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What Are The Chances Of An IRS Audit In 2024?

Last updated 03/21/2024 by

Andrew Latham
Just the thought of an “IRS audit” is enough to strike fear in the heart of any taxpayer. Everybody knows someone with a story about an audit from hell from an over-zealous collections officer. Audits can be an effective bogeyman to “encourage” people to be truthful in their tax returns, but what are the odds you will be audited?

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What are the chances of being audited by the IRS?

The answer may surprise you. On average, the chances a taxpayer will get audited are just 1 in 333. In other words, the IRS only audits 0.3% of tax returns. And 74% of audits are done by letter. So, most taxpayers never see an IRS agent even if they are unlucky enough to get audited.
The drop in IRS audits is part of a trend that started in 2010. The average taxpayer today is 56% less likely to get audited than in 2010. Despite a record-high number of individual tax returns filed in 2020 (157,195,302), the IRS audited only audited 509,917 thousand of them1.
As you would expect, this means the IRS is getting much less money from audits. To be exact, the IRS is now only collecting 41% of what it collected in 2010 (adjusting for inflation).
In 2010, the IRS collected $28.2 billion (adjusting for inflation) from audits, but only $11.1 billion in 2019. It doesn’t take a genius to see that the IRS is leaving a lot of money on the table. If the IRS had audited as many tax returns as in 2010, it may have collected $25 billion more in 2019. This is based on the 2019 average collection per IRS audit of $14,395. Apply the same logic to the years 2011 to 2019 and you get an estimated total shortfall of $164 billion.

So, why doesn’t the IRS hire more agents and audit more taxpayers?

That is a good question. The quick answer is the IRS can’t afford it. It simply doesn’t have the budget to hire more agents and examine tax returns adequately. Funding for IRS enforcement has dropped by $1.6 billion since 2010 despite a rising number of taxpayers (13.3 million more tax returns in 2019) and an increasingly complex tax and banking system.
The IRS is understaffed and underfunded, and yet it’s still an efficient source of revenue. The IRS only spends $0.33 in operating costs for every $100 it collects in taxes. Its budget has been slashed in the last decade despite a ballooning national debt. This means the IRS has to focus its efforts on the revenue collecting activities on the low hanging fruit. Audits, particularly when they involve high-income taxpayers, are expensive and require highly trained and experienced IRS agents.
Another issue is nonfilers. People who have an income but don’t file a tax return. According to a report by the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration published in May 2020, the IRS didn’t even try to audit more than 879,415 high-income nonfilers with an estimated tax due of $45.7 billion3 because they didn’t have the staff to handle the work.
Wealthy taxpayers are still more likely to be audited — as you would expect — but the gap has narrowed dramatically. In 2011, 12.5% of millionaires were audited. Fast-forward to 2019 and only 2.4% of millionaires get audited. In contrast, 1.2% of taxpayers who claim the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) and earn less than $25,000 a year get audited, which is three times more likely than the average tax return.

Why are the working poor so likely to get audited?

According to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, as many as 25% of EITC claims contain errors4. This is partially because the rules of this credit are complicated, but there are also those that try to game the system. For instance, sometimes both parents will split the children and file as head of household so they can both claim the EITC.

Does this mean taxpayers can lie and cheat and always get away with it?

Not by a long shot. Although it is true that IRS audits are shockingly low now, the IRS is not completely toothless. It uses sophisticated algorithms to profile taxpayers and look for “red flags” in tax returns that signal a higher likelihood of “mistakes” and tax evasion. Here are a few examples.

IRS red flags

  • Tax returns with bloated deductions when compared to the income reported are a clear signal that something is fishy. For example, you are more likely to get audited if you report $25,000 and claim $15,000 in tax credits and deductions than if you just claimed $2,000. Returns with extremely large deductions in relation to income are more likely to be audited.
  • Deductions that include travel, meal expenses, or auto expenses are classic red flags for IRS agents.
  • Businesses that report a loss — particularly if the losses are recurring — are also more likely to get an audit.
  • Odd or unexpected deductions are another obvious signal to the IRS.
  • Not filing a tax return will also trigger alarm bells. The IRS has the capability of matching information from your W-2s and your tax return.
  • W2s and 1099-MISC. The IRS also has the ability to match the information reported by your employer in your Form W-2s or 1099-MISC forms if you are a contractor. If there is a discrepancy, the IRS is going to ask questions. The IRS does not categorize these checks as audits so they don’t show up in their audit statistics.
The bottom line is IRS audit rates are at historically low levels. IRS agents only examine 1 in 333 tax returns (0.3%). You can improve those odds by avoiding the red flags the IRS uses to profile taxpayers. Millionaires, business owners that are aggressive with tax deductions, and low-income taxpayers that claim EITC have a higher chance to get audited, but it’s still unlikely.

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Andrew Latham

Andrew is the Content Director for SuperMoney, a Certified Financial Planner®, and a Certified Personal Finance Counselor. He loves to geek out on financial data and translate it into actionable insights everyone can understand. His work is often cited by major publications and institutions, such as Forbes, U.S. News, Fox Business, SFGate, Realtor, Deloitte, and Business Insider.

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