Penalty Abatement Services

Posted Monday, July 6, 2026

IRS penalty notice on a desk next to a calculator and coffee — because nothing pairs with your morning brew like a letter from the government.

The IRS assesses penalties like a parking meter hands out tickets. Sometimes you deserve it, sometimes you were two minutes late, and sometimes the meter was broken. We figure out which situation you’re in and respond accordingly.

Here’s what most people don’t realize – the IRS penalizes you not because they’re trying to ruin your year, but because penalties are automated. A computer somewhere decided you owe more money based on a set of rules, and that computer doesn’t care that you were in the hospital, that your accountant ghosted you, or that your QuickBooks file imploded. It just prints the notice, adds the penalty, and moves on. The good news? Many of those penalties can be reduced or eliminated entirely through a process called penalty abatement. The bad news? You actually have to ask for it. The IRS isn’t going to volunteer to give your money back. Shocking, right?

At WCG CPAs & Advisors, penalty abatement is one of the most common – and most satisfying – things we do in our specialty support services practice. We’ve helped clients recover thousands of dollars in penalties that were either unfairly assessed, disproportionate to the offense, or eligible for forgiveness under IRS programs that most taxpayers don’t know exist. If you’ve received a penalty notice, don’t just pay it and move on. Let’s talk about your options first.

Types of IRS Penalties (And They’ve Got Quite the Menu)

Before we can abate a penalty, we need to know what we’re dealing with. The IRS has a smorgasbord of penalties, each with its own rules, rates, and quirks.

Here we go-

  • Failure-to-File Penalty. This is the big one – 5% of your unpaid tax per month, up to a maximum of 25%. Let’s say you owe $20,000 and you’re three months late filing your return. That’s $1,000 per month, or $3,000 in penalties before we even talk about interest. If you owe nothing? The penalty is zero, because 5% of zero is zero. So the lesson here is simple – if you can’t pay, still file. Period. Full stop.
  • Failure-to-Pay Penalty. This one is gentler but persistent – 0.5% per month of your unpaid balance, also capped at 25%. On that same $20,000 balance, that’s $100 per month. Doesn’t sound terrible until it compounds for two years and you realize you’ve added $4,800 in penalties on top of interest. Yuck.
  • Accuracy-Related Penalty. If the IRS determines you substantially understated your income or took a position on your return that lacked reasonable basis, they slap a 20% penalty on the underpayment. Owe an extra $15,000 after an audit? Here’s another $3,000 in penalties. This one stings because it feels like adding insult to injury – you already got caught, and now they’re punishing you for getting it wrong.
  • Estimated Tax Penalty. If you’re self-employed or have income that isn’t subject to withholding, you’re supposed to make quarterly estimated payments. Miss them – or underpay them – and the IRS charges a penalty that functions like interest on the shortfall. It’s not catastrophic, but it’s annoying, and it’s one of those penalties where many taxpayers don’t even know they’re supposed to be making quarterly payments until the notice arrives. We see this constantly with new business owners and people who just started getting 1099 income.
  • Information Return Penalties. These are the penalties for filing late W-2s, 1099s, and K-1s. The penalties range from $60 to $330 per form depending on how late you are, and they can stack up fast if you have multiple employees or contractors. A small business with 20 contractors who files their 1099s 60 days late? That could be $6,600 in penalties. For paperwork.
  • Trust Fund Recovery Penalty (TFRP). This is the nuclear option. If you’re a business owner who collected payroll taxes from employees but didn’t remit them to the IRS, the penalty is 100% of the unremitted amount. And here’s the part that keeps people up at night – this penalty applies personally to “responsible persons,” meaning it can pierce the corporate veil. You, as an individual, are on the hook. Not your LLC, not your corporation. You. This is the penalty that turns a business tax problem into a personal financial crisis. If you’re dealing with a TFRP situation, you need professional help immediately – this is exactly the kind of scenario we handle through our tax resolution services.

How Penalty Abatement Actually Works

Penalty abatement sounds fancy, but at its core, it means asking the IRS to remove or reduce a penalty. The IRS has several paths for doing this, and the trick is knowing which one applies to your situation. Let’s break them down.

First-Time Abatement (FTA)

This is the low-hanging fruit, and it’s where we start for most clients. The IRS has an administrative waiver – they call it First-Time Abatement – for taxpayers who have a clean compliance history over the prior three years. That means you filed all required returns, paid all taxes owed (or had an approved payment plan), and didn’t have any penalties during that period.

