Dustin Rinaldi Shares Red Flags that Could Alert the IRS
The IRS audited approximately 1.4 million individual tax returns filed in 2012.1 That amounts to approximately 1% of 146 million individual returns filed that year. However, fewer than one-quarter of those audits involved face-to-face meetings with IRS auditors. The rest were conducted through the mail.
Filers earning less than $100,000 had a .58% chance of being audited. Among filers with income exceeding
$200,000, the audit rate was 2.06%; for those earning more than $1 million, it climbed to 9.20%. Audit risk also increased for self-employed taxpayers who filed a Schedule C, Income and Expenses for sole proprietors.
Depending on how much income was reported, the chance of being audited ranged from 1.0% for returns listing gross receipts under $25,000 to 2.7% for those reporting gross receipts of $200,000 or more.1
What Triggers an Audit
The following are some of the red flags that could alert the IRS, aside from earning a lot of money:
1. Running a cash business
2. Claiming the home-office deduction