IRS Audit Defense and Representation

Posted Monday, July 6, 2026

IRS Audit Defense – WCG CPAs & Advisors

You got a letter from the IRS. It’s in one of those envelopes with the little window, and your stomach just dropped. We get it. But here’s the thing – an IRS audit is not a criminal investigation. It’s a paperwork exercise. A very specific, very bureaucratic paperwork exercise where the IRS wants to verify that what you put on your tax return matches reality. That’s it. No handcuffs. No perp walk. Just documents.

Now, that doesn’t mean you should treat it casually. An audit handled poorly can cost you thousands of dollars in additional taxes, penalties, and interest. An audit handled well? Sometimes you walk away with no changes at all. We’ve represented clients through hundreds of audits at WCG, and the difference between a good outcome and a bad one almost always comes down to preparation, process, and knowing how the IRS actually works on the inside – not just what the manual says.

This page is specifically about audit defense and representation. You got a notice, and now what? We’re not talking about tax settlements, offers in compromise, or general tax resolution here – we have other pages for that. This is about standing between you and the IRS examiner with the right documents, the right strategy, and the right attitude. Here we go.

Types of IRS Audits

Not all audits are created equal, and the type of audit you’re facing determines everything about how we respond.

Let’s break them down-

  • Correspondence Audits are by far the most common. The IRS sends you a letter asking you to verify a specific item on your return – maybe a charitable deduction, a credit you claimed, or some income that doesn’t match their records. You respond by mail. No face-to-face meeting required. These are often the easiest to resolve, but “easy” doesn’t mean you should wing it. We’ve seen plenty of correspondence audits escalate because someone sent too much information, or the wrong information, or responded with a four-page emotional letter about how they’re a good taxpayer. Don’t do that.
  • Office Audits mean the IRS wants you to bring specific documents to a local IRS office and sit down with an examiner. These tend to be more detailed than correspondence audits and usually involve multiple items on your return. The IRS will send you a letter telling you exactly what to bring. Bring exactly that. Nothing more.
  • Field Audits are the ones that make people nervous. An IRS revenue agent comes to your home or place of business to review your records. These are typically reserved for more complex returns – business owners, high-income filers, people with complicated investment structures. The agent will want to look at your books, your records, and sometimes your physical operation. Having said that, even a field audit follows a predictable process, and with proper representation, it’s entirely manageable.
  • TCMP Audits – Taxpayer Compliance Measurement Program audits – are the ones nobody wants. These are random. You didn’t do anything wrong. The IRS selected your return for a line-by-line, item-by-item review of everything. Every deduction. Every income source. Every credit. The IRS uses these to update their statistical models (the DIF scores we’ll talk about in a moment). It’s like getting selected for jury duty, except the jury duty lasts months and involves shoeboxes full of receipts. Yuck!

What Triggers an Audit

Let’s say you’re wondering whether you should be worried. Here’s what actually moves the needle at the IRS-

The IRS uses something called a DIF score – Discriminant Information Function – which is a computer-generated score that compares your return to statistical norms for people with similar income, filing status, and profession. Huh? Basically, if your deductions, credits, or income patterns deviate significantly from what the IRS expects for someone in your bracket, your DIF score goes up, and your return gets flagged for potential examination. The IRS doesn’t publish how the DIF score works. Wonderful.

Beyond the DIF score, here are the common audit triggers we see in practice:

  • High deductions relative to income. If you’re reporting $75,000 in income and $60,000 in deductions, that ratio is going to raise eyebrows. It doesn’t mean your deductions aren’t legitimate – it means you better have documentation.
  • Large charitable contributions. Donating 30% of your adjusted gross income to charity is generous and may be perfectly valid, but it’s going to get a second look. Especially non-cash donations.
  • Home office deductions. The IRS has historically scrutinized these because they’ve been abused. If you claim a home office, make sure it’s a dedicated space used regularly and exclusively for business. Not your kitchen table. Not your couch.
  • Schedule C losses year after year. If your side business has lost money for five consecutive years, the IRS is going to question whether it’s actually a business or a hobby. The hobby loss rules under IRC Section 183 are no joke.
  • Cash-intensive businesses. Restaurants, bars, salons, auto detailing – any business where cash is a primary form of payment gets extra scrutiny because cash is harder to trace.
  • Foreign accounts and FBAR issues. If you have foreign bank accounts exceeding $10,000 in aggregate at any point during the year and you forgot to file your FBAR, you’re in a different category of trouble.
  • The IRS has made crypto a priority. If you sold, traded, or received crypto and didn’t report it, expect attention. The IRS now asks about crypto right on the front of Form 1040.
  • Amended returns. Filing an amended return isn’t a red flag by itself, but it does put your return back in front of human eyes. If the amendment involves a large refund claim, the scrutiny increases.
  • Informant tips. Yes, people report other people to the IRS. Disgruntled ex-spouses, former business partners, angry employees. The IRS has a whistleblower program that actually pays informants a percentage of what they collect. Really?!

Sidebar: None of these triggers guarantee an audit. Millions of returns have one or more of these characteristics and never get audited. The overall audit rate is still historically low. But if your return does get selected, don’t panic. That’s what we’re here for.

What NOT to Do When You Get an Audit Notice

This might be the most important section on this page. We’ve seen more audits go sideways because of what the taxpayer did before calling us than because of anything actually wrong on the return.

Here we go-

  • Don’t ignore the notice. The IRS gives you a deadline to respond. If you miss it, they’ll assess the additional tax, penalties, and interest automatically – based on their numbers, not yours. And once that assessment is made, you’re now fighting uphill to get it reversed. The clock starts ticking the moment that notice arrives.
  • Don’t call the IRS yourself. We say this with love. You’re smart. You’re capable. But calling the IRS without representation is like performing your own dental work – technically possible, but why? IRS agents are trained to ask open-ended questions that get you talking. And when you’re nervous, you talk. And when you talk, you volunteer information. And when you volunteer information, you open up issues that weren’t even part of the original audit. See where this is going?
  • Don’t volunteer information. If the IRS asks for your 2024 vehicle mileage log, give them your 2024 vehicle mileage log. Don’t also hand over your 2023 log, your maintenance records, your fuel receipts, and a narrative about how you use your car. The IRS is not your friend in this moment. They are doing their job, and their job is to find discrepancies.
  • Don’t give the IRS access to your full books when they only asked for specific items. If the audit letter says they want to review your charitable contributions and your home office deduction, those are the only two topics on the table. Handing over your complete QuickBooks file is like inviting someone over for dinner and giving them a key to your house. They only needed to come to the dining room.
  • Don’t agree to extend the statute of limitations without understanding the implications. The IRS will sometimes ask you to sign Form 872 to extend the time they have to assess additional tax. Sometimes this makes sense – maybe you need more time to gather documents. But sometimes the IRS is fishing, and they need more time to fish. We evaluate every extension request on its merits before advising you to sign anything. Period. Full stop.

WCG’s Audit Defense Process

When you engage WCG for audit defense, here’s exactly what happens. No mysteries, no surprises-