If you qualify, the IRS will remove the penalty. Just like that. No sob story required, no documentation beyond your tax history. The crazy part? Most taxpayers don’t know this exists. They get a penalty notice, assume it’s final, and write a check. We’ve seen clients pay penalties of $5,000, $10,000, even $15,000 that could have been wiped out with a single phone call or letter. If you’ve been a good taxpayer and you had one bad year, First-Time Abatement is your friend.

Sidebar: FTA applies to failure-to-file, failure-to-pay, and failure-to-deposit penalties. It does not apply to accuracy-related penalties or estimated tax penalties. Different tools for different problems.

Reasonable Cause

When FTA doesn’t apply – maybe you had a penalty two years ago, or this is your second offense – the next option is reasonable cause. This is where you explain why you didn’t comply and demonstrate that the failure was due to circumstances beyond your control.

The IRS recognizes several categories of reasonable cause-

  • Serious illness or incapacitation – You or an immediate family member had a health crisis that prevented you from meeting your tax obligations
  • Natural disaster – Fires, floods, hurricanes, earthquakes. If your records were destroyed or you were displaced, the IRS generally gives you a pass
  • Death in the family – The death of a spouse, dependent, or close family member around the time of a filing deadline
  • Reliance on professional advice – You hired a CPA or tax preparer, gave them complete information, and they still got it wrong. This one is nuanced, because you can’t just say “my accountant messed up” – you need to show you acted in good faith
  • Fire, casualty, or other disturbance – Theft of records, civil unrest, or other extraordinary events
  • Inability to obtain records – Sometimes records are held by a third party who won’t cooperate

The key to reasonable cause is documentation. The IRS wants proof, not promises. Hospital records, insurance claims, death certificates, written correspondence with your tax preparer – all of it supports your case. We draft these requests carefully because the first impression matters. A well-documented reasonable cause letter gets approved. A vague one-paragraph plea gets denied.

Statutory Exception

Certain situations are carved out by law. If you’re in a federally declared disaster area, you automatically get extended deadlines and penalty relief. Military personnel serving in combat zones get similar protections. There are also specific provisions scattered throughout the Internal Revenue Code that provide penalty exceptions for particular situations. These are less common, but when they apply, they’re bulletproof.

IRS Error

Sometimes – and we love these situations – the penalty was assessed because the IRS made a mistake. Maybe they processed your payment late, gave you incorrect advice over the phone, or misapplied your estimated tax payments. In these cases, you shouldn’t owe the penalty at all, and getting it removed is a matter of proving what happened. We’ve had cases where the IRS cashed a check three weeks after receiving it and then assessed a late-payment penalty. That’s their problem, not yours.

The WCG Penalty Abatement Process

We don’t just fire off a form letter to the IRS and hope for the best. That’s how you get denied. Here’s how we actually approach penalty abatement-

  • Step 1: Review the penalty assessment for accuracy. Before we even talk about abatement, we verify that the penalty was calculated correctly. You’d be surprised how often the IRS gets the math wrong or applies the penalty to the wrong period. If the penalty itself is incorrect, we challenge it on that basis alone.
  • Step 2: Determine the best abatement strategy. Based on your compliance history, the type of penalty, and the circumstances surrounding it, we figure out whether to pursue First-Time Abatement, reasonable cause, statutory exception, or a combination. Sometimes we layer strategies – request FTA first, and if that’s denied, pivot to reasonable cause.
  • Step 3: Prepare the penalty abatement request. This is the craft part of the work. We write a penalty abatement letter that presents your case clearly, cites the relevant IRS guidelines (Internal Revenue Manual provisions, not just IRC sections), and includes all supporting documentation. The goal is to make it easy for the IRS examiner to say yes.
  • Step 4: Submit to the IRS. We submit through the appropriate channel – sometimes that’s a phone call for straightforward FTA requests, sometimes it’s a written request via Form 843, and sometimes it’s a formal response to a penalty notice. The method matters.
  • Step 5: Follow up and negotiate if initially denied. An initial denial is not the end. The IRS has a reconsideration process, and sometimes the first examiner missed something or applied the wrong standard. We escalate when needed and reframe the argument if necessary.
  • Step 6: Appeal if necessary. If all administrative remedies fail, taxpayers have the right to appeal through the IRS Office of Appeals. This is a more formal process, but it brings a fresh set of eyes to the case – and Appeals officers have broader authority to settle cases than frontline employees.

This is all part of our broader approach to IRS notice response – we don’t just react, we respond strategically.

What Can Actually Be Abated?

Here’s a question we get all the time – “Can you get them to remove the interest too?” The answer is nuanced. We can get penalties removed, and when a penalty is removed, the interest that was charged on the penalty also gets removed. That’s a nice bonus that people don’t expect. Having said that, interest on the underlying tax balance cannot be abated except in very rare cases involving IRS error. The IRS is pretty firm on this one – you owed the tax, the tax was late, and interest accrued. They see that as the cost of late payment, not a punishment.

