Common IRS Audit Triggers and How to Avoid Them
An IRS audit is a formal examination of your tax return. The overall audit rate is quite low — less than 0.5% of all individual returns — but certain return characteristics significantly increase the probability of selection. Understanding what draws IRS attention helps you file accurately while maintaining proper documentation for any claims that might be scrutinized.
How the IRS Selects Returns
The IRS uses the Discriminant Information Function (DIF), a computerized scoring system that compares your return to statistical norms for your income level and industry. High DIF scores indicate entries significantly outside the norm. Returns can also be selected through related audits (if your business partner is audited, you may be too), through information return matching (comparing your reported income to W-2s and 1099s filed by payers), and through specific compliance campaigns targeting known problem areas.
High-Income Returns
The IRS allocates audit resources where they can collect the most revenue. Returns with adjusted gross income over $1 million are audited at approximately 2.5% to 3% in recent years. Even returns over $200,000 face elevated scrutiny. This is not an argument to under-report income but context for understanding that more complex, higher-income returns attract proportionally more IRS attention.
Large Deductions and Schedule C Losses
The DIF system compares your deductions to statistical averages for your income level. Charitable contributions, home office deductions, business meals, and business losses significantly above average will increase your DIF score. If you report losses from a business activity for multiple consecutive years, the IRS may question whether it is a legitimate business or a hobby loss. The general presumption is that a business that shows a profit in at least 3 of 5 consecutive years is operated for profit.
Incomplete or Mismatched Information Returns
The IRS receives copies of all W-2s and 1099s filed by employers and payers and automatically matches these against your return. Failing to report a 1099 you received — even a small one — will be caught and trigger an IRS notice. Always ensure all income reported to you is reflected on your return. If a 1099 is wrong, contact the issuer to correct it rather than simply omitting it.
If You Are Audited
Most audits are correspondence audits — IRS letters requesting documentation for a specific item. Respond promptly, provide the requested documentation, and consider whether professional representation is warranted. For field or office audits, having a qualified CPA or EA represent you is strongly advisable. Do not provide more information than specifically requested.
Read more about tax compliance on our tax resource blog, or schedule a consultation to review your return before filing.