  • Step 1: Initial Notice Review and Risk Assessment. You send us the notice (or better yet, forward the letter the day it arrives). We review the notice, identify the type of audit, the specific items under examination, and the response deadline. We then assess the risk – meaning, how strong is your position on the items being questioned? Are there documentation gaps? Potential exposure areas? We give you an honest assessment, not a pep talk.
  • Step 2: Power of Attorney Filing. We file Form 2848 with the IRS, which gives us legal authority to represent you. Once this is filed, the IRS communicates with us, not you. You don’t have to take their calls. You don’t have to open their letters. We handle it. This alone takes an enormous weight off our clients’ shoulders.
  • Step 3: Document Gathering and Organization. We work with you to gather every document the IRS has requested – and only what they’ve requested. We organize it in a way that makes the examiner’s job easy, because here’s a secret about IRS agents: they have enormous caseloads. If your documentation is clean, organized, and directly responsive to their questions, they’re more likely to move through your case efficiently and less likely to go digging for more issues. We make their job easy on purpose.
  • Step 4: IRS Communication. All communication with the IRS goes through us. Every letter, every phone call, every email (yes, the IRS uses email now in some cases). We know what to say, what not to say, and when to push back. More importantly, we know when the IRS examiner is fishing versus when they have a legitimate issue. That distinction matters.
  • Step 5: Representation at In-Person Meetings. If your audit requires an in-person meeting – either at an IRS office or at your place of business – we’re there. In many cases, you don’t even need to attend. Our enrolled agents and CPAs sit across from the IRS examiner and handle the entire conversation. We know what they’re trained to look for, what questions are designed to get you to overshare, and how to keep the scope of the audit where it belongs.
  • Step 6: Negotiation of Findings. After the examination, the IRS issues proposed adjustments. Sometimes they’re reasonable. Sometimes they’re not. We review every proposed adjustment, compare it to the tax code and relevant case law, and negotiate where we disagree. We’ve successfully reduced or eliminated proposed adjustments in more audits than we can count.
  • Step 7: Appeals Process. If we can’t reach an agreement with the examiner, we take it to IRS Appeals. The Appeals process is a completely separate division within the IRS, staffed by more experienced officers who are specifically authorized to settle cases based on the “hazards of litigation.” Translation: Appeals officers can compromise. Examiners generally can’t. This is often where the best outcomes happen.

Why WCG for Audit Defense

Here’s the deal – lots of firms say they handle audits. And they do, technically. But there’s a difference between “handling” an audit and strategically defending one. Our team includes enrolled agents and CPAs who have spent years dealing with the IRS, and some who have worked inside the IRS. That’s not cocktail party fodder – it’s a practical advantage.

We know what the IRS is actually looking for versus what they say they’re looking for. The audit letter says they want to review your business expenses. What the examiner is really doing is looking at your lifestyle – does the income you reported support the life you’re living? Are there deposits in your bank account that don’t match reported income? We understand the unwritten playbook because we’ve been on the other side of the table enough times.

We’ve also handled hundreds of audits across every type – correspondence, office, field, and even those dreaded TCMP audits. We know the IRS Internal Revenue Manual procedures, the examiner’s authority limits, and the precise moment when an audit shifts from information-gathering to position-taking. That experience translates directly into better outcomes for our clients.

Sidebar: We’re not trying to beat the IRS. We’re trying to resolve the audit fairly and accurately. If you took a deduction you weren’t entitled to, we’ll tell you. We’re not going to fabricate a defense for something indefensible – that’s how people end up with fraud penalties. But if your deduction is legitimate and the IRS is challenging it, we’ll fight for it with everything we’ve got.

Audit Outcomes - What to Expect

Every audit ends one of four ways-

  • No Change. The IRS reviewed your return, looked at your documentation, and determined everything checks out. You owe nothing additional. This happens more often than people think, especially when you’re well-represented.
  • Agreed Adjustments. The IRS proposes changes, we review them, and we agree (either fully or partially) because the adjustments are correct. Let’s say you claimed $12,000 in vehicle expenses but could only substantiate $8,500 of business mileage. The IRS adjusts the $3,500 difference, you owe a bit more in tax plus some interest, and everyone moves on. Not the end of the world.
  • Disagreed – Appeals. We disagree with some or all of the proposed adjustments, and we take the case to IRS Appeals. As we mentioned, Appeals officers have settlement authority that examiners don’t, and they evaluate cases based on the likelihood of the IRS winning if it went to court. If the IRS’s position is weak, Appeals knows it.
  • Tax Court. If Appeals doesn’t resolve the dispute, you have the right to petition the U.S. Tax Court before paying the assessed tax. This is the nuclear option, and it’s rarely necessary – the vast majority of audits resolve well before this stage. But the right to petition Tax Court gives you leverage throughout the process. The IRS knows that if their position isn’t solid, a Tax Court judge might not side with them.