Let’s say you had a $10,000 failure-to-file penalty and $1,200 in interest accrued on that penalty over the past year. We get the penalty abated, and you save $11,200. That’s real money. But the $3,000 in interest on the underlying tax balance? That’s probably staying. Still worth pursuing the abatement though – $11,200 is $11,200.

When Penalty Abatement Won’t Work

We want to be straight with you – penalty abatement isn’t magic, and it doesn’t work in every situation. Here’s where we typically hit a wall-

  • Intentional disregard. If you knowingly didn’t file or pay because you decided you didn’t want to, the IRS isn’t going to be sympathetic. There’s a difference between “I forgot to file an extension” and “I don’t believe in paying taxes.” One gets relief. The other doesn’t.
  • If there’s any indication of fraud on a return, penalties are not only non-abatable – they get worse. The fraud penalty is 75% of the underpayment. If fraud is even remotely in the picture, we’re having a very different conversation, likely involving our tax resolution services team.
  • Repeated violations. First-Time Abatement requires a clean three-year history. If you’ve had penalties in each of the last four years, FTA is off the table. Reasonable cause becomes harder to argue too, because the IRS will ask why you didn’t fix the problem after the first penalty.
  • No reasonable cause exists. Sometimes the honest answer is that there’s no good excuse. You just forgot, life was busy, and nothing extraordinary happened. We’ll still look for angles, but we’re not going to fabricate a story – that makes things worse, not better.

When penalty abatement isn’t viable, we pivot to other strategies. An installment agreement can make the total balance (tax + penalties + interest) manageable. In extreme hardship cases, an offer in compromise might reduce the total amount owed. The point is, there’s almost always a path forward.

Common Penalty Scenarios We Handle

We’ve seen just about everything. Here are the situations that bring people through our door most often-

“I forgot to file an extension.” This is the classic. You meant to file by April 15, life got in the way, and suddenly it’s July and you’re looking at a failure-to-file penalty. If you have a clean history, FTA usually knocks this out. If not, we look at reasonable cause – was there a medical issue, a family emergency, something that explains the delay?

“I missed my estimated payments.” New business owners and freelancers hit this one all the time. You didn’t know you needed to make quarterly payments, or you knew but cash flow was tight. The estimated tax penalty is usually smaller than the other penalties, but it’s also harder to abate because the IRS views it as more of an automatic calculation than a punitive measure. We can sometimes reduce it by showing annualized income patterns – if you earned most of your money in Q4, you shouldn’t be penalized for not paying in Q1.

“My employer didn’t withhold correctly.” This is frustrating because it wasn’t your fault. Your employer under-withheld, and now you owe a balance plus penalties. Reasonable cause can work here – you relied on your W-4, your employer made an error, and you acted in good faith. Documentation from the employer helps enormously.

“I had crypto gains I didn’t report.” Welcome to the new frontier of penalty exposure. The IRS is aggressively pursuing unreported cryptocurrency transactions, and accuracy-related penalties are common when they find unreported gains. Whether we can get the penalty abated depends on why you didn’t report – did you genuinely not understand the reporting requirements (possible reasonable cause), or did you hope nobody would notice (that’s a tougher sell)? We work with clients to get their crypto reporting caught up and resolve any resulting penalties as part of a comprehensive approach.

“I didn’t report my foreign accounts.” FBAR and FATCA penalties are in a league of their own. The penalties for not reporting foreign financial accounts can be $10,000 per account per year for non-willful violations – and much, much more for willful violations. If you have unreported foreign accounts, this requires a careful, strategic approach. We often use the IRS’s Streamlined Filing Compliance Procedures or Voluntary Disclosure Practice to resolve these situations before penalties are assessed or to mitigate penalties that have already been assessed.

The Cost of Doing Nothing

Sidebar: People sometimes ask us whether it’s worth pursuing penalty abatement. “Is it really worth the hassle?” Let’s do some quick math. If you owe $30,000 in taxes and filed six months late, your failure-to-file penalty is $7,500 (5% × 6 months = 30% but capped at 25%, so $7,500). Add failure-to-pay penalties accumulating at 0.5% per month, plus interest on everything, and you could easily be looking at $10,000+ in penalties and penalty-related interest. If we can get even half of that abated, you’re saving $5,000. The cost of doing nothing is almost always more than the cost of having a professional handle it.

And penalties don’t go away on their own. If you ignore IRS notices, the penalties continue to accrue, interest compounds, and eventually the IRS starts enforced collection – levies, liens, wage garnishments. The earlier you address it, the more options you have. We digress.

