Is your tax return raising a red flag?
Most taxpayers will never face an IRS audit, but certain
patterns on a return make you much more likely to be selected for a closer
look. By understanding the most common “red flags,” you can file accurately,
claim every deduction you’re entitled to, and still minimize audit risk.
The IRS runs every filed return through a scoring system
(often called the DIF score) that compares your income, deductions, and credits
to others in similar situations. Returns that look unusually aggressive for
their peer group are kicked out for manual review and are more likely to be
audited.
Think of it this way: the further your return looks from
“normal” for your income level and occupation, the more likely it is to be
flagged.
1. Not Filing When You Should (Income)
If you have reportable income and simply don’t file, you are
inviting IRS attention. The agency receives W‑2s, 1099s and other information
directly from payors, and missing returns with visible income are prime
candidates for enforcement and substitute-for-return assessments.
How to reduce the risk:
·
File
every required return, even if you can’t pay in full.
·
Respond
promptly to non‑filer notices before the IRS files an estimated return for you.
2. Reporting Too Little Income (Income)
Underreported income is one of the biggest audit triggers.
IRS computers automatically match what you report against W‑2s, 1099‑NEC,
1099‑K, 1099‑INT, K‑1s and other forms filed by third parties. If you leave
something off, the mismatch can generate a notice or an examination.
How to reduce the risk:
·
Track all
sources of income, including gig work, side businesses and digital platforms.
·
Reconcile
your numbers to every tax form you receive before filing.
3. High Income With Aggressive Patterns (Income)
Higher‑income taxpayers face higher audit rates, especially
when their returns show large losses, complex activities or deductions that
don’t “fit” their income profile. AI‑driven systems now do a better job of
spotting outliers among high earners with closely held businesses, significant
investments, or multiple K‑1s.
How to reduce the risk:
·
Make sure
complex items (partnerships, S corporations, trusts) are prepared with solid
documentation and professional support.
·
Expect
more scrutiny if you are in the top brackets and plan accordingly.
4. Foreign Income, FEIE and Housing Exclusion (Foreign ties)
The foreign earned income exclusion and foreign housing
exclusion are legitimate but often misunderstood benefits. Claims that don’t
clearly meet the physical‑presence or bona fide residence tests—or that swing
in and out from year to year—can draw attention.
How to reduce the risk:
·
Maintain
detailed travel calendars and proof of foreign residence if you rely on these
exclusions.
·
Coordinate
foreign tax credits, exclusions and treaty positions so the return presents a
consistent story.
5. Unreported Foreign Accounts and Assets (Foreign ties)
Failing to report foreign financial accounts (FBAR) or
specified foreign assets (Form 8938) is a classic red flag. The IRS receives
increasing amounts of data from foreign financial institutions under FATCA and
information‑sharing agreements and cross‑checks it with filed returns.
How to reduce the risk:
·
Disclose
all foreign accounts when you exceed the filing thresholds, even if the income
is small.
·
Address
past non‑compliance proactively; penalties for willful failures are severe.
6. Disproportionately Large Charitable Deductions (Deductions
& credits)
Charitable giving is encouraged in the tax code, but
deductions that look unusually large relative to your income are one of the
most common audit triggers. Non‑cash contributions, such as appreciated
securities or property, are especially likely to be scrutinized if appraisals
and acknowledgments are missing or incomplete.
How to reduce the risk:
·
Keep
written acknowledgments for gifts of 250 dollars or more and qualified
appraisals when required.
·
Make sure
total giving is realistic for your income level and consistent from year to
year, or be prepared to explain real changes.
7. Rental Losses and “Real Estate Professional” Status (Deductions
& credits)
Rental real estate losses that routinely wipe out wage or
business income are a magnet for IRS attention. Returns claiming real estate
professional status to avoid passive loss limits are regularly examined for
contemporaneous time logs and actual material participation.
How to reduce the risk:
·
Maintain
detailed logs of hours and activities for each rental or real estate business.
·
Be
careful when grouping activities and when claiming that real estate is your
primary trade or business.
8. Excessive Self‑Employed and Small‑Business Deductions (IRS
transactions)
Schedule C filers and small businesses have more room for
judgment, which means more room for the IRS to question whether expenses are
ordinary, necessary and truly business‑related. Very high ratios of expenses to
income, repeated Schedule C losses, or large write‑offs for vehicles, travel,
meals, or “consulting” to family members are frequent audit triggers.
Rounded or “too neat” numbers—10,000 for advertising, 5,000
for supplies, 20,000 for travel—also suggest that estimates, not actual
records, are being used.
How to reduce the risk:
·
Separate
business and personal accounts and keep receipts or digital records to support
every significant deduction.
·
Avoid
making up round numbers; use actual totals from your books.
9. Alimony and Other Sensitive Adjustments (Deductions &
credits)
For divorces finalized after 2018, alimony is generally not
deductible to the payer or taxable to the recipient; older agreements are
treated differently. Mismatches between what one spouse deducts and what the
other reports, or incorrectly claiming alimony on a post‑2018 agreement, can
lead to questions.
Other above‑the‑line deductions and credits—such as
education benefits or child‑related credits—also draw attention when they are
unusually large or inconsistent with the rest of the return.
How to reduce the risk:
·
Confirm
exactly how your divorce decree treats payments and which tax rules apply to
your agreement year.
·
Keep
documentation for education expenses, dependency claims and similar items that
the IRS frequently disallows.
10. Virtual Currency and Digital Assets (IRS transactions)
Digital assets are now squarely in the IRS spotlight. There
is a dedicated question on Form 1040, brokers must issue new Form 1099‑DA
information reports, and the IRS uses advanced data‑matching and AI tools to
cross‑check exchange data with individual returns. Failing to answer the
digital asset question accurately or omitting taxable crypto sales, staking
income, or other transactions is increasingly risky.
How to reduce the risk:
·
Keep
wallet‑by‑wallet records of buys, sales, swaps, and income events and reconcile
them each year.
· Report all taxable events on Form 8949 and Schedule D, even if you did not receive a 1099 from an exchange.
Contact the Tax Lawyers at
www.TaxAid.com or www.OVDPLaw.com
or Toll Free at 888 8TAXAID (888-882-9243)
Sources:
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