The Real Cost of Going It Alone

Let’s talk numbers, because that’s what we do. Let’s say the IRS audits your Schedule C and proposes $18,000 in additional income based on bank deposits they flagged. You know that $12,000 of those deposits were transfers between your own accounts and reimbursements from a friend, not income. But you can’t articulate that clearly to the examiner, you don’t have organized records, and you accidentally mention that you sometimes do side work for cash.

Now the IRS examiner is interested in the side work. They start asking more questions. Before you know it, the original $18,000 adjustment has grown to $27,000 because you opened up a whole new line of inquiry. Add a 20% accuracy-related penalty on the additional tax, plus interest accruing from the original due date – you could be looking at $8,000 to $10,000 in total liability on issues that were partially or completely defensible.

Compare that to engaging WCG to represent you from day one. We file the Power of Attorney, respond to the IRS with the specific documentation that explains the $12,000 in non-income deposits, and never mention the side work because it wasn’t part of the audit scope. Proposed adjustment: reduced or eliminated. Penalty: none, because there was no underpayment. That’s the difference. It’s not magic – it’s discipline and experience.

Connecting the Dots

An audit notice is one thing. But tax problems rarely exist in isolation. If you’ve received an audit notice, you might also want to explore-

  • IRS Notice Response if you’ve received other types of IRS correspondence beyond audit notices – CP2000 underreporter notices, balance due notices, or identity verification letters.
  • Penalty Abatement if your audit results in penalties and you have reasonable cause for abatement.
  • Tax Resolution Services if your tax situation has escalated beyond an audit into collection, liens, levies, or settlement territory.
  • Specialty Support Services Hub for an overview of all the specialized services WCG offers when things get complicated.

An audit is a snapshot in time. Our job is to resolve it cleanly and make sure your tax position going forward is solid enough to withstand scrutiny. Because the best audit defense? Not getting audited in the first place. We digress.

Key Takeaways

  • An audit is a documentation exercise, not a criminal proceeding. The IRS wants to verify what’s on your return. If you have the paperwork, you’re already in a strong position.
  • The type of audit determines the strategy. A correspondence audit and a field audit are completely different animals and require completely different approaches.
  • What you don’t say matters more than what you do say. Volunteering information during an audit is the single most common mistake we see, and it’s entirely avoidable with representation.
  • Power of Attorney changes everything. Once we file Form 2848, the IRS talks to us, not you. You go back to running your business.
  • Most audits don’t end in disaster. Many result in no change at all, and even when adjustments are made, they’re often negotiable – especially at the Appeals level.
  • Timing matters. The sooner you engage representation after receiving an audit notice, the more options you have. Waiting until the deadline has passed puts you at a significant disadvantage.
  • The IRS has a playbook, and so do we. Our team knows IRS examination procedures from the inside out, which means we know what the examiner is really looking for and how to respond strategically.

FAQs

How much does IRS audit defense cost?

It depends entirely on the type and complexity of the audit. A simple correspondence audit where we need to send in a few documents is far less involved than a full field audit on a multi-entity business return. We scope the engagement upfront so you know what you’re looking at before we start. No surprises.

Will the IRS auditor come to my house?

Only in a field audit, and even then, we can often negotiate to have the examination conducted at our office instead. Most audits are correspondence or office audits, which don’t involve anyone visiting your home or business.

Can I represent myself in an audit?

You can. We don’t recommend it. As we explained above, IRS examiners are trained to ask questions that get you talking, and most taxpayers – even smart, successful ones – end up volunteering information that expands the scope of the audit. Representation exists for a reason.

