When T.S. Eliot began The Waste Land noting that "April is the cruelest month," the American poet wasn't talking about tax season. But anyone who has ever been audited might adopt the phrase to suit their circumstances . . . and the month is rapidly becoming crueler and crueler each passing year. According to an article in today's New York Times, the Internal Revenue Service has become increasingly more likely to audit middle-class Americans. In fact, since 2000, audits have nearly tripled among those taxpaying Americans who earn between $25,000 and $100,000 per year. During the past six years, middle-class households (who make up nearly half of all taxpayers) have seen their odds of an audit rise from 1 in 377 to 1 in 140.
Kevin Brown, the I.R.S. deputy commissioner, said the agency's audit practices previously paid too little attention to the middle class, focusing instead on those making $1 million or more. "We try to run a balanced audit program," he now confirms. Even with the ramped-up audits on the nation's middle class, those in the highest tax bracket remain more like to be audited. Taxpayers with income above $100,000 have a 1 in 59 chance of being audited; those fortunate enough to make $1 million or more enjoy the misfortune of a 1-in-16 chance of an audit. Finally, those making below $25,000 face only a 1 in 94 chance of enduring an audit.
If you are among the unlucky middle-class households to be audited, and if evidence of errors are found in your documents, the average penalty is about $4,100.
Beth Gaston Moon is an analyst at Schaeffer's Investment Research.











Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
4-16-2007 @ 11:37AM
Tracy said...
I have been audited three times in the past 4 years because of stock activity and have paid no penalty. Buying and selling stocks will get you AUDITED. Daytrading will get you AUDITED because in a years time you can buy up to 200,000.00 dollars worth of stock using only the same initial 10,000.00 or 20,000.00 buying and selling. At the end of the year your stock broker will report that you SOLD 200,000.00 dollars worth of stock to the IRS. If your taxes not done right, the IRS computer will kick out your return demanding taxes be paid on the 200,000.00 dollars. Like I said I have been audited 4 times because of Stocks, Bonds or Annuities. Anything you sell. Institutions only report on what you sell for, not what you bought for. So you might sell at a loss, yet the IRS will demand their money thinking you have made a profit.
4-18-2007 @ 7:05PM
DB said...
The IRS is a hoax, and they should ONLY be auditing anyone, or corporation which makes more than $100,000 a year. The middle class is already being dissolved into nothing, so let's make it even harder on them, screw the IRS.