Key Takeaways

  • Most IRS penalties are automated, not personal. A computer assessed your penalty based on a set of rules. That same set of rules often provides a path to get it removed.
  • First-Time Abatement is the most underused tool in tax resolution. If you’ve been compliant for three years and get hit with a penalty, there’s a strong chance it can be eliminated with a single request. Don’t pay it without asking.
  • Reasonable cause requires documentation, not just a good story. The IRS wants evidence – medical records, insurance claims, correspondence with your tax preparer. We help you build the case properly.
  • Penalties and the interest on those penalties can both be removed. When a penalty is abated, the interest that accrued on that penalty goes away too. That’s often a significant additional savings.
  • The failure-to-file penalty is five times worse than the failure-to-pay penalty. If you can’t pay, file anyway. Always file. The penalty for not filing is 5% per month versus 0.5% per month for not paying.
  • Penalty abatement is not a one-shot deal. If your first request is denied, there are reconsideration processes and formal appeals available. An initial denial is a setback, not a dead end.
  • Some penalties require immediate professional help. Trust fund recovery penalties and willful FBAR violations are serious enough that you need a tax professional involved from day one. These can follow you personally regardless of your business structure.
  • There’s almost always a path forward. Even when penalties can’t be abated, installment agreements and offers in compromise can make the total balance manageable.

FAQs

How do I know if I qualify for First-Time Abatement?

You need to have filed all required returns and have no penalties on your account for the three tax years prior to the penalty year. You also need to have paid (or arranged to pay) any tax due. We pull your IRS transcripts to verify your eligibility before making the request – there’s no point requesting FTA if the records show a penalty from two years ago.

Can I request penalty abatement myself, or do I need a professional?

You can absolutely request it yourself, and for straightforward First-Time Abatement situations, a phone call to the IRS can sometimes get it done. Having said that, reasonable cause requests and more complex situations benefit significantly from professional preparation. The quality of the request letter and supporting documentation directly impacts whether it’s approved or denied. We’ve seen plenty of DIY attempts get denied that we later got approved on reconsideration.

How long does the penalty abatement process take?

It depends on the method. A phone request for FTA can sometimes be resolved in a single call – 30 minutes and done. Written requests typically take 60 to 90 days for a response. If we need to go through Appeals, you’re looking at several months. We set expectations upfront so there are no surprises.

Will requesting penalty abatement trigger an audit?

No. Requesting penalty abatement does not increase your audit risk. It’s a completely separate process from examination. The IRS expects taxpayers to request abatement when they have valid grounds – it’s built into the system.

Can penalties be abated if I already paid them?

Yes. You can request abatement and a refund of penalties you’ve already paid. The IRS will issue a refund if the abatement is approved. There are time limits though – generally you need to request within two years of paying the penalty or three years of filing the return, whichever is later.

What’s the difference between penalty abatement and an offer in compromise?

Penalty abatement removes or reduces specific penalties on your account. An offer in compromise settles your entire tax debt (tax, penalties, and interest) for less than the full amount owed, based on your ability to pay. They’re different tools for different situations. We sometimes use both – abate the penalties first, then pursue an offer on the remaining balance if needed.

Do I need to pay the underlying tax before requesting abatement?

Not necessarily, but it helps. For First-Time Abatement, you need to have paid or arranged to pay any tax due. For reasonable cause, having the tax paid (or being on a payment plan) strengthens your case. The IRS is more receptive to penalty relief when you’ve shown good faith on the underlying tax obligation.

Can estimated tax penalties be abated?

They can, but it’s harder. The estimated tax penalty is calculated like interest rather than a flat percentage, and FTA doesn’t apply to it. You can request a waiver if you retired or became disabled during the tax year, if the underpayment was due to a casualty, disaster, or other unusual circumstance, or if you can show reasonable cause. We also sometimes reduce the penalty by recalculating it using the annualized income installment method.

What if the IRS denies my penalty abatement request?

A denial isn’t the end. We can request reconsideration with additional documentation or arguments. If reconsideration fails, you can appeal to the IRS Office of Appeals, which is independent from the unit that assessed the penalty. Appeals officers have broader authority and are often more willing to compromise. If all else fails, you may have the option to petition the U.S. Tax Court.

How much does WCG charge for penalty abatement services?

It depends on the complexity of the situation. A straightforward First-Time Abatement request is relatively quick work. A reasonable cause case involving multiple years and extensive documentation takes more time. We’ll assess your situation during a consultation and give you a clear picture of what’s involved and what it will cost before we start any work. We’re not going to charge you $5,000 to save $500 – that math doesn’t work for either of us.

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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.”

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