What happens if I ignore the audit notice?

The IRS will make adjustments based on their calculations – not yours – and assess additional tax, penalties, and interest. You’ll then receive a Notice of Deficiency (a “90-day letter”), and if you don’t respond to that either, the assessment becomes final. Ignoring the IRS doesn’t make them go away. It makes them more expensive.

How long does an IRS audit take?

Correspondence audits can resolve in a few weeks to a few months. Office and field audits typically take three to six months, sometimes longer for complex cases. TCMP audits can drag on for the better part of a year. The IRS generally has three years from the filing date to initiate an audit, and the statute of limitations on assessment is also typically three years (six years if there’s a substantial understatement of income).

Does getting audited mean I did something wrong?

Not at all. Some audits are completely random (TCMP). Others are triggered by statistical anomalies that have perfectly legitimate explanations. Getting audited doesn’t mean you cheated – it means the IRS wants more information. That’s it.

Can WCG help if my audit has already started?

Absolutely. We can step in at any point during the audit process. Obviously, the earlier the better – we’d rather be involved before you’ve had conversations with the IRS examiner. But even if you’ve already started responding on your own and things aren’t going well, we can file Power of Attorney and take over from there.

What if the IRS finds something wrong on my return?

It depends on what they find and why. An honest mistake that results in additional tax owed is not the end of the world – you pay the tax, some interest, and potentially a penalty (which we may be able to get abated). Intentional underreporting is a different situation entirely and can result in civil fraud penalties of 75%. We’re always straightforward with you about where you stand.

Will I owe penalties if the audit goes badly?

Possibly. The most common penalty in audits is the accuracy-related penalty under IRC Section 6662, which is 20% of the underpayment. Having said that, penalties can often be abated if you had reasonable cause for the position you took. We evaluate penalty exposure as part of our initial risk assessment and pursue abatement whenever it’s warranted.

Is audit defense the same as tax resolution?

No. Audit defense is about responding to an IRS examination of your tax return – verifying that what you reported is accurate. Tax resolution is about resolving a tax debt that already exists – through installment agreements, offers in compromise, currently not collectible status, or other programs. Different problem, different process. If your audit results in a tax debt you can’t pay, that’s when tax resolution comes into play.

IRS Notice Response

Not all IRS notices are audits. Learn about the different types of notices and how WCG handles each one.

Penalty Abatement

If your audit results in penalties, we may be able to get them reduced or eliminated through reasonable cause abatement.

Tax Resolution Services

When tax problems go beyond an audit into collections, liens, or settlement territory.

Specialty Support Services

Overview of all WCG specialty services for complex tax situations.

S Corp Election

Proper entity structure can reduce audit risk by ensuring your tax reporting aligns with IRS expectations.

Schedule a Consultation

Got an audit notice? Contact us today. The sooner we get involved, the better your outcome.

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Tax planning season is here! Let's schedule a time to review tax reduction strategies and generate a mock tax return.

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Professional Consultation

Did you want to chat about this? Do you have any questions for us? Let’s chat!

The tax advisors, business consultants and rental property experts at WCG CPAs & Advisors are not salespeople; we are not putting lipstick on a pig expecting you to love it. Our job remains being professionally detached, giving you information and letting you decide within our ethical guidelines and your risk profiles.

We see far too many crazy schemes and half-baked ideas from attorneys and wealth managers. In some cases, they are good ideas. In most cases, all the entities, layering and mixed ownership is only the illusion of precision. As Chris Rock says, just because you can drive your car with your feet doesn’t make it a good idea. In other words, let’s not automatically convert “you can” into “you must.”

Let’s chat so you can be smart about it.

We typically schedule a 20-minute complimentary quick chat with one of our Partners or our amazing Senior Tax Professionals to determine if we are a good fit for each other, and how an engagement with our team looks. Tax returns only? Business advisory? Tax strategy and planning? Rental property support?

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