fraudulent return, can land you in prison for five years. Failure to File a Return: Failing to file a return can land you in jail for one year for each year you didn't file by the due date.

Can you get in trouble for not filing taxes if you don't owe? ›

There's no penalty for failure to file if you're due a refund. However, you risk losing a refund altogether if you file a return or otherwise claim a refund after the statute of limitations has expired.

What happens if you don't make enough to pay taxes? ›

Paying as much as you can when you file your return will reduce interest and penalty charges. If you find that you cannot possibly come up with the money to pay your taxes, even through an installment plan, you may apply for an “offer in compromise” to settle your tax debt for less than the full amount owed.

What happens if you just never file taxes? ›

The more years you don't file, the more tax debt you'll owe, which means a larger penalty. In addition, you will owe interest on any unpaid taxes, which can add up.

How much money do you have to owe the IRS before you go to jail? ›

You ignore the bill and all of the IRS's collection notices. At this point, the IRS may obtain a civil judgment against you for the $10,000. This gives the IRS the right to issue a federal tax lien, seize your assets, garnish your wages, or take other collection actions. The IRS cannot put you in jail.

Is owing the IRS a felony? ›

Penalty for Tax Evasion in California

Tax evasion in California is punishable by up to one year in county jail or state prison, as well as fines of up to $20,000. The state can also require you to pay your back taxes, and it will place a lien on your property as a security until you pay.

Do people get away with not filing taxes? ›

Under the Internal Revenue Code § 7201, an attempt to evade taxes can be punished by up to 5 years in prison and up to $250,000 in fines.

How long can the IRS come after you for unfiled taxes? ›

Generally, under IRC § 6502, the IRS can collect back taxes for 10 years from the date of assessment.

How many years can you go without filing income tax? ›

Note, too, that the IRS does not have a statute of limitations on missing or late tax forms. If you didn't file taxes for the last two, three, ten, twenty, or fifty years, the IRS will still accept your forms as soon as you can get them submitted.

Can I skip a year of filing taxes? ›

1. It's illegal. The law requires you to file every year that you have a filing requirement. The government can hit you with civil and even criminal penalties for failing to file your return.

What happens if I owe taxes and I don't pay them? ›

If you file your tax return but don't pay what you owe, you'll likely receive a letter from the IRS detailing how much you owe and asking you to pay. “One of the immediate consequences of not paying your taxes on time is the accumulation of interest and penalties.

How do I get my IRS debt forgiven? ›

Can I get my tax debt forgiven? 5 options to consider
  1. Use a professional tax relief service.
  2. Utilize the offer in compromise program.
  3. Request a currently not collectible (CNC) status.
  4. File for bankruptcy.
  5. Agree on a payment plan.
Mar 28, 2024

Is there a way to settle with the IRS? ›

How an offer in compromise works. This is an agreement between a taxpayer and the IRS that settles a tax debt for less than the full amount owed. The goal is a compromise that's in the best interest of both the taxpayer and the agency. The offer in compromise application includes a fee of $205 and an initial payment.

How serious is not paying taxes? ›

Being unable to afford to pay your tax bill typically doesn't rise to the level of criminal charges, but the IRS can assess late payment penalties and interest charges. The penalties and interest assessed depend on the amount owed and how long it takes you to pay it off.

How do people get caught for tax evasion? ›

Preliminary Analysis and Investigation Approvals. Special agents analyze information to determine if criminal tax fraud or some other financial crime may have occurred. Relevant information is evaluated.

What happens if the IRS finds unreported income? ›

If a discrepancy exists, a Notice CP2000 is issued. The CP2000 isn't a bill, it's a proposal to adjust your income, payments, credits, and/or deductions. The adjustment may result in additional tax owed or a refund of taxes paid.

How far back can tax evasion be investigated? ›

The basic rule for the IRS' ability to look back into the past and conduct a tax audit is that the agency has three years from your filing date to audit your tax filing for that